Well yeah. To me it doesn't match anything. But many want to believe that narrative because they're vested in it. So even though the whole reason many of us are on the fence or questioning is because it doesn't fit such typical, real kidnapping scenarios, if someone were to orchestrate such a thing they might feel it would play into attitudes and suspicions of people in the area.
The demographics of her county and city are overwhelmingly working class to middle class white and they voted in record numbers for Trump. I think a narrative about "dusky-skinned savages" stealing "nice" white mamas would be eaten up around there, frankly.
It's a narrative that has excited the imaginations of Americans and caused panic in them since the inception of the nation- Indians pillaging and stealing white women and kids for slavery and sex. Black slaves uprising and taking revenge on their masters by murdering everyone and raping the women. The mythic white slave trade so many people talk about that has regular women and children stolen off the streets or from their homes and placed in auctions controlled by shadowy forces- often foreign. The movie Taken is a great example of that. Cute little white girl sold to creepy Arab rapist.
People are vested in that type of narrative and similar ones. I've found that when someone makes something up or tries to create a scene, they often, even if subconsciously, play into ethnic or other tensions at play in their community. So for Susan Smith it was a black man who stole the kids she actually murdered. For the runaway bride it was a Latino man and white woman who kidnapped and raped her in the back of a van. For political worker Ashley Todd, a black Obama supporter mugged her and carved a B on her face for "Barack". For blond Breanna Talbott it was three masked black men who beat and raped her.
It's interesting.