SANTA ANA, Calif. — Prosecutors charged a man Thursday with kidnapping his former girlfriend’s 15-year-old daughter a decade ago and repeatedly sexually assaulting her.

Isidro Medrano Garcia faces five felony counts, including rape and kidnapping to commit a sexual offense, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office said. His arraignment was expected later in the day.

The woman, now 25, came forward this week and told police that Garcia had abducted her and then through physical, mental and sexual abuse kept her from reuniting with her family since her 2004 disappearance.

Garcia forced the woman to marry in 2007 and fathered a daughter with her in 2012, according to investigators with the Santa Ana Police Department.

Police described an ordeal during which the woman was moved at least four times and given multiple fake identities to hide her from family and authorities.

The woman, who police did not identify by name, said she often thought about escaping but did not out of fear, even though in recent years she was not physically held captive.

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“I was very afraid about everything because I was alone,” she said in an interview with KABC-TV that aired Wednesday night.

Police said that she had arrived in the U.S. from Mexico several months before her abduction and didn’t speak English at the time.

On Monday she contacted police, who said she did so after reconnecting with her sister on Facebook in recent weeks.

In Bell Gardens – a working-class city near Los Angeles and about 20 miles from where she originally vanished – stunned neighbors who knew the suspect as Tomas Medrano found the woman’s portrait of him hard to reconcile with the man they knew.

“He treats her like a queen. He does his best to do whatever she wants,” next-door neighbor Maria Sanchez said in Spanish on Wednesday after police announced Garcia’s arrest.

The woman told the station that her neighbors believed Garcia was a good man because he provided for her.

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“He worked hard for me and my daughter and he bought everything I want. But I didn’t want that,” she said with her mother, sister and daughter at her side. “I need love from my family, not things.”

KABC-TV didn’t identify the woman because police say she is a victim of sexual abuse. The station had interviewed the woman’s mother 10 years ago, after she reported her daughter missing.

Santa Ana police Cpl. Anthony Bertagna said his department’s investigation concluded the following:

The girl arrived from Mexico in February 2004 to join her mother and sister in Santa Ana, about 30 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles. She had entered the United States illegally and spoke no English.

Garcia was her mother’s boyfriend. After one fight between the girl’s mother and Garcia in August 2004, the girl’s mother left the house and the girl went to a nearby park.

Garcia followed the girl. When he caught up with her, she said she had a headache and wanted to go home.

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“He told her then, ‘You can’t go home. You’re here illegally, you don’t speak the language, your mom’s called the police, they will send you back. I’m your only hope,” ’ Bertagna said.

Garcia gave her five pills that he said would help her headache but instead knocked her out. When the girl awoke, she was locked in a garage in Compton, a city between Santa Ana and Los Angeles.

The mother “filed a police report and for 10 years (police) did due diligence. But they were changing their names and dates of birth and physical locations so that made it exceedingly difficult,” Bertagna said.

In 2007, Garcia got documents from Mexico that gave the girl a new name and date of birth. Using those documents, he married her at a courthouse. Police said their daughter was born in 2012.

Police said the woman tried to escape twice but was severely beaten.

Elizabeth Smart, who was kidnapped from her Utah bedroom at 14 and held captive for nine months, told The Associated Press that people cannot know what victims are going through and should not question why the woman didn’t escape sooner.

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“We don’t know what these evil people are holding over them – whether it’s their families’ lives, their lives, whatever it is,” Smart said.

Marisa Cianciarulo, a law professor at Chapman University, said immigrants who came to the United States illegally are vulnerable to certain kinds of manipulation.

“The threat that ‘I am going to get your family deported’ is a very real threat,” Cianciarulo said. “Any interaction with law enforcement, whether it is federal, local, can be seen as very threatening and frightening to undocumented immigrants.”

In addition, small acts of kindness – a bit of food, permission to use the bathroom – can create positive feelings within the victim that the captor then exploits, said Dr. Frank Ochberg, an expert on the psychology of captives.

Neighbors of Garcia said he always said hello, joked with neighbors and sometimes brought them fruit. His wife worked for a nearby janitorial service and he held at least two jobs. “I’m astounded she waited so long to say something,” said Rita Salazar, who lived across the street from the couple.

Police said Garcia repeatedly told the victim her family had given up looking for her.

Only recently, she contacted her sister on Facebook and they started to communicate, police said. She also learned that her mother had indeed tried to find her, going to media, including a Spanish-language television station and newspaper in 2004. 


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