THE DAILY BEAST ^ | 5/9/13 | Michael Daly
How Ariel Castro Remained at Liberty in Cleveland All These Years
(monumentally stupid cops and ethnic solidarity)
The domestic-violence and abduction allegations didn’t stop him. Nor did
telling a kid on the bus he drove, ‘Lay down, bitch.’ Michael Daly on how
Cleveland proved the perfect home for the alleged kidnapper.
Cleveland seems to be a great city to be a monster.
Ariel Castro remained at liberty there for year after year, even though three
kidnapped women were imprisoned in his house and his ex-wife had told the
domestic-violence court that he had brutalized and terrorized her and their
children.
Police in protective suits on May 8 investigate homes down the street from
the house where three women were held captive for close to a decade in
Cleveland. (Matt Sullivan/Getty)
In her petition for an order of protection, ex-wife Grimilda Figueroa stated
that Castro had “broken petitioner’s nose (twice), ribs, lacerations, knocked
out tooth, blood clot on brain, (inoperable tumor), dislocated shoulder, (twice,
once on each side) threatened to kill petitioner and daughters 3 to 4 times just
this year.”
Figueroa had further alleged that Castro “frequently abducts daughters and
keeps them from mother/petitioner/legal custodian.”
Deputies were dispatched to serve Castro notice of a hearing on the ex-wife’s
petition, and they first went to the Cleveland schoolbus depot on Ridge Road.
They were told he no longer worked out of that location, having been suspended
and then transferred the year before, after an incident that began when he
failed to drop off a grammar-school special-education student.
Castro is said to have told the student, “Lay down, bitch,” and left the
youngster on the bus while he grabbed a bite at a Wendy’s. Castro had then
driven around for a time before finally delivering the child. That would
certainly seem to have constituted endangering the welfare of a child, but the
police who went to Castro’s house to interview him decided there was no criminal
intent and let the matter drop.
The Castro house was visited on three occasions by the deputies seeking to
serve the hearing notice. Castro did not answer the door, perhaps because by
that time three women were imprisoned there. Or he may have already been in
court on another matter, as the witness in a sex-abuse and kidnapping case
against his ex-wife’s husband, Fernando Colon.
That’s right, even as three three missing women were being held in Castro’s
house and his ex-wife was accusing him of beating her, he was on the stand in a
case where Colon was accused of detaining and molesting two of Castro’s three
daughters.
Investigators had first taken an interest in the Castro family when they
learned that one of the daughters, Arlene, was the last person to see Gina
DeJesus before she vanished in 2004. Arlene was said to be Gina’s best friend.
The two had spoken of Arlene going to Gina’s house after school.
Castro was never interviewed and he was able just to continue on, allegedly
growing only more monstrous.
“She gave me 50 cents to call my mom and so my mom said no, that I can’t go
over to her house,” Arlene would tell the TV show America’s Most Wanted on the
first anniversary of her friend’s disappearance. “So I told her I couldn’t and
she said, ‘Well, OK, I’ll talk to you later,’ and she just walked.”
Arlene said that after giving her the 50 cents, Gina no longer had enough
money to take the bus and had set off for home on foot. A police dog would later
track Gina’s scent halfway up the block before there suddenly was no trace of
her.
Investigators interviewed Arlene, who was living with her mom. The
investigators began to take an interest in her stepfather, Colon, after there
were suggestions that he may have been molesting two of the Castro daughters.
Colon would later insist that Ariel Castro was behind the allegations.
Colon reportedly agreed to take a polygraph test, which is said to have
indicated that he had no involvement in Gina’s disappearance. The sex-abuse
allegations remained, and court records show that Colon was indicted on November
1, 2004. He subsequently went to trial on August 30, 2005, a day after his wife
filed the domestic-abuse allegations against Castro.
Those who testified in Colon’s defense included his wife, Castro’s ex,
Figueroa. Colon was convicted on September 6, 2005. He would continue to insist
that he had been set up by Castro. He could not be reached for comment.
Exactly a week after Colon’s conviction, Castro contacted the
domestic-violence court to acknowledge notice of the hearing. But after all
that, the hearing was canceled, apparently because Figueroa’s lawyer, Robert
Fererri, failed to show. The lawyer was apparently the same Fererri who had been
suspended twice while a judge and would subsequently resign from the practice of
law following questions about a case in which he represented two defendants with
conflicting interests. He did not return repeated calls for comment.
By then, the investigators seem to have nixed Colon as a suspect in the
disappearance. Had they taken a look at Castro—as they should have if they had
investigated everybody with a possible connection to the missing Gina—they would
have seen Figueroa’s allegation in the court papers that he frequently abducted
his daughters.
It would not take much imagination to consider the possibility that Castro
might have been waiting outside the school to abduct Arlene and then decided to
kidnap Gina instead. Castro always had to return his daughters to their mother.
But Gina he could keep, along with the other two captives who might have served
as an available rush of power to offset no longer being able to control his
ex-wife.
Castro was never interviewed and he was able just to continue on, allegedly
growing only more monstrous. He is said to have impregnated one of his hostages
five times, forcing at least one of four ensuing miscarriages.
Around 2007, one pregnancy went to term, and Castro allegedly ordered another
hostage to deliver the baby in an inflatable plastic swimming pool, threatening
her with death if the child died. The hostage turned midwife is said by police
to have breathed air into the infant to get the babe breathing, perhaps saving
both of their lives. The child survived to become a fourth kidnap victim.
By some reports that police officially neither deny nor confirm,
investigators found a draft of an apparent suicide note in Castro’s house in
which he complained of an unhappy childhood and blamed the captives for his
troubles.
Yet, to many who encountered him outside his dungeon, he seemed generally
cheery. He certainly seemed chipper enough on his Facebook page when he talked
about the joys of listening to a cardinal herald the approach of spring or
rhapsodized, “miracles really do happen. God is good :)”
Maybe the miracle was that he was able to keep it up for so long without
being caught.
Were it not for Amanda Berry’s courage when she finally saw an opportunity to
escape with the child and for Charles Ramsey’s courage in coming to their aid,
Cleveland might have kept on being a good town to be a monster.
In fairness, Cleveland also seems a good city to be a striver, as others of
the Castro family proved after becoming one of the first Hispanic families to
settle there, coming from the town of Yauco in Puerto Rico after World War II.
Ariel’s father, Nona Castro, opened a used-car lot. One of Ariel’s uncles, Julio
“Cedi” Castro, opened the Caribe Grocery and became a prominent figure in the
community. He was honored in 1996 as one of the top 12 Hispanics in Ohio.
Among the other highly regarded members of the Hispanic community in
Cleveland is Victor Perez, the city’s chief prosecutor. Perez stood as both a
proud citizen of Cleveland and an equally proud native of Puerto Rico as he
announced the charges against Castro on Wednesday.
The word from the jail is that Castro is beginning to learn that a monster
also can find Cleveland to be a very bad place indeed once he is found out.
DIOGENES invites you to pull up a chair on this fine day and read posts from around the world. The writing may lean to the right...but that's the way Diogenes wants it! You may leave your opinion, but Diogenes rarely changes his! WELCOME!
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