Tied Gag Kidnapped Rape

Tied Gag Kidnapped Rape




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Tied Gag Kidnapped Rape
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Kidnapped girl found bound and gagged




13-year old kidnap victim Sarah Maynard was found bound and gagged in the basement of murderer Matthew Hoffman. She had been kept there and sexually assaulted for 4 days.

The sole survivor of last November's kidnapping and mass murder in Knox County appeared on NBC's Today show this morning.

Sarah Maynard, 13, said she wanted "to let people know how I could survive" after being kidnapped from her home, held for four days and sexually assaulted.

Sarah and her father, Larry Maynard, spoke to Today show host Meredith Vieira in New York.

She was rescued from the basement of Matthew Hoffman on Nov. 14, four days after her mother, Tina Herrmann, 32; brother, Kody Maynard, 11; and family friend Stephanie Sprang, 41, disappeared from Herrmann's Apple Valley home.

Their bodies were found Nov. 18 in a hollow tree in the Kokosing Wildlife Area north of Fredericktown.

It was the first time Sarah has spoken publicly about the case. Her words were read by Knox County Prosecutor John Thatcher in court when Hoffman, 30, pleaded guilty to 10 felonies, including aggravated murder and rape.

"I wanted to tell him that I wasn't scared of him," she said of her statement in court. "I just wanted to live my life."

Hoffman was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Jan. 6. He avoided the death penalty by revealing the location of the bodies to investigators.

Sarah wanted to come on the show and speak publicly, Vieira said.

She said she wanted "to let people know how I could survive what he did to me. I just listened to everything he told me to do."

She stayed strong by "just hoping someone would find me so I won't have to live with him again. Or stay there with him."

Hoffman kept Sarah Maynard tied up on a bed of leaves in the basement of his home just outside Mount Vernon. She was there for four days, during which he sexually assaulted her, and at one point left her in a Jeep for hours along with the dismembered bodies of her mother, brother and friend as he worked to cover his tracks.

The Dispatch typically does not identify victims of sexual assault unless they agree to be identified. Before her appearance on Today, the newspaper had not been naming her in stories.

The show broadcast photos of Hoffman's bizarre home, which was filled with thousands of leaves, many of which lined the walls in bags. Vieira asked Sarah Maynard if Hoffman explained the leaves.

"He told me that someone helped him bag the leaves," she said. "He said he wanted to make my bed comfy so that's why he put leaves there, so I could sleep on it."

In his written confession, Hoffman detailed the four days he spent with Sarah Maynard, saying they played video games and he cooked dinner for her. She said that's untrue.

"I think he was just trying to say that in his letter to make people think that he felt good about himself, for him to think he fed me and stuff," she said. "He didn't. He didn't let me shower or do any of that stuff."

Larry Maynard reiterated that he doesn't believe that Hoffman intended to just rob Herrmann's 481 King Beach Dr. home, as the killer wrote in his confession.

"A thief steals and a murderer kills," he said. "If he was there to burglarize the home, why did he stake it out the way he did? Why did he purchase a knife online a week prior to making entrance into this home?"

Larry Maynard said the family has started a nonprofit called the Healing Hearts Foundation, which will help other victims of violent crime.

"It's still a nightmare every day knowing that, you know, part of our family's not with us," he said.

Sarah smiled when asked about her mother and brother.

"Mom, she took really good care of us and made sure we had food and heat and clothes," she said. "Kody, he was just a really good brother, even though we fought a lot."

Knox County Sheriff David Barber has called Sarah the epitome of bravery. Larry Maynard said she is an inspiration to him.

"I think she's taught me far more than I ever could probably ever teach her about life," he said.

What keeps her strong, she said, is "just making my life go on and not thinking about what's happened in the past."


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Kidnapped girl found bound and gagged




13-year old kidnap victim Sarah Maynard was found bound and gagged in the basement of murderer Matthew Hoffman. She had been kept there and sexually assaulted for 4 days.

The sole survivor of last November's kidnapping and mass murder in Knox County appeared on NBC's Today show this morning.

Sarah Maynard, 13, said she wanted "to let people know how I could survive" after being kidnapped from her home, held for four days and sexually assaulted.

Sarah and her father, Larry Maynard, spoke to Today show host Meredith Vieira in New York.

She was rescued from the basement of Matthew Hoffman on Nov. 14, four days after her mother, Tina Herrmann, 32; brother, Kody Maynard, 11; and family friend Stephanie Sprang, 41, disappeared from Herrmann's Apple Valley home.

Their bodies were found Nov. 18 in a hollow tree in the Kokosing Wildlife Area north of Fredericktown.

It was the first time Sarah has spoken publicly about the case. Her words were read by Knox County Prosecutor John Thatcher in court when Hoffman, 30, pleaded guilty to 10 felonies, including aggravated murder and rape.

"I wanted to tell him that I wasn't scared of him," she said of her statement in court. "I just wanted to live my life."

Hoffman was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Jan. 6. He avoided the death penalty by revealing the location of the bodies to investigators.

Sarah wanted to come on the show and speak publicly, Vieira said.

She said she wanted "to let people know how I could survive what he did to me. I just listened to everything he told me to do."

She stayed strong by "just hoping someone would find me so I won't have to live with him again. Or stay there with him."

Hoffman kept Sarah Maynard tied up on a bed of leaves in the basement of his home just outside Mount Vernon. She was there for four days, during which he sexually assaulted her, and at one point left her in a Jeep for hours along with the dismembered bodies of her mother, brother and friend as he worked to cover his tracks.

The Dispatch typically does not identify victims of sexual assault unless they agree to be identified. Before her appearance on Today, the newspaper had not been naming her in stories.

The show broadcast photos of Hoffman's bizarre home, which was filled with thousands of leaves, many of which lined the walls in bags. Vieira asked Sarah Maynard if Hoffman explained the leaves.

"He told me that someone helped him bag the leaves," she said. "He said he wanted to make my bed comfy so that's why he put leaves there, so I could sleep on it."

In his written confession, Hoffman detailed the four days he spent with Sarah Maynard, saying they played video games and he cooked dinner for her. She said that's untrue.

"I think he was just trying to say that in his letter to make people think that he felt good about himself, for him to think he fed me and stuff," she said. "He didn't. He didn't let me shower or do any of that stuff."

Larry Maynard reiterated that he doesn't believe that Hoffman intended to just rob Herrmann's 481 King Beach Dr. home, as the killer wrote in his confession.

"A thief steals and a murderer kills," he said. "If he was there to burglarize the home, why did he stake it out the way he did? Why did he purchase a knife online a week prior to making entrance into this home?"

Larry Maynard said the family has started a nonprofit called the Healing Hearts Foundation, which will help other victims of violent crime.

"It's still a nightmare every day knowing that, you know, part of our family's not with us," he said.

Sarah smiled when asked about her mother and brother.

"Mom, she took really good care of us and made sure we had food and heat and clothes," she said. "Kody, he was just a really good brother, even though we fought a lot."

Knox County Sheriff David Barber has called Sarah the epitome of bravery. Larry Maynard said she is an inspiration to him.

"I think she's taught me far more than I ever could probably ever teach her about life," he said.

What keeps her strong, she said, is "just making my life go on and not thinking about what's happened in the past."


If playback doesn't begin shortly, try restarting your device.
Videos you watch may be added to the TV's watch history and influence TV recommendations. To avoid this, cancel and sign in to YouTube on your computer.
An error occurred while retrieving sharing information. Please try again later.
0:48 / 7:53 โ€ข Watch full video Live
Watch ads now so you can enjoy fewer interruptions

Kidnapped girl found bound and gagged




13-year old kidnap victim Sarah Maynard was found bound and gagged in the basement of murderer Matthew Hoffman. She had been kept there and sexually assaulted for 4 days.

The sole survivor of last November's kidnapping and mass murder in Knox County appeared on NBC's Today show this morning.

Sarah Maynard, 13, said she wanted "to let people know how I could survive" after being kidnapped from her home, held for four days and sexually assaulted.

Sarah and her father, Larry Maynard, spoke to Today show host Meredith Vieira in New York.

She was rescued from the basement of Matthew Hoffman on Nov. 14, four days after her mother, Tina Herrmann, 32; brother, Kody Maynard, 11; and family friend Stephanie Sprang, 41, disappeared from Herrmann's Apple Valley home.

Their bodies were found Nov. 18 in a hollow tree in the Kokosing Wildlife Area north of Fredericktown.

It was the first time Sarah has spoken publicly about the case. Her words were read by Knox County Prosecutor John Thatcher in court when Hoffman, 30, pleaded guilty to 10 felonies, including aggravated murder and rape.

"I wanted to tell him that I wasn't scared of him," she said of her statement in court. "I just wanted to live my life."

Hoffman was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Jan. 6. He avoided the death penalty by revealing the location of the bodies to investigators.

Sarah wanted to come on the show and speak publicly, Vieira said.

She said she wanted "to let people know how I could survive what he did to me. I just listened to everything he told me to do."

She stayed strong by "just hoping someone would find me so I won't have to live with him again. Or stay there with him."

Hoffman kept Sarah Maynard tied up on a bed of leaves in the basement of his home just outside Mount Vernon. She was there for four days, during which he sexually assaulted her, and at one point left her in a Jeep for hours along with the dismembered bodies of her mother, brother and friend as he worked to cover his tracks.

The Dispatch typically does not identify victims of sexual assault unless they agree to be identified. Before her appearance on Today, the newspaper had not been naming her in stories.

The show broadcast photos of Hoffman's bizarre home, which was filled with thousands of leaves, many of which lined the walls in bags. Vieira asked Sarah Maynard if Hoffman explained the leaves.

"He told me that someone helped him bag the leaves," she said. "He said he wanted to make my bed comfy so that's why he put leaves there, so I could sleep on it."

In his written confession, Hoffman detailed the four days he spent with Sarah Maynard, saying they played video games and he cooked dinner for her. She said that's untrue.

"I think he was just trying to say that in his letter to make people think that he felt good about himself, for him to think he fed me and stuff," she said. "He didn't. He didn't let me shower or do any of that stuff."

Larry Maynard reiterated that he doesn't believe that Hoffman intended to just rob Herrmann's 481 King Beach Dr. home, as the killer wrote in his confession.

"A thief steals and a murderer kills," he said. "If he was there to burglarize the home, why did he stake it out the way he did? Why did he purchase a knife online a week prior to making entrance into this home?"

Larry Maynard said the family has started a nonprofit called the Healing Hearts Foundation, which will help other victims of violent crime.

"It's still a nightmare every day knowing that, you know, part of our family's not with us," he said.

Sarah smiled when asked about her mother and brother.

"Mom, she took really good care of us and made sure we had food and heat and clothes," she said. "Kody, he was just a really good brother, even though we fought a lot."

Knox County Sheriff David Barber has called Sarah the epitome of bravery. Larry Maynard said she is an inspiration to him.

"I think she's taught me far more than I ever could probably ever teach her about life," he said.

What keeps her strong, she said, is "just making my life go on and not thinking about what's happened in the past."


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