Home Scandal and Gossip Stockholm syndrome? Was Arizona autistic teen, 14, kidnapped?

Stockholm syndrome? Was Arizona autistic teen, 14, kidnapped?

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Alicia Navarro heard arguing with man day before turning up at Montana police station
Alicia Navarro heard arguing with man day before turning up at Montana police station
Alicia Navarro Stockholm syndrome kidnaping victim.
Alicia Navarro Stockholm syndrome: Was Glendale, Arizona girl victim of kidnapping? Pictured then 14 year old autistic teen girl.

Alicia Navarro Stockholm syndrome: In love with her predator abductor? Glendale, Arizona teen who went missing for 4 years may have been victim of kidnapping but not aware of crime. 

Lured and abducted by an online predator? FBI authorities are now surmising that a 19 year old Glendale, Arizona, teen girl who turned up thousands of miles at a Montana police station earlier this week after mysteriously disappearing over the course of 4 years may have been a victim of a kidnapping and now in the throes of Stockholm syndrome.

The autistic teenager, now 18, walked into a police station in Montana this week ready to leave wherever it was she had been living. 

The police station in Havre was 1,400 miles from her home in Glendale, Arizona. 

Mystery man arrested blocks from where she turned up to Montana police station

Much of what happened to Alicia Navarro remains unknown, including whether she went willingly with anyone when she vanished from her Arizona home in 2019, and whether she now intends to go home.

After she presented herself to police in Havre, Montana, on Wednesday, a man was arrested in an apartment just blocks away. 

His arrest is believed to be in connection with Alicia’s disappearance but it’s unclear exactly who he is, or what he is being held for. 

Glendale Police in Arizona are leading the investigation.

When they spoke with Alicia over FaceTime, she told them that she hadn’t been harmed. 

An officer asks her: ‘Did anybody hurt you in any way?’

‘No, nobody hurt me,’ Navarro replied. 

In love with her captor? 

Former FBI agent Jim Egleston told AZ.com that she may be in the throes of Stockholm syndrome – a psychological condition where victims of kidnapping begin to empathize and even love their captors. 

Explained the FBI agent: ‘One of the keys to unraveling what happened to her and holding whoever may have been with her responsible, the investigators are going to have to spend time and develop trust and rapport with her over a series of contacts and interviews. 

‘Regardless of whether or not she’s been diagnosed with autism, what strikes me is what I saw in many of the victims that I helped recover when I was working those cases.  

‘And that is they often don’t recognize that they are a victim. It used to be referred to as Stockholm Syndrome. Now it’s referred to as trauma bonding’. 

The former fed believes the investigation will reveal that a crime was committed and that someone may have put Navarro through a harrowing experience.

When she vanished from her family home in 2019, Alicia left a note for her mother that read: ‘I ran away. I will be back. I swear. I’m sorry.’ 

Since then, there had been no sign of her. 

Free to go home – but where is home? 

Her mother Jessica Nunez over the years had pleaded for information about her whereabouts, paying for billboards in multiple states in the hopes that someone may lead her to her daughter. 

Since she was found, Jessica has updated her public Facebook page – where she had been appealing for information – to speak of her relief. 

‘I want to give glory to god for answering my prayers. Miracles do exist – never lose hope. My daughter was missing since September 2019. She has been found safe. I do not know the details. She is my daughter, she is alive and she is safe. 

‘I don’t have details but the important thing is she is alive. 

‘I want to thank God and the community.’  

Since her reappearance, Alicia has ‘spoken briefly’ with her mom, with the teen yet to physically re-unite with her mother.

Police have not revealed if Navarro had been living with anyone during the last four years or why she ran away.

The teen has not made her intentions clear on whether she would return to Glendale.

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