The crime was abduction, burglarly was a by product though another charge,....he broke in...he wasnt there to burgle but to abduct...I give up
Some further info on this burglar/kidnapper:-
QUOTE
AURORA -The man accused of kidnapping an 8-year-old girl and burglarizing a home on Oct. 28 was formally advised of his charges Friday morning.
John Stanley Snorsky, 26, is charged with second-degree kidnapping, first-degree burglary, second-degree burglary, enticement of a child, child abuse and third-degree assault.
His bond was set at $500,000.
Police say Snorsky carried the 8-year-old girl from her bedroom to an alley behind her Aurora home last week, where she screamed and managed to break free.
Snorsky was already in custody on an unrelated charge of false reporting to a pawn shop when he was accused in the attempted kidnapping.
When Snorsky was taken into custody that same night on the unrelated parole violation, police noticed his clothing matched the attempted kidnapping suspect's description.
A search warrant was executed and clothing from Snorsky was taken along with a sample of his DNA.
Results indicated that the DNA found on the girl's clothing matched Snorsky.
Police later received a tip from a woman who claimed to at one point have been Snorsky's foster mother. She says she never reported to police that she had caught him watch child pornography on his computer. She also said he had been texting her occasionally pictures of male genitalia and went by the name "Jonathan."
Police say at the time of the tip, it was not publicly revealed that the man accused of kidnapping the girl told her his name was Jonathan. He also asked the girl for a hug.
"If he could do that to a child ... he can do it to anybody," the girl's grandmother, Beatrice Padilla, told 9NEWS.
Snorsky now faces charges of kidnapping and burglary.
The burglary charges allege that Snorsky staged a burglary at the home of Linda Taylor. He was living as her roommate at the time.
On Sept. 4, Taylor reported the burglary in which $14,000 of cash and more than $50,000 of jewelry was stolen. She alerted Snorsky to the incident and believed she had been robbed through a window in the basement.
In October, Snorsky the affidavit says that he had pawned a large amount of women's jewelry. Police were alerted to this and showed pictures of the items to Taylor.
She confirmed that the jewelry belonged to her.
(KUSA-TV © 2013 Multimedia Holdings Corporation)