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Roy Whiting's first victim
by HELEN WEATHERS, Daily Mail
Like most teenagers, she often drives her parents to distraction. Just turned 16, she can switch in seconds from being the lovely little girl they remember usually when she gets what she wants into a silent, sulking stranger when she doesn't.
Their battlegrounds are common to most parents. The untidy state of her bedroom; her refusal to study; the non communicative grunts which greet most questions; and her mother's insistence that Anne be home by 10.30pm when she goes out.
They hope it is just a phase, but they are not sure. Indeed, they worry incessantly that her behaviour, far from being normal, is instead betraying some terrible inner turmoil which they are powerless to stop.
Their fears are not without foundation. For their daughter has to live with the knowledge that, aged nine, she was paedophile Roy Whiting's first victim, and eight year old Sarah Payne was his second. Anne survived and Sarah did not.
It is something she has barely spoken to her parents about since the Saturday in March 1995 when Whiting grabbed her off the street in broad daylight and threw her, kicking and screaming, into his red Ford Sierra. Then he drove to some woods where, after threatening her with a knife, he subjected her to a terrifying sexual assault.
Anne has become even more guarded since Whiting's trial last month in which the harrowing details of Sarah Payne's murder on July 1, 2000, emerged. Snatched and bundled into his white van as she walked alone to her grandparents' home in West Sussex, Sarah was sexually abused and then murdered. Her naked body was discovered in a shallow grave 17 days later.
Sentencing him to spend the rest of his life in prison, Mr Justice Curtis branded the 41 year old divorced father of one 'every parent and grandparent's nightmare come true'.
The parents of his first victim know only too well the truth of that statement. Tom and Susan's only comfort if it can be called that is that the police picked up Whiting so quickly because Sarah Payne's abduction bore all the hallmarks of the previous attack on their daughter.
'Our daughter rarely talks about what happened to her, and we don't like to pry for fear of dragging up all the memories,' says 37 year old Susan, an office administrator. 'We told her from the start "We are here for you if you want to talk", but she has rarely wanted to.
'We can't help but worry about the effect all this has had on her. She is very headstrong and rebellious replica van cleef and arpels turquoise alhambra necklace if you tell her something is black, she will tell you it is white.
'She is fiercely independent and acts as if she is invincible. It's almost as if she thinks: "No one can ever hurt me that way again."
Tom, 41, an airport worker adds: 'We don't know if she is simply being a normal teenager, or whether her behaviour is a result of what she went through. One minute she is gorgeous, and the next a fake van cleef long necklace complete monster.
'I'm not convinced we know the full details of what Whiting did to her. She has told us and the police only so much, because, we believe, she didn't want to upset us.
'All she will say is: "You don't know what it was like." I think she needs counselling, but you can't make her do anything she doesn't want to do.'
There is no doubt that the murder of Sarah Payne, and Whiting's conviction 18 months later, have forced the family to relive a nightmare they were only just beginning to put behind them. They also feel intensely the grief of Sarah's parents, Sara and Michael, whose daughter they know was not as lucky as theirs.
Anne, then aged nine, was still in bed when Susan, who also has a son two years older than her daughter, left for work that Saturday in 1995. The family car wouldn't start, so she had to take a taxi to her office instead.
'I phoned home at around 1pm and this man answered the phone. He said "Who are you?" and I replied: "Who are you?" I thought we'd been burgled and that the burglar had picked up the phone. Now, of course, I wish it had been that.
'The man on the end of the phone told me he was a police officer and said: "Something has happened where are you?" I immediately thought my husband had been in some kind of accident, but the officer wouldn't tell me anything. He said he would send a car to pick me up.
'That was the worst feeling in the world, sitting in my office for half an hour not knowing what had happened. My mind ran riot.
'On the journey home, I was told my daughter had been abducted. My first reaction was absolute anger. I kept demanding to know where she was, who had her, what had happened, but they couldn't tell me anything. By the time I got home, I was desperate. I thought I would never see my daughter again.
'They told me the police helicopter was out looking for her and they had set up roadblocks, but I thought: "How many children kidnapped by copy van cleef and arpels long necklace strangers are released?" I thought she had gone for ever.
'I could feel the panic rising and couldn't stop crying. I didn't know what to do. I phoned my husband, who was with some friends, and told him she was missing.
He rushed straight home. He was beside himself with anger and the sheer frustration of not being able to help her.'
That morning, Anne had set off to an indoor adventure playground with three girl friends and her elder brother, telling her father that she would be back at around 5pm.
At around lunchtime, however, she remembered a friend's birthday party she was supposed to be at and the four girls left together, refusing her brother's offer to walk them all home.
Having dropped off one girl, the remaining trio were walking back to the housing estate in Crawley where they lived when a man came rushing towards them and tried to bundle all three into a car. Two of the girls ducked under his arms, but he managed to grab hold of Anne's arms and throw her, twisting and screaming, into the back of the car, then drove off.
Her two friends ran to raise the alarm, but as Tom and Susan sat in the lounge of their three bedroom terrace house, surrounded by police officers, they could only imagine what terrors their daughter was going through and wonder whether they would see her alive again.
by HELEN WEATHERS, Daily Mail
Like most teenagers, she often drives her parents to distraction. Just turned 16, she can switch in seconds from being the lovely little girl they remember usually when she gets what she wants into a silent, sulking stranger when she doesn't.
Their battlegrounds are common to most parents. The untidy state of her bedroom; her refusal to study; the non communicative grunts which greet most questions; and her mother's insistence that Anne be home by 10.30pm when she goes out.
They hope it is just a phase, but they are not sure. Indeed, they worry incessantly that her behaviour, far from being normal, is instead betraying some terrible inner turmoil which they are powerless to stop.
Their fears are not without foundation. For their daughter has to live with the knowledge that, aged nine, she was paedophile Roy Whiting's first victim, and eight year old Sarah Payne was his second. Anne survived and Sarah did not.
It is something she has barely spoken to her parents about since the Saturday in March 1995 when Whiting grabbed her off the street in broad daylight and threw her, kicking and screaming, into his red Ford Sierra. Then he drove to some woods where, after threatening her with a knife, he subjected her to a terrifying sexual assault.
Anne has become even more guarded since Whiting's trial last month in which the harrowing details of Sarah Payne's murder on July 1, 2000, emerged. Snatched and bundled into his white van as she walked alone to her grandparents' home in West Sussex, Sarah was sexually abused and then murdered. Her naked body was discovered in a shallow grave 17 days later.
Sentencing him to spend the rest of his life in prison, Mr Justice Curtis branded the 41 year old divorced father of one 'every parent and grandparent's nightmare come true'.
The parents of his first victim know only too well the truth of that statement. Tom and Susan's only comfort if it can be called that is that the police picked up Whiting so quickly because Sarah Payne's abduction bore all the hallmarks of the previous attack on their daughter.
'Our daughter rarely talks about what happened to her, and we don't like to pry for fear of dragging up all the memories,' says 37 year old Susan, an office administrator. 'We told her from the start "We are here for you if you want to talk", but she has rarely wanted to.
'We can't help but worry about the effect all this has had on her. She is very headstrong and rebellious replica van cleef and arpels turquoise alhambra necklace if you tell her something is black, she will tell you it is white.
'She is fiercely independent and acts as if she is invincible. It's almost as if she thinks: "No one can ever hurt me that way again."
Tom, 41, an airport worker adds: 'We don't know if she is simply being a normal teenager, or whether her behaviour is a result of what she went through. One minute she is gorgeous, and the next a fake van cleef long necklace complete monster.
'I'm not convinced we know the full details of what Whiting did to her. She has told us and the police only so much, because, we believe, she didn't want to upset us.
'All she will say is: "You don't know what it was like." I think she needs counselling, but you can't make her do anything she doesn't want to do.'
There is no doubt that the murder of Sarah Payne, and Whiting's conviction 18 months later, have forced the family to relive a nightmare they were only just beginning to put behind them. They also feel intensely the grief of Sarah's parents, Sara and Michael, whose daughter they know was not as lucky as theirs.
Anne, then aged nine, was still in bed when Susan, who also has a son two years older than her daughter, left for work that Saturday in 1995. The family car wouldn't start, so she had to take a taxi to her office instead.
'I phoned home at around 1pm and this man answered the phone. He said "Who are you?" and I replied: "Who are you?" I thought we'd been burgled and that the burglar had picked up the phone. Now, of course, I wish it had been that.
'The man on the end of the phone told me he was a police officer and said: "Something has happened where are you?" I immediately thought my husband had been in some kind of accident, but the officer wouldn't tell me anything. He said he would send a car to pick me up.
'That was the worst feeling in the world, sitting in my office for half an hour not knowing what had happened. My mind ran riot.
'On the journey home, I was told my daughter had been abducted. My first reaction was absolute anger. I kept demanding to know where she was, who had her, what had happened, but they couldn't tell me anything. By the time I got home, I was desperate. I thought I would never see my daughter again.
'They told me the police helicopter was out looking for her and they had set up roadblocks, but I thought: "How many children kidnapped by copy van cleef and arpels long necklace strangers are released?" I thought she had gone for ever.
'I could feel the panic rising and couldn't stop crying. I didn't know what to do. I phoned my husband, who was with some friends, and told him she was missing.
He rushed straight home. He was beside himself with anger and the sheer frustration of not being able to help her.'
That morning, Anne had set off to an indoor adventure playground with three girl friends and her elder brother, telling her father that she would be back at around 5pm.
At around lunchtime, however, she remembered a friend's birthday party she was supposed to be at and the four girls left together, refusing her brother's offer to walk them all home.
Having dropped off one girl, the remaining trio were walking back to the housing estate in Crawley where they lived when a man came rushing towards them and tried to bundle all three into a car. Two of the girls ducked under his arms, but he managed to grab hold of Anne's arms and throw her, twisting and screaming, into the back of the car, then drove off.
Her two friends ran to raise the alarm, but as Tom and Susan sat in the lounge of their three bedroom terrace house, surrounded by police officers, they could only imagine what terrors their daughter was going through and wonder whether they would see her alive again.
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