The Girl In The Box

26 Apr five's blog | Email this page | 8105 reads

This one-off documentary tells the disturbing true story of a bizarre kidnapping case that took place in America in the late 1970s. In northern California, a sexual sadist abducted a young woman and kept her in a coffin-sized box for seven years, relentlessly abusing and torturing her. But when the case came to court some years later, serious doubts were to emerge as to what had actually taken place.

On 19th May, 1977, Colleen Stan was hitchhiking through Red Bluff in California when she accepted a ride with Cameron Hooker, his wife Janice and their baby daughter. Hooker drove to the outskirts of the town and stopped, allowing his wife and child to leave the car. He then grabbed Colleen and blindfolded her, before fitting her with a homemade contraption that was to become known as the ‘head box’. “The purpose of the head box was to prevent people from hearing you scream,” explains Al Shamblin, a former Red Bluff police chief.

Hooker took his victim to his house, hung her by her wrists in the basement and, after whipping her, left her overnight – bound, gagged and struggling for breath. The next day, Colleen was chained to a homemade torture rack and left all day. “I didn’t understand what was going on,” she recalls. However, her ordeal was only just beginning.

After a few days, Hooker moved Colleen into a coffin-like box he had constructed and left her there for three to four months, feeding her scraps to keep her alive. Hooker had no police record or history of violence, but had developed an obsession with bondage and extreme sexual practices from an early age. By torturing his prisoner and keeping her isolated, he intended to break her spirit and make her utterly compliant. “Cameron Hooker was after the perfect slave,” explains ex-FBI agent Roy Hazelwood.

Eight months after the abduction, Hooker decided to formalise Colleen’s status as a slave and drew up a contract laying claim to her body and soul. He told her he was part of a powerful network of male slave-owners called ‘The Company’ that operated across America. Under this extraordinary fiction, Colleen was made to believe that any attempt to escape would result in her family being killed by the Company. She signed the contract and accepted her new slave name, ‘K’. “I totally believed it,” she says.

In May, 1978, Hooker moved Colleen and his family into a trailer on the outskirts of the town where he began a new stage of his plan. He put Colleen in a tiny box below the bed that he and his wife shared, and kept her there for 22 hours of every day. When not confined, Colleen was set to work in the garden, or tied to a device Hooker called the ‘stretcher’ and tortured. All this time, Hooker’s wife, Janice, was aware that her husband was keeping Colleen as a slave, but allowed it to go ahead in return for immunity from his abuse.

As time went by, Colleen’s domestic chores expanded until she was acting as a live-in nanny for the hours she was out of the box, looking after the two children Hooker and Janice now had. Hooker granted her the occasional freedom to go out, and even once allowed her to visit her family – all the time trusting in his absolute control over his victim. Colleen’s family realised she was not herself, but were happy to see that she was alive. On her return to the trailer, however, Colleen was to pay an awful price for her brief freedom, and spent the next three years in the box below the bed.

Eventually, after herself suffering abuse at Hooker’s hands, Janice told Colleen that the Company did not exist and told her to run away. With Hooker’s control now broken, Colleen escaped, returned home and contacted the police. In November, 1984, Hooker was eventually brought to trial on 17 charges of rape and sodomy.

However, what seemed like an open-and-shut case was to offer a sensational twist. Hooker’s defence lawyer argued that while his client did abduct Colleen, the sex they had was consensual. To support this claim, he produced a series of love letters written by Colleen to her supposed captor. The shocking trial that followed lasted some five weeks and explored, in the most dramatic way, the real meaning of consent, coersion and control.

Comments

If you live in the UK or Ireland you can get it on channel 5's on demand tv online, heres the link...hope it works for u guys
http://demand.five.tv/Series.aspx?seriesBaseName=TheGirlInTheBox
Aleabh
xx

Anonymous
3 Sep 08 at 9:09 pm

What's brown and sticky?

...

A STICK!

from Vogina princess

Dangerous person
25 Jul 08 at 1:39 am

hey guys im the same az madeleine, missed it and really wanna catch up on that story, is it anywhere on the net?

Flatx
20 Jul 08 at 3:19 am

I just watched the documentary.. I believe it was both ways.. she seemed like she fell in love and couldn't have the nerve to leave him??

Anonymous
17 Jul 08 at 10:49 pm

snaaaaaakes

Anonymous
28 Jun 08 at 8:10 pm

did anyone record this documentary? i missed it and cant find it online anywhere?

madeleine
15 May 08 at 10:01 pm

did anyone record this documentary? i really wanted to see it but missed it and cant find it online anywhere

madeleine
15 May 08 at 9:59 pm

where did u find that book ive been looking everywhere for it and cant find it, wot site did u find it on

alison cook
15 May 08 at 6:04 pm

What a sick sick man he deserves to die let alone be in prison!

Adam
15 May 08 at 2:15 pm

Was intersted in finding the book myself and came across this book written by the chief prosecutor in the case, hope that helps.
^ Mcguire, Christine; Carla Norton (1989). Perfect Victim: The True Story of "The Girl in the Box" by the D.A. That Prosecuted Her Captor. Dell. ISBN 978-0440204428.

Anonymous
14 May 08 at 11:30 pm

has anyone got the book to this film as i have been looking for it for a number of years??

Anonymous
12 May 08 at 9:05 am

Ah this is what public service broadcasting is all about Smiling

Anonymous
8 May 08 at 5:43 pm

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