About: Mary Elizabeth Sarsfield   Sponge Permalink

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Mary Elizabeth lived in a seaside home in Felixstowe with her father, Ward Nayland Sarsfield, an accountant at the Stanton Shipping company. A Big Sister broke into their home at 2:30 AM in the morning of March 16 and captured Mary Elizabeth in her bedsheets, hefting her over one shoulder to carry away. Her father heard her screams, but he did not investigate immediately since he knew that his daughter was "prone to night terrors." By the time he went downstairs to check on her, the Big Sister was already escaping out of the window.

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  • Mary Elizabeth Sarsfield
rdfs:comment
  • Mary Elizabeth lived in a seaside home in Felixstowe with her father, Ward Nayland Sarsfield, an accountant at the Stanton Shipping company. A Big Sister broke into their home at 2:30 AM in the morning of March 16 and captured Mary Elizabeth in her bedsheets, hefting her over one shoulder to carry away. Her father heard her screams, but he did not investigate immediately since he knew that his daughter was "prone to night terrors." By the time he went downstairs to check on her, the Big Sister was already escaping out of the window.
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dbkwik:bioshock/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Mary Elizabeth lived in a seaside home in Felixstowe with her father, Ward Nayland Sarsfield, an accountant at the Stanton Shipping company. A Big Sister broke into their home at 2:30 AM in the morning of March 16 and captured Mary Elizabeth in her bedsheets, hefting her over one shoulder to carry away. Her father heard her screams, but he did not investigate immediately since he knew that his daughter was "prone to night terrors." By the time he went downstairs to check on her, the Big Sister was already escaping out of the window. Like the kidnapping of Maura Clune, Ward Sarsfield's only clue about the identity of the kidnapper was the red light coming from the Big Sister's helmet. Local authorities mistakenly assumed that the kidnapper was a jewel thief who used precision glass-cutting tools, due to the way a window in the Sarsfield home was cut. They believed that Mary Elizabeth had only been taken by accident when the thief was alarmed by her screams during the search for valuables. Thus, they expected an eventual ransom demand. None of the local authorities connected the red light of the kidnapper with a sighting of red light underwater by a shipping vessel 50 miles off shore the previous night.
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