Dugard’s accused captor was arrested in 1972 rape

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – The man accused of  kidnapping Jaycee Dugard and hiding her in a squalid backyard  compound for 18 years was arrested in 1972 for raping a  14-year-old girl, but never faced prosecution because the  victim refused to testify in court, police said yesterday.

Phillip Garrido’s 37-year-old rape arrest was unknown to  police investigating Dugard’s abduction until the victim, who  is now in her 50s, saw his picture during sensational media  coverage over the past week and contacted them.

Garrido, 58, and his wife Nancy, 54, are charged with  snatching Dugard from a street near her South Lake Tahoe home  on June 10, 1991, when she was 11 years old.

Authorities say Garrido fathered two girls with Dugard, who  is now 29, and kept all three concealed in a maze of sheds and  tents behind his home near the town of Antioch, California.

Dugard was found last week after Garrido, who served 10  years in prison for the 1976 rape of another woman, aroused the  suspicion of police at a college campus.

The victim in the 1972 rape case told police that she and a  friend met Garrido, then 21, at the Antioch Public Library,  where he offered them a ride and gave them barbiturates.

“She ended up at a motel with Mr. Garrido after being given  more barbiturates,” Antioch police Lt. Leonard Orman said. “She  basically awoke and found herself there and was repeatedly  raped and sexually assaulted at that time.”

Orman said Garrido was arrested in the rape but that  charges were dropped because the girl would not testify.

Meanwhile Dugard’s aunt, Tina Dugard, told reporters the  kidnapping victim had spent her first week of freedom with  family members.

“Jaycee and her daughters are with her mom and younger  sister in a secluded place, reconnecting,” she said. “Jaycee  remembers all of us. She is especially enjoying getting to know  her little sister, who was just a baby when Jaycee was taken.”

Tina Dugard described the last week as a “joyous time” for  the family despite the horrific nature of Jaycee’s ordeal,  adding: “The smile on my sister’s face is as wide as the sea.  her oldest daughter is finally home.”