It was not immediately apparent to Karla T’s ( mother's changed name, but I will call the child the same) parents that there was anything amiss in the immediate aftermath of her assault. Only later when a bruise in the shape of a handprint came out on her face was it discovered what had happened to her and that her abductor had first tried to gain entry via a window using a ladder.
Thankfully she had not been taken further afield nor was she killed … but one wonders what would have happened had she not been returned to her room.
Despite her testimony about the intruder and DNA on her top which eventually identified her abductor, Karla T’s father and brother came under suspicion.
Had she not been there to tell what happened and had there been no corroborating forensics what would we have had? Most certainly accusation of a ‘simulated’ abduction … with either her father or brother being accused of staging the scene and disposing of Karla T’s body.
The only evidence of an intruder was the child's story and the foreign DNA on the child’s top.
If she had been taken what weight would the her father’s ‘evidence’ have carried about being alerted by the open front door? and the ‘simulation’ of the ladder and attempt at entry via the window?
Porter girl abducted from bedroom, assaulted
Posted: Monday, March 28, 2011 12:33 am | Updated: 10:29 am, Tue Mar 29, 2011.
By VANESA BRASHIER
>>snip<<
“When a child predator sets his sights on a victim, nothing will stand in his way. Not a locked door, a locked window or even an occupied house.”
Karla T., whose name has been changed to protect her family’s privacy, knows all about such monsters.
In July 2010, while she and her family were sleeping in their Porter, Texas home, a man broke in and stole her 6-year-old daughter’s innocence.
The child was sexually assaulted before being released. When he freed the girl outside her home, the kidnapper reportedly warned: “Tell your parents what I did and I will come back and hurt them.”
The crime wasn’t noticed until hours later.
It might have been overlooked altogether had the kidnapper not left a tell-tale sign.
The morning after the assault, Karla’s husband was the first to see that things were not quite right. When he walked into the dining room to put on his boots to go to work,
the front door was standing wide open.
Alarmed, he ran to his children’s rooms to see if they were OK. When he found them both asleep in their beds, he locked the front door and left for work, assuming the wind must have blown open the front door during the overnight hours.
>>snip<<
Home was no longer safe and based on the evidence found around the home,
it appeared that the predator might have first attempted to gain access to the child through her bedroom window.
“We found that the pool ladder had been placed outside her bedroom.
It appears he also tried to pry open a window with a butter knife,” said Karla.
When that failed, he took a more direct path to the child through the front door.
With an
unknown predator now targeting her daughter, Karla took drastic steps and moved the two of them in with a relative.
>>snip<<
An unintentional victim of the crime against the 6-year-old girl was her brother, who in the past had always been her protector. After his sister’s attack and before a suspect was named, he was, by his own admission, the focus of the law enforcement investigation.
Looking back now, he knows why and even blames himself a little.
At around the time his 6-year-old sister was abducted, he had been wearing headphones and playing video games. He and his mother now speculate about whether or not the kidnapper could have walked right past him because he was so engrossed in the game.
“The police had perfectly good reasons for being suspicious of me. I was in the next room and I was the last one to see her before bedtime,” he said. “But after a while they seemed to throw out the evidence. I knew I was their target.”
Before this incident happened, “I had a lot of respect for law enforcement. I wanted to be a police officer. Now I can’t help but see a cop and think, ‘How is he going to mess up my life,’” he said.
His advice now for friends who are questioned by police: “Get a lawyer before talking to police. Being in that room for questioning, just with them, they can say and do anything they want. Now I know that basically they have a job and they need to get it done.
“And I know why defense attorneys exist,” he said.
Karla is more forgiving even though
it took a few months to entirely clear her husband and son of any wrongdoing. She even praises the Montgomery County sheriff’s detectives who investigated her daughter’s case.
“The detective in the case, Ken Bivens, has been a godsend. If not for the work of Bivens, the other detectives and the forensic scientists, we would still not know who hurt my daughter," said Karla.
http://www.yourhoustonnews.com/cleveland/news/article_4187ed83-fed3-5276-b6c2-2166c8720c11.html