Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Sex offender molested captives, victim says

In affidavit, rescued Idaho child also alleges suspect tied up her family

FREE VIDEO
Seen on surveillance tape
July 5: Shasta Groene and the convicted sex offender suspected of kidnapping her and her brother are seen in surveillance tape from a Kellogg, Idaho, service station the night before she was rescued. NBC's Michael Okwu reports.

Today show

Video: Crime & courts  
Teacher accused of strip-searching girls
  Oct. 7: A Michigan mother claims her daughter was among a group of girls who were strip-searched by at least one female teacher after money went missing. WDIV-TV's Bifi Onile-Ere reports.

MSNBC News Services
updated 9:33 p.m. ET July 5, 2005

COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho - An abducted 8-year-old girl told authorities that a violent sexual predator tied up her family before she and her 9-year-old brother were taken away in a pickup truck, according to court papers released Tuesday.

The affidavit makes no mention of the savage beating deaths of the children’s mother, older brother and mother’s boyfriend, or whether the girl witnessed the killings.

Other court documents say the abducted 8-year-old girl has told authorities her captor repeatedly molested her and her 9-year-old brother.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

Kootenai County Sheriff's Sgt. Brad Maskell wrote in a terse, handwritten document that both children "were repeatedly molested."

Joseph Edward Duncan III, a violent sexual predator arrested in the Shasta Groene abduction, was charged Tuesday with kidnapping two children with the intent of committing sexual acts or causing serious injury.

First District Magistrate Judge Scott Wayman ordered Duncan, 42, of Fargo, N.D., held without bail.

First court appearance
Wearing a yellow jumpsuit, Duncan was shackled and appeared unshaven as he looked intently at the judge during a brief appearance, his first in court. He said little, other than to acknowledge that he understood the charges against him and to ask if he could consult his public defender, Lynn Nelson.

Duncan was arrested Saturday with the girl after they were spotted by employees and customers at a Denny’s restaurant in Coeur d’Alene.

The girl and her brother, Dylan, had been missing since May 16, when the bound and bludgeoned bodies of their mother, older brother and mother’s boyfriend were found at their rural home near here. Authorities have said they believe Dylan is dead and that human remains found in western Montana earlier this week may be those of the boy.

Duncan has refused to cooperate with authorities, officials said. Authorities have relied on information from the 8-year-old girl, evidence from Duncan’s stolen red Jeep Cherokee and some 100 new tips from the public in the search for the 9-year-old boy.

The two first-degree kidnapping charges do not say who the victims are but identify them as 8-year-old “S.G.” and 9-year-old “D.G” because they are minors. The abductions occurred during the period of May 15 to July 2 and the children were held both in and out of the state of Idaho, charging papers say.

Record of sexual assault
The intent of the crimes, the documents say, was to rape, seriously injure or commit a lewd and lascivious act on a child under 16 years old. Convictions can carry the death penalty or life in prison.

Duncan, who was raised in Tacoma, Wash., had spent more than a decade in prison for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy at gunpoint and was a fugitive at the time of his arrest for allegedly molesting a 6-year-old boy in Minnesota. Wayman on Tuesday ordered him held on $2 million bail on the fugitive charge.

At a news conference in St. Regis, Mont., FBI Special Agent in Charge Tim Fuhrman of Salt Lake City confirmed Tuesday that the children were with Duncan in the Lolo National Forest of northwestern Montana sometime over the past seven weeks. But he said officials had not yet confirmed whether Duncan was with them the entire time.

Reviewing video
Authorities, meanwhile, were reviewing video of Shasta and Duncan at a gas and convenience store in nearby Kellogg hours before she was rescued.

Kootenai County Sheriff’s Capt. Ben Wolfinger said it appeared Shasta was “wanting to be recognized by the patrons there in the store.”

“In the small takes I saw out of that surveillance video, she’s walking around, stopping, looking right at the faces of the different patrons there,” Wolfinger said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Find a business to start

Try for Free

Search Jobs

Find Your Dream Home

$7 trades, no fee IRAs

Find your next car