Suspect’s blog showed malicious thoughts
Alleged Idaho kidnapper spoke of ‘demons’ that led him to commit crimes
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BOISE, Idaho - Convicted sex offender Joseph Edward Duncan III spent months on the Internet documenting his internal struggle over right vs. wrong. Then, four days before two Idaho children he is accused of kidnapping disappeared, he wrote: "The demons have taken over."
It was one of the last entries in Duncan's Weblog before the 42-year-old North Dakota man was arrested and charged this week with two kidnapping counts. Authorities believe he took 9-year-old Dylan Groene and 8-year-old Shasta Groene from their Idaho home shortly before their 13-year-old brother, mother and her boyfriend were bludgeoned to death May 15. Police say Duncan also is a suspect in the killings.
"God has shown me the right choice, but my demons have me tied to a spit and the fire has already been lit," Duncan wrote April 24, after he had jumped bail in Minnesota on charges of molesting a 6-year-old boy on a playground.
His last blog entry was May 13, two days before Dylan and Shasta were taken from their home and their family members killed.
Losing grip on right vs. wrong
"As far as 'taking people with me,' well, I don't know if that is right or wrong," he wrote. "In fact, I don't know much any more what right and wrong even is."
Duncan was arrested Saturday at a Denny's restaurant in Coeur d'Alene when a waitress recognized the girl with him as Shasta and called police. A body believed to be that of Dylan has been found in Montana and awaits positive identification.
Richard Forno, a computer crimes expert in Washington, D.C., said prosecutors will likely use Duncan's blog as they prepare the case against him.
"This type of information in his blogs, where he's telegraphing things and revealing some of his other issues, certainly that is relevant in a case like this," said Forno.
Duncan's began his "Blogging the Fifth Nail" online journal — the title is an allegorical reference to a fifth nail intended to end Christ's suffering on the cross — in January last year.
Police concluded that Duncan was the author of the journal based on interviews of people who knew him and on the Internet Protocol address — an identifying number specific to a computer — that was used to establish the blog. The entries each include the tag line, "Posted by: Joe."
In sporadic entries usually posted in the middle of the night, Duncan used the digital soapbox to vent his anger over the social stigma of being a convicted sex offender.
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