Whoa. That is a very, very strange statement.
What does Sharon Murch KNOW or, rather, what has she been told by law enforcement officials about Jaycee? Was Jaycee so traumatized that her personality "split", so to speak? Sounds like things are far, far, far from "normal" at the moment . . . sounds almost like deprogramming is needed.
Even, if, let's say, Michaela was there at the Garrido house and was introduced by another name, Michaela would still be "herself" . . . and would be recognizable from a photo, I would think.
I agree. Sharon Murch's plea is odd. It sounds like something you'd say to a girl who ran away, rather than one who was kidnapped.
Judging from the passage on Sharon Murch's blog (which was noted here yesterday), and from this interview with Dr. Phil, I would guess that law enforcement has suggested to her that the girls were made to do . .. unspeakable . .. horrifying things.
Jaycee's recovery will be a long, hard road. Please pray right now as you are reading this that she will come to know in her heart and soul that nothing she did, nothing that happened to her, was ever, ever her fault, and that she will heal and realize the promise of her life.
I actually don't find Sharon Murch's plea very odd. She's hoping against hope that her daughter was alive like Jaycee, and knows that if she is, whether she was ever with Garrido or anyone else, she is probably in at least as difficult a mindset or situation as Jaycee is and was. Jaycee now a woman of 29 (Michaela a little older) and feeling apparently resigned to her situation, even committed to it, in her way. She was, after all, "brought up" by Garrido and as her stepfather said, she's now feeling a bit guilty about the bond and that it was "a sort of marriage." So let's say you are Murch wishing your daughter is out there somewhere - you want her to know, that regardless of anything that happened to her or how she lives her life today, she is not "damaged goods" to her family, they will open their arms to her and she does not need to feel shame or reluctance to come forward. I think if I were Murch thinking there was a smidgen of hope that my daughter was alive and could hear me, I would just want to use the opportunity of this media coverage to say "no matter what, I love you" and I think that's all Mrs. Murch was trying to get at. Poor thing.