California attorneys have approved a $20 million settlement to Jaycee Lee Dugard, who was kidnapped and held for almost 20 years by a Philip Garrido, a convicted sex offender who had been paroled by he state. The compensation is waiting final approval by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. A bill that approves the compensation has already made it through the Senate and California’s State Assembly. Typically California’s corrections department would have immunity from such a claim, but the State approved liability due to the extreme and unique circumstances.
In a story that seems too gruesome to be real, Jaycee Dugard was allegedly kidnapped by Philip Garrido in 1991 outside her home in South Lake Tahoe, California when she was 11 years old. Garrido had been released less than three years earlier after serving 11 years of what was originally a 50 year sentence for rape. Dugard was found alive last August in a secret compound of Garrido’s home in Antioch, California. Dugard, 30, and her two daughters fathered by Garrido, had filed claims with the California Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board.
The case drew heavy criticism of California’s justice system, leading to inquires as to how Garrido was able to evade detection despite being on parole.
Jaycee Dugard is living with her daughters in an undisclosed location in northern California, undergoing therapy.
Related Resources:
- Lawmakers pass $20M settlement for kidnapped girl (AP)
- California passes 20 million dollar kidnap victim payout (AFP)
- Jaycee Dugard Approved for $20 Million Settlement from California (People.com)
- California to Compensate Jaycee Dugard With $20 Million (ABC)
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