True-crime author Caitlin Rother is guest blogging today about her latest book Lost Girls.
Why
I felt compelled to write LOST GIRLS
By
Caitlin Rother
First
I have a confession to make. After writing Body
Parts, a book about serial rapist-killer Wayne Adam Ford, I really didn’t
think I’d ever be able to stand getting into the head of another man like him,
let alone one who had molested, raped and killed teenagers. I also have a
standing rule: I cannot and will not write stories about young murdered
children. I just can’t stomach it.
But
on March 4, 2010, the day after John Gardner was arraigned for killing Chelsea
King, and the same day he quietly told his attorneys he could lead them to
Amber’s body (which remained a secret for six weeks), I got an e-mail from an
editor from The Daily Beast, asking
if I’d be interested in covering this case for them.
I
said yes, and spent fourteen hours researching and writing the first article.
The following week, I wrote a second one, which was difficult because District
Attorney Bonnie Dumanis had issued a “gag order” e-mail, and the judge had also
put an actual gag order in place. But, after watching my own community reeling
from the emotional fallout of this case, I was feeling it too. I felt in my gut
that I really wanted to tell this story – both sides of it, and very much
in-depth.
For
me to move forward and get past my own rule, I had to convince myself that
Chelsea and Amber weren’t children, even though some folks might disagree.
Still, because of their age and out of respect to their families, I knew I had
to be extremely sensitive and thoughtful about how I wrote this book.
Following
my usual methodology, I read every article and collected every piece of
information I could, trying to determine if I could go further than the
mainstream media. With the crazy amount of coverage, I was a bit worried at first.
However, after a long series of calls and e-mails, I was able to persuade John
Gardner’s family to open up to me. They were paid no money for telling me their
story, they did it because they wanted it to be told accurately and in full
detail, not in sound bites, and not taken out of context by the media.
Knowing
that I could tell the back story of how Gardner
evolved into the man who could commit these heinous acts, I felt I could go
deeper than any reporter had gone before me. And despite the dark subject
matter, the investigative passion of revealing new facts energized me. I felt
this book was more important than some of my earlier works because people are
so scared of losing their children to sexual predators, and I felt we could all
benefit from knowing why this happens. We, as a society, seem to have so little
understanding of these men and how to deal with them. For some, I believe, it
is just too repulsive and difficult a subject to ponder, but burying our heads
in the sand won’t stop these crimes from occurring.
The
Gardner-Osborn family and I share a hope that this book will help educate
people by delving into all the
factors that contributed to making John Gardner into a man who could not
control his sexual and homicidal compulsions, and by casting a spotlight on the
flawed system that allowed him and predators like him to roam free to prey on
children, teenagers and grown women.
Although
they’ve since become pessimistic that anything they say will help, I’m still
hopeful that the idealism that drove me into journalism years ago was right and
true, and that this story will give unprecedented insight into all the facets of a sex offender like
John Gardner—the sweet, nurturing, loving and goofy guy his family once knew,
the guy who seemed friendly and normal to people at the dog park, as well as
the angry, manipulative and violent man who brutally killed these poor girls.
I
hope that we, as a society, can find ways to help people like him before they
get to a breaking point or to stop them from doing harm after they’ve reached
it. And I hope that with this book, we can learn something that will help protect
us and our families from falling to the same fate as Amber Dubois, Chelsea King
and Gardner’s third victim, Candice Moncayo, who lived to deliver a powerful
victim impact statement to him during the sentencing hearing.
I
did try to speak with Candice, as well as Chelsea’s and Amber’s parents, so I
could pay a more personal tribute to each victim by hearing their stories
directly rather than piecing them together from other sources, but they chose
not to be interviewed. (I can’t tell these stories without writing about the
victims and their families – they are why we tell these stories in the first
place.) Instead, I respectfully crafted their stories from their own words in
public comments to the media, public records and details I collected from
interviews with law enforcement and other sources.
I
understand that this was an enormously traumatic event in these families’ lives,
and I hope they will understand that I had only good intentions in writing this
book, that my goal was to educate people and to help prevent tragedies like
this in the future. Some victims and their families have cooperated fully with
me in my previous books, they have told me they found relief in doing so, and they
have thanked me for my sensitive approach. I can also see that others might
find it too painful to do the same. I’m sure these events are still fresh in
their minds and that they are still grieving.
I
think we all want to change the system in a positive way, to save lives and to
keep this from happening again. This is my way, and I hope they find some peace
and success in theirs.
About the Author:New York Times bestselling author Caitlin Rother has written or co-authored eight books, including Poisoned Love (Kensington, December 2011), Dead Reckoning (Kensington, February 2011), Twisted Triangle (Wiley, 2009), Body Parts (Kensington, 2008), Deadly Devotion (Simon&Schuster/Pocket, July 2011), NYT bestseller My Life, Deleted (HarperOne, October 2011), and Naked Addiction (Dorchester, 2011). Her latest true crime project, Lost Girls (Kensington, July 2012), chronicles the rape and murder of two innocents, teenagers Chelsea King and Amber Dubois, by sexual predator John Gardner. Rother, a Pulitzer-nominated investigative journalist with more than 270,000 copies of her books in print, has also been published in Cosmopolitan, the Los Angeles Times, The San Diego Union-Tribune, The Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Boston Globe, and The Daily Beast. She has done dozens of TV and radio appearances as a crime expert on Nancy Grace, the Jay Thomas Show, E!, the Oxygen Network; Greta Van Susteren’s “On the Record,” Investigation Discovery, “America at Night,” American Radio Network, XM and numerous NPR/PBS affiliates. Rother also works as a book doctor/editorial consultant and teaches journalism and creative writing at University of California, San Diego Extension.
To get your copy of LOST GIRLS by Caitlin Rother: http://www.amazon.com/Lost-Girls-Caitlin-Rother/dp/0786022183/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325862088&sr=1-1
To get your e-copy of LOST GIRLS by Caitlin Rother at Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Lost-Girls-ebook/dp/B00746OUGS/ref=tmm_kin_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1339950947&sr=1-4
To view all books by Caitlin Rother: http://www.amazon.com/Caitlin-Rother/e/B001JS87ZC/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1
To learn more about Caitlin, go to her website: http://caitlinrother.com/
Visit Caitlin Rother on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/CaitlinRother
Like Caitlin Rother on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Caitlin-Rother/190361197708434
About the Book:
The desperate search for two lost innocents, Chelsea King and Amber Dubois, led authorities to a brutal predator hiding in plain sight: John Albert Gardner, a convicted sex offender who could have been returned to prison several times over. Pulitzer-nominated writer Caitlin Rother delivers an incisive, heartbreaking true-life thriller about a case that galvanized its community, first by grief and goodwill, then by anger and injustice, as it came to grips with a flawed system that failed … and adopted a law that will forever change how we keep our children safe.(Kensington/Pinnacle, July 2012)
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