CASCADE, Idaho — A harrowing weeklong search for
a missing California teenager ended Saturday when FBI agents rescued the girl
and shot and killed her apparent kidnapper at a campsite deep in the Idaho
wilderness. Hannah Anderson, 16, appeared to
be uninjured and will be reunited soon with her father at a hospital,
authorities said. Her suspected abductor, James Lee DiMaggio, 40, was killed
after his campsite was found in Idaho's rugged Frank Church River of No Return
Wilderness, roughly 40 miles from the tiny town of Cascade.
Hannah was taken to a hospital where crisis
counselors and health care providers were assisting her. Her father was expected
to arrive in Idaho on Sunday to reunite with her. "We will make sure she gets as much care as possible,
physically and emotionally," said Andrea Dearden, a spokeswoman from the Ada
County Sheriff's Department who has been leading the communication team for the
interagency effort in Valley County. The
shooting came after officers participating in a massive manhunt for the pair
spotted the campsite from the air and an FBI hostage recovery team trekked to
the site near Morehead Lake.
"No one really knows where an investigation like
this will lead," said Mary Rook, special agent in charge of the FBI's Salt Lake
City division. "In this case, our team faced a very challenging situation.
"The FBI said it was sending a team to
investigate what unfolded before, during and after the shooting. Authorities
offered few details Saturday night. The location wasn't far from what had been the last known
sighting of the pair. A horseback rider called authorities Thursday night to
report that on Wednesday he had seen two people who resembled Anderson and
DiMaggio with camping gear on a trail near the lake.
The rider, whose name
wasn't released, didn't realize they were subjects of a massive search until he
got home and saw news reports. The case began when the charred bodies of Hannah
Anderson's mother, Christina Anderson, 44, and the teen's 8-year-old brother,
Ethan Anderson, were found in DiMaggio's burning house outside San Diego, near
the Mexico border. DiMaggio was close to the
family. Christina Anderson's husband, Brett Anderson, has described him as a
best friend and said the children thought of him as an uncle.
Authorities have said DiMaggio had an
"unusual infatuation" with Hannah, although the father said he never saw any
strange behavior.
An Amber Alert was issued, and tips led
investigators to Oregon after DiMaggio and the teen were reportedly spotted
there. But it wasn't until the
Idaho horseback rider called in his tip that investigators found a major lead –
DiMaggio's car, hidden under brush at a trailhead on the border of the Frank
Church River of No Return Wilderness in central Idaho.A contingent of about 270 law enforcement officers from
the FBI, the Valley and Ada County sheriffs' offices, Idaho State Police, the
U.S. Marshals Service, and the Border Patrol, aided by experts from federal land
management and wildlife agencies, worked around the clock to figure out the best
way to track DiMaggio and the teen in the roadless area.
San Diego County Sheriff William D. Gore
announced Hannah's rescue and DiMaggio's death from a news conference in
California. He said members of his office notified Hannah's father, Brett
Anderson, of her rescue. "He
was very relieved and very excited and looking forward to being reunited with
his daughter," Gore said. At a
separate news conference in Idaho, Dearden said she didn't know if DiMaggio
fired shots at officers but there were no reports of any injuries to authorities
involved in the encounter. Cascade residents gathered behind Dearden, Rook and
the other officials gathered at the news conference and cheered at the news of
Hannah's rescue.
Rook said FBI victim specialists were working
with Hannah and her family to get them the resources they need.
"As grateful as we are that she was
recovered safely, we also remember the other victims in this case who lost their
lives," Rook said. FBI policy
calls for an investigation whenever an agent fires a weapon, Rook said. A team
from Washington, D.C., was preparing to investigate the events at the campsite,
and until that investigation is complete, Rook said she couldn't share any other
details.