Bone fragment found at home of kidnap suspects


ANTIOCH, Calif. (AP) — Police said Wednesday they found a bone fragment on the property of a Northern California couple charged with kidnapping a little girl and hiding her in their backyard for 18 years. Other fragments were found on property next door.

Investigators collected the fragments as part of a search for any evidence that might link Phillip and Nancy Garrido to two other child abductions in the 1980s.

An earlier search of their next- door neighbor’s backyard also yielded a bone fragment that police say is likely human, but tests still must be completed.

The Garridos are already charged with kidnapping Jaycee Dugard in 1991 and holding her in a squalid encampment of tents and sheds at their Antioch home. Dugard was reunited with her family after the Garridos’ Aug. 26 arrest. The Garridos have pleaded innocent and are in jail.

Authorities returned to the couple’s Antioch property this week after citing similarities between the Dugard kidnapping and the unsolved abductions of Michaela Garecht in 1988 in Hayward and Ilene Misheloff in 1989 in Dublin.