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Abduction and Kidnapping

Abduction involves using trickery or force to remove someone from where they belong, such as with their family or friends. Kidnapping is when they confine that person against their will. False imprisonment is a type of kidnapping.

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Can a mother take her children out of North Carolina state during a divorce to move back to home state or is this considered kidnapping?

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This depends on the custody arrangements established during the divorce proceedings. If the mother has sole custody or permission from the court to move, she can take her children out of North Carolina. However, if there is a custody agreement in place that restricts relocation without the consent of the other parent, taking the children out of the state without permission may violate the agreement and be considered parental kidnapping.

What do you call the money a kidnapper asks for to release a person?

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The money that a kidnapper asks for to release a person is commonly referred to as a ransom.

Who was madeleine mccann kidnapper?

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As of my last update in March 2021, the person responsible for the kidnapping of Madeleine McCann has not been definitively identified or apprehended. The investigation into her disappearance is still ongoing.

If you are 25 with a 17-year-old girlfriend you are in love with and her parents are truly against it could you leave together without being tried for kidnapping?

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I am not a legal expert, but generally, leaving with a minor without the consent of their parents or legal guardians could be considered kidnapping or child abduction, depending on the jurisdiction. It is essential to respect the laws and seek legal advice to understand the specific implications in your situation. Communication and involvement of all parties, including the girl's parents, may be important to address their concerns and find a resolution.

Who was the Norman schwarzkopf who was state trooper connected with the Lindbergh kidnapping?

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Norman Schwarzkopf Sr. was a state trooper in New Jersey at the time of the Lindbergh kidnapping in 1932. He was involved in the investigation and played a role in the arrest and conviction of Bruno Hauptmann, the man found guilty of the crime. His son, Norman Schwarzkopf Jr., later rose to fame as a general in the U.S. Army during the Gulf War.

Is it kidnapping if your mom takes you to her house without your father's permission and keeps you because you wanted to stay?

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The legal definition of kidnapping typically involves unlawfully and forcibly taking a person against their will. If you willingly went with your mother and communicated your desire to stay, it may not fulfill the criteria for kidnapping. However, custody and visitation rights are determined by family court, so it's essential to consult a legal professional to address any potential custody issues.

When does kidnapping happen?

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In the United States, a kidnapping occurs about 15 times per month, according to kidnapping statistics.com

Answered by Shaaron Evans

Why is preventing kidnapping important?

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The impact of family abduction can be devastating and long lasting for both the children involved and their family members left behind. Historically, the response of the professional community has been more reactive than pro-active or preventive. In recent years, however, the issue of missing and abducted children has captured the nation's attention through the media's depiction of high profile child abduction cases. Public concern has resulted in the development of numerous prevention education programs focusing on "stranger danger," or the prevention of an abduction by someone unknown to the victim child and/or family. Although no one can dispute the horror and significance of a child abducted by a stranger, this is the least likely type of abduction to occur. A child is more likely to be abducted by someone he or she knows and trusts. The abductor is most likely to be a parent, family member or an individual once involved in a romantic relationship with the parent.

Although not every family abduction is preventable, steps can be taken to help reduce the possibility. This paper will include some practical preventive approaches for professionals, parents, and guardians.

How many children died from child abduction?

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By strangers, approximately .410. There are on average, according to the FBI, 100-200 child abductions by strangers every year.

The numbers for family abductions are not tracked.

Where does Abduction take place at?

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it takes place when you bend your elbow

What is attempted kidnapping?

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It is when you attempted to kidnap a person and the attempt was failed.

What is the kidnapping of American soldiers called?

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yes, American sailor were kidnapped by the British for their expanding navy during the War of 1812, between France and Britain, unfortunately American cargo ship were seized and confiscated by each country. However the U.S. remained neutral.

What effects can kidnapping leave?

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15 to 30 yrs they keep you in jail between this time.

Added: ALSO - If the kidnapper takes their victim across a state line it changes from a state law offense and becomes a federal offense.

What was a theory behind the kidnapping of Charles Lindberg Jr?

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Answer : because they were poor and living on the streets.and they were jealous that the baby was living big time and was really rich.Charles Lindbergh came to New Jersey in 1932 to reclaim his privacy after five years of living as the most famous, most photographed, most admired man on earth.

But instead of finding peace at his newly built estate in Hopewell Township, the hero aviator lost his infant son to a kidnap-murder that that was instantly billed the most infamous crime in U.S. history.

Even to a public hooked on contemporary crime novels and Court TV, the Lindbergh case of 1932 remains endlessly fascinating.

It offers the heartbreak of a baby's death, the detective drama that led to Bruno Hauptmann's arrest two years later -- and the intriguing, if unproved, theory that the authorities may have executed the wrong man.

But before there was a Lindbergh case or a Lindbergh baby, becoming a public idol was the furthest thing from young Charles Lindbergh's mind.

He just wanted to land his plane in one piece.

On May 20, 1927, Lindbergh determined to fly the Atlantic, New York to Paris, in a stunt that wowed the public as a daring dash against all odds. He had no radio, no co-pilot, and no precedents -- for no one had ever attempted to cross an ocean alone.

When he landed "The Spirit of St. Louis" at Paris' Le Bourget airfield, after 34 hours of nonstop flying from New York, a crowd of thrilled Frenchmen carried him off in jubilation.

Lindbergh was never more than what he seemed to be -- a shy, unpretentious Minnesota boy, only 25 at the time of his record-breaking flight. He did not posture or publicize himself. But his very modesty only seemed to make him that much more of a hero.

Well-wishers wanted to shake his hand everywhere he went. Newsmen pursued him, desperate for a quote, a photo, a bit of gossip. Cranks and charlatans wrote him with schemes to cash in on his good name.

On a goodwill flight to Mexico City soon afterward, he met his future wife, Anne Morrow, daughter of a prominent New Jerseyan who was ambassador to Mexico.

She, too, was shy, but perceptive. "Fame - opportunity - wealth and also tragedy & loneliness & frustration rushed at him in those running figures on the field at Le Bourget," she later wrote.

In 1930, the newlywed Lindberghs had a baby, Charles Jr. His birth was front-page news everywhere, but the family shunned all publicity and shielded themselves from prying eyes by retreating to a new home.

They bought a 425-acre tract in the remote Sourland Mountains, 14 miles north of Trenton, at a site Lindbergh personally selected by flying overhead. Surrounded by thick woods and hills and accessible only by a twisting dirt road, the ir dream house where they could raise their toddler son in peace.

The fieldstone house became front-page news, too, and many a newspaper printed maps of it along with pictures of its private airstrip.

The Lindbergh were a busy couple. But not too busy to coddle and play with their baby. Charles Jr. had the blond hair and dimpled chin of his dad, the slender features of his mom. Charles Sr. would take him for "airplane rides" by tossing him in the air, and teach him the names of his toy animals.

The boy loved it. But he also got sick a lot, as toddlers do. On the night of March 1, 1932, he caught a cold.

His Scottish nursemaid, Betty Gow, sewed him a flannel nightshirt, tucked him into a crib and let him sleep.

At 10 p.m., she went upstairs to check on him. The crib was empty.

Betty Gow was a nervous wreck. The father stayed calm. He phoned the state police in Trenton.

"This is Charles Lindbergh," hhe said. "My son has just been kidnapped."

The troopers had few clues to go on. The kidnapper, or kidnappers for all anyone knew, left behind a homemade ladder in three pieces, which had been used to get into the second-story nursery. There was a crudely written ransom note, too.

"Dear Sir!" it began, and went on with a demand for $50,000.

"After 2-4 days we will inform you were to deliver the mony We warn you for making anyding public or for notify the police The child is in gut care."

Once, it had seemed like nothing could shock an America already punch-drunk from gangsterism and the Great Depression. But the Lindbergh kidnapping opened the country's heart.

Offers of help poured in from every corner of the United States. It wasn't just that Charles Lindbergh was a hero -- it was that every parent could share in the horror of having a child stolen away.

The Lindberghs, editorialized the Trenton State Gazette, "enjoy an esteem which is worldwide. Now the sympathy which their sorrow arouses is equally limitless and sincere."

Thousands of police officers from New Jersey, New York and the FBI joined the case. Anne Lindbergh gave out the baby's diet for the kidnapper to read -- half a cup of orange juice, cooked cereal and vegetables, two table

spoons of stewed fruit -- and every big newspaper in the country carried it.

From his jail cell in Chicago, Al Capone offered to help in the search, insisting that his underworld contacts could free the boy with a single phone call.

At about the same time, Congress felt spurred to enact the so-called Lindbergh Law, making kidnapping a federal crime punishable by death.

In the Bronx, N.Y. a retired school principal named John "Jafsie" Condon offered to act as a go-between to exchange money for the baby. He set up a meeting in a cemetery with the shadowy man who wrote the ransom notes. At one meeting, the stranger -- Condon later described him as a "triangle-faced" man -- asked a question.

"Would I burn if the baby is dead?" he asked.

Lindbergh had to believe the baby was alive. He authorized payment of the full $50,000, which was delivered to the man in the cemetery on April 2 in return for a written slip of information.

The note said that the baby was located on a boat off Cape Cod. An intense search, joined by Lindbergh himself flying up and down the Massachusetts coast, turned up no boat and no sign of the baby.

Still, America kept up hope for Charles Jr.'s return. In the comics world, Dick Tracy fulfilled everyone's fantasy that spring by rescuing the kidnapped son of a beloved hero and then pounding the tar out of the brutal gangster who committed the crime.

In the real world, the Lindbergh baby was dead, of course.

He had been dead from the instant he was snatched out of the Hopewell estate. On May 12, truck driver William Allen of Trenton pulled over to the side of Hopewell-Mount Rose Road to relieve himself. In the woods, just four miles from the Lindbergh home, he stumbled over a mound of earth and leaves that concealed a small, skeletal body.

A coroner identified the body as Charles Lindbergh Jr. Cause of death was "external violence" to the head.

Even in death, the baby did not get any rest. Photographers sneaked into the Swayze & Margerum funeral parlor on Trenton's Greenwood Avenue, took pictures of the dead body and hawked them on the streets.

It took 2 1/2 years for police to catch a break in the Lindbergh case.

Serial numbers on the ransom notes had been recorded and passed on to businesses and bank clerks across the country. One of the bills found its way to a Bronx gas station, and was traced to a car belonging to 35-year-old Bruno Richard Hauptmann, who lived a few blocks away.

Hauptmann was taken in for questioning Sept. 19, 1934. He turned out to be a wiry, triangle-faced German immigrant and carpenter. For two years he had done no work and lived independently, off money he said he earned playing the stock market.

Cops tore apart his apartment in the presence of his wife, Anna, and year-old son. Detectives peppered him with accusatory questions. Why did you kill the Lindbergh baby? Where did you hide the money? Did you have confederates?

Under pressure, Hauptmann stayed cool and stuck to his claims of innocence. But he told a lie: that he had no ransom money in the garage. Cops later found thousands of dollars worth of Lindbergh money there.

They also said they found a missing floorboard. Placed in the gap, a plank from the kidnapper's ladder matched it perfectly.

In January 1935, Hauptmann went on trial in Flemington. (The venue was Hunterdon County, not Mercer County, because a check of deed maps proved that while the front door of the Lindbergh property was in Mercer County, the nursery itself where the crime occurred was over the county line in East Amwell).

H. L. Mencken was only half-kidding when he called the trial "the greatest story since the Resurrection."

More than 10,000 people surrounded the Main Street courthouse on days of especially dramatic testimony. Walter Winchell, Damon Runyon, Edna Ferber and Dorothy Kilgallen were among the celebrities covering the event for the New York papers.

"Outside the courthouse, one man would sell pennies for 10 cents -- each penny was engraved with 'Lindbergh trial, Flemington, New Jersey," recalled Thelma Miller, who was a teenager when her dad, a sheriff's deputy, got her admitted to the trial as a spectator.

"Another man was selling little replica ladders. And all these ladies around in fur coats and diamonds -- it was quite a scene."

The trial had a hero and a villain. The hero was Lindbergh, who came to the trial every day. The villain was the foreigner Hauptmann.

In the court of public opinion, he was a baby-killer, a monster. Even though he preferred "Richard," the press turned him into the more sinister-sounding "Bruno" for headline purposes.

In the Flemington courthouse, he was probably doomed from the moment that Lindbergh testified against him.

Lindbergh said he could identify the defendant from two words he shouted at Condon during a ransom drop: "Hey, doctor!" And when subjected to withering cross-examination from the lead prosecutor, David Wilentz, Hauptmann turned snappish and unsympathetic. He even had to admit the lie about the ransom dollars.

Assigned to guard Hauptmann was a young state trooper, Hugo Stockburger. Now 92 and living in Milltown, Stockburger said he never experienced anything as intense in his life before or after the trial.

"I would sit down at the witness stand with Hauptman's right wrist in my hand -- they wouldn't handcuff him because it made him look like a criminal," Stockburger said. "Reporters passed me notes: What did he say? What did he have for breakfast?"

Stockburger, who also guarded Hauptmann's Flemington cell from noon to 6 p.m., was a German immigrant like his prisoner. But they rarely conversed, except to talk about the weather.

"Some people ask me, did you have compassion for the guy? I say, compassion? This guy was a cold-blooded killer. The day after he was convicted, his expression was the same as any day during the trial."

Hauptmann was found guilty of murder on Feb. 13, 1935, and sentenced to die in the electric chair. Under New Jersey's capital murder statute, the prosecution did not need to prove he intended to kill the baby; only that the baby died as result of a break-in. No one ever determined whether Charles Jr. was clubbed over the head or died in a fall.

There were some who believed Hauptmann was an innocent victim of a frame-up; that belief is just as widespread today, in an era when faith has diminished in government and the courts.

Yet all Hauptmann's appeals were turned down at the time, and up to the present day no one has offered definitive evidence that any other person was responsible.

April 3, 1936, was Hauptmann's execution date. Three jolts of electricity -- 2,100 volts each -- killed him. When the hearse carrying his coffin motored out of the death house of New Jersey State Prison in Trenton, fleets of cars gave chase with newsreel cameramen standing on the roofs.

Charles Lindbergh was not around for comment. Five months before, feeling embittered and hounded, he had deserted his Hopewell estate for a new home in England -- seeking not simply privacy, but isolation.

How much would the fine be for kidnapping?

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If you kidnap a child you would be charged with child indangermeant and probably a few other things.

What was the outcome of the trial for Lindberghs baby kidnapping?

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Bruno Richard Hauptmann was found guilty and sentenced to death by electric chair.

Is mother traveling with children considered kidnapping?

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no.if a mother wants 2 take her children on a trip it is not conceded kidnapping.it just means she wants to take the children to be with her but it does not mean she wants to kidnap them. but just incase she does always ask her where she is going with the children or leave a phone number where she can be reached to.

What type of crime kidnapping is?

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A Felony - a Capital Crime - a Crime of Moral Turpitude.

How can you help a kid with a kidnapping problem?

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well you cant really help a kid with kidnapping problems apart from look out for them and keep them safe! this is a stupid question to ask i mean really come on its logical thinking!

Has a kidnapping victim been abducted?

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Yes, Well someone who has been kidnapped has been abudected.

As in ex. If you where kidnapped by aliens then you have been abducted by aliens.

Can a parent kidnap a child?

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Yes. It is also kidnapping if the CUSTODIAL parent abducts the child, on the grounds that they are interfering with the other parent's care/access of the child (assuming a court order in place granting such access).