Taranaki Daily News

Victims and families say healing process can begin at last

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Jane Carson-Sandler’s morning in

1976 turned from innocence to terror when a masked man broke into her home and entered the bedroom where she lay snuggled with her

3-year-old son.

He confronted them with a butcher knife and shone a flashlight in her eyes before tying them up.

She was paralysed by fear, afraid the man would kill them. When he untied her ankles, she knew he would rape her.

Before assaulting her, he moved her son from her side. After it was over, he put her son back in bed next to her.

Carson-Sandler voiced relief after police arrested Joseph James DeAngelo and identified him as the serial killer who committed a string of killings and rapes in the 1970s and ‘80s in California.

Carson-Sandler, now 72, wants to face her attacker in person and ask how long he had been watching her and what he did with her son during the attack.

‘‘I just wonder when he first saw me, how long he had been stalking me,’’ said Carson-Sandler, who was in the US Air Force reserves and studying to be a nurse at the time of the attack.

Carson-Sandler was one of dozens of women raped by the man dubbed the East Area Rapist and the Golden State Killer. She was attacked in her home in the Sacramento suburb of Citrus

Heights.

She and Bruce Harrington, whose brother and sister-in-law were beaten to death in their Orange County home in 1980, said DeAngelo’s arrest would launch a healing process for victims that had been delayed for decades.

‘‘It is time for the victims to begin to heal,’’ Harrington said at a news conference in Sacramento.

‘‘I feel like I’m in the middle of a dream and I’m going to wake up and it’s not going to be true,’’ Carson-Sandler said. ‘‘It’s just so nice to have closure and to know he’s in jail.’’

Carson-Sandler, who is now living in South Carolina, said she did not know DeAngelo or recognise his name.

She wrote a book about her experience, called Frozen In Fear. She has also spoken with rapists in prison about how the attack affected her. She tells them to close their eyes and imagine that their victim is their mother or sister or lover while she tells her story. She says she hopes to make them understand the trauma they have caused so they won’t hurt more people.

Bruce Harrington applauded law enforcemen­t’s pursuit of justice for them. DeAngelo’s arrest, he said, would ‘‘bring closure to the anguish that we all suffered for the last 40-odd years’’. –AP

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Rape victim Jane Carson-Sandler, left, says she wants to face her attacker in person, while Bruce Harrington, right, whose brother and sister-in-law were murdered in 1980, says is time for the victims to begin to heal.
PHOTO: AP Rape victim Jane Carson-Sandler, left, says she wants to face her attacker in person, while Bruce Harrington, right, whose brother and sister-in-law were murdered in 1980, says is time for the victims to begin to heal.
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