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This Saturday, May 6, marks 10 years since the day that touched off neighborhood celebrations in Cleveland and gave hope to families with long-term missing children everywhere. But we've lived a good life in 10 years. We have good days, bad days. But we've really been blessed. I've done a lot of things that I normally wouldn't have done.
We're just living life. He hid them in plain sight. Neighbors, even friends who visited his home, had no idea they were imprisoned there. That day 10 years ago, Berry finally saw a chance to escape when Castro left one of the two heavily secured front doors unlocked.
She went for it, pounding on the outside door until a neighbor, Charles Ramsey, heard her screams and helped her break free. That's when she made the now infamous call to police who rescued the others in the home and later arrested Castro. Since their recoveries, they've all embraced life, adjusting to a world that moved on without them, navigating some bumps along the way and giving back to their communities.
Knight, who changed her name to Lily Rose Lee, moved away, got married, and is trying to help others by telling her story. They find their journey remarkable. Amanda and Gina flew to Washington, D. DeJesus, at age 14, was the last and youngest of the three girls abducted on April 2, , when Castro, the father of her friend, asked her if she wanted a ride on her way home from middle school. She hopped in his car, and he drove her straight to his home where he lured her inside and chained her to a pole in his basement.
Knight and Berry were already confined in the house, having been abducted in and respectively. Castro pleaded guilty to a raft of charges, including abduction and rape, and was sentenced to life in prison plus 1, years with no chance of parole. He hung himself in prison one month later. It was the steadfast support from their close-knit families, friends, and neighbors that kept their story and hope alive, both Berry and DeJesus said. They were allowed to watch some TV in captivity and were buoyed by the televised vigils held by their families each year on their missing dates.