concentric
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I wanted to post this, since some of you said that possibly Sierra could have previously accepted a ride from a person who seemed to have no ill intention the first time:
48 Hours Mystery: Escape From A Serial Killer
http://www.cbsnews.com/2100-18559_162-6986320.html
On Sept. 27, 1992, Jennifer Asbenson was 19 years old and working at a home for crippled children.
"I was working the night shift there from 10 p.m. until 6 in the morning… I went to the bus stop to catch the bus to go to work. I had run in the store to buy something and I saw that the bus had left without me, so I came running out in a panic. I knew that was the last bus for the night. I had no way to get to work.
"Somebody pulled up in a car and just said, 'Hey, do you need a ride?'"
The man, she says, looked "totally harmless."
"That's what makes him evil is that you don't see it right away," says Cook County Prosecutor Jim McKay of the man in the car. "He is smarter than you average serial killer. He learned as he killed…"
McKay says the man was waiting for Jennifer when she got off of work the next morning.
"Well, the next morning when I saw him, I wasn't scared," she tells "48 Hours Mystery" correspondent Susan Spencer. "My thought was, 'This guy is not dangerous. If he wanted to do something to me he had his chance last night.' And he said, 'Let me give you a ride home.' I opened the door and I got in the car."
48 Hours Mystery: Escape From A Serial Killer
http://www.cbsnews.com/2100-18559_162-6986320.html
On Sept. 27, 1992, Jennifer Asbenson was 19 years old and working at a home for crippled children.
"I was working the night shift there from 10 p.m. until 6 in the morning… I went to the bus stop to catch the bus to go to work. I had run in the store to buy something and I saw that the bus had left without me, so I came running out in a panic. I knew that was the last bus for the night. I had no way to get to work.
"Somebody pulled up in a car and just said, 'Hey, do you need a ride?'"
The man, she says, looked "totally harmless."
"That's what makes him evil is that you don't see it right away," says Cook County Prosecutor Jim McKay of the man in the car. "He is smarter than you average serial killer. He learned as he killed…"
McKay says the man was waiting for Jennifer when she got off of work the next morning.
"Well, the next morning when I saw him, I wasn't scared," she tells "48 Hours Mystery" correspondent Susan Spencer. "My thought was, 'This guy is not dangerous. If he wanted to do something to me he had his chance last night.' And he said, 'Let me give you a ride home.' I opened the door and I got in the car."