FILE - In this Aug. 1, 2013 file photo, Ariel Castro bows his head in the courtroom during his sentencing sentencing in Cleveland. Castro, 53, now serving a life sentence for the kidnapping and rape, was found hanging in his cell, Tuesday night, Sept. 3, 2013, at the Correctional Reception Center in Orient, Ohio. |
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) -- A man who held three women for a decade in his Cleveland home
said authorities missed an opportunity to catch him in 2004, because his
picture should have been captured by a school security camera minutes
before he abducted one of his victims, according to interrogation
videotapes that became public Friday.
In the
video, deceased kidnapper Ariel Castro says cameras outside Gina
DeJesus' school should have captured him there 15 minutes before the
then-14-year-old girl was abducted.
"You could
have broke the case right then and there," Castro told police during a
recorded interview that was obtained by NBC and first reported Friday on
the "Today" show.
Cleveland police did not
respond to requests for comment regarding Castro's claim that there was a
missed opportunity to catch him after DeJesus disappeared.
The
recording shows the former school-bus driver eating a slice of pizza
and later pacing the room during a reportedly four-hour interrogation in
which he told police he had used victim Amanda Berry's cell phone to
call her mother and say she was alive.
"I
think I said something ... that I have her daughter and that she's OK,
and that she's my wife now - something like that, you know, probably not
the exact words," he told investigators.
Castro
also describes what he considered a close call: a girlfriend spotted a
television on in a room occupied by victim Michelle Knight. Castro told
police that made him think he might be caught.
Castro,
53, was a month into his life sentence when he hanged himself in his
prison cell Tuesday night. A funeral home picked up his body Friday from
the Franklin County Coroner's office on behalf of Castro's family.
In
the recording of his interrogation following his May arrest, Castro,
handcuffed and dressed in dark clothes, is asked about suicidal
thoughts. A search of Castro's home had turned up a 2004 confession note
in which he wrote he wanted "to put an end" to his life.
"And what about suicide? You still?" an investigator asked him.
"I just want to crash through that window," Castro answered.
Castro
committed suicide using a bedsheet despite his placement in protective
custody, which involves checks every 30 minutes. He had been taken off
suicide watch while in county jail.
The state
has launched two probes related to Castro, Ohio prisons spokeswoman
JoEllen Smith said. One looks into the suicide, and the other examines
whether Castro received proper medical and mental health care leading up
to his death.
A spokeswoman for the city of
Cleveland and its police department said Castro's case records are being
reviewed to determine what will be made public under Ohio law. Maureen
Harper said the city isn't the source of the video that aired Friday.
Through
a spokesman, Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy McGinty also denied
having released the recording. The FBI's Cleveland division spokeswoman
said the office did not release the video.
Authorities
speculated Castro's defense team released the tape. Attorney Jaye M.
Schlachet on Friday declined to comment on the matter.
Representatives of the victims did not respond to messages seeking comment Friday.
Castro
was sentenced Aug. 1 to life in prison plus 1,000 years after pleading
guilty to 937 counts, including kidnapping and rape, in a deal to avoid
the death penalty.
Castro's captives
disappeared separately between 2002 and 2004. They were rescued from
Castro's house May 6 when Berry broke through a screen door.
Investigators said the women were bound, repeatedly raped and deprived of food and bathroom facilities.