Jaycee Lee Dugard was only eleven years old when she was kidnapped in South Lake Tahoe, California while walking to a school bus stop. That day, June 10, 1991, would change her family’s life forever. Through the years they never gave up hope that their precious child would someday return to them. Terry Probyn, Jaycee’s mother, worked tirelessly to keep her daughter’s face and name in the public eye. She began a group called “Jaycee’s Hope”, and created shirts, buttons, jewelry, and other items that people could purchase. All of the funds raised went to producing more posters and other materials to maintain interest in the case.
For eighteen years Jaycee Dugard remained in captivity by Phillip and Nancy Garrido. They kept the young girl in a backyard shack, where she was repeatedly raped and tormented. The Garridos did everything they could to keep Jaycee isolated from the outside world. They constantly told her that her family did not love her and did not want to look for her. Throughout the harrowing ordeal, Jaycee became deeply fearful and depressed. Still, she held out hope that one day on she would be reunited with her family. On March 28th, 2006 Jaycee wrote down a list that she titled “My Dreams for the Future”. Number one on the list was “See Mom”.
In her 2012 memoir, “A Stolen Life”, Jaycee Dugard wrote about how the moon was a special part of the relationship between her and her mother. They would sit together on the porch swing to watch the moon rise up in the night sky. During the years she was kidnapped, Jaycee had a difficult time looking at the moon. It would break her heart all over again. Terry, however, could not look away. She used the moon to talk through to her daughter, hoping that Jaycee would somehow hear it. One night in late August, 2009 Terry was looking outside at a particularly bright, full moon. She spoke to Jaycee again, asking where she was. When Jaycee later heard this story, she was awestruck; she remembered that night too. It was one of those rare occasions where she was allowed to be outside. The moon was so beautiful that Jaycee could not look away. She stood in place for several minutes, just looking at the moon. The next day Terry Probyn received the phone she had been waiting nearly two decades for. Jaycee had been found, and she was alive.
On August 26th, 2009 Jaycee finally got back her freedom. She was attending a parole meeting with her kidnappers, as well as her two daughters that she had given birth to while in captivity. At the parole meeting, Jaycee presented as Philip Garrido’s niece, using the name Alyssa. Investigators did not believe the story. At the police station Garrido eventually revealed the young woman’s true identity, and confessed to the kidnapping and rape. Once she was safe, an FBI agent connected Jaycee to her mother through the phone. They were finally able to speak to each other after eighteen years.
Photos: 1. Jaycee Dugard in 1991. 2. Jaycee’s mother, Terry, and Carl Probyn, her step-father, photographed at the abduction site. 3. Items for Jaycee’s Hope. 4. Jaycee and Terry together in 2013.