Yet 12-year-old Alexandria and 8-year-old Kyliyah Bain
went home to their father Friday alive, with no apparent injuries other
than being tired, scared and itchy from poison ivy. They told the
officers who found them that they had not had food or water for three
days, said Mississippi Highway Patrol Master Sgt. Steve Crawford.
Beverly Goodman, the aunt of the slain mother, Jo Ann Bain, said she was relieved the girls were home but still saddened by the killings of Bain and Bain's 14-year-old daughter Adrienne.
"He's
been missing for so long. How do you hide out from 350 million people?"
Goodman said. "I thought they were going to find them dead — the girls
and him — so I am very, very relieved that those girls are home and
they're not dead, like I figured they were gonna be."
At
one point, Mayes claimed to be the girls' father. That may be why he
spared them, one criminologist said. It also may be that while he wanted
to escape prosecution, he didn't believe the girls were better off
dead. And he was close to the family, described as an uncle-like figure
who smiled cheek-to-cheek with the girls in Facebook photos.
"He
probably developed an attachment to them, and even the most vicious of
killers can separate the world into people they care about, people they
detest and people they don't care about," said James Alan Fox, a
criminologist at Northeastern University.
Authorities
said Mayes, 35, killed Jo Ann Bain and 14-year-old Adrienne on April 27
in Whiteville, Tenn. Mayes' wife, Teresa Mayes, is charged with murder
in the killings. She told investigators she saw her husband kill the
mother and oldest girl, then drove him, the younger children and the
bodies to Mississippi, according to court documents. His mother, Mary Mayes, also is charged in the kidnapping but maintains she is not guilty.
Adam Mayes
was hiding out with the girls in the woods just miles from his home in
Mississippi, and some 90 miles from where the sisters were kidnapped in
Tennessee. The area is frequented by hunters and dotted with deer
hunting stands and other wood structures that one law enforcement
official said may have been used for shelter.
An officer combing through the area spotted Alexandria Bain
face down on the ground Thursday evening about 100 yards behind a
church. They also saw the younger girl and Mayes prone on the ground.
Officers yelled for Mayes to show his hands, but he got to his knees,
pulled a 9mm pistol from his waistband and shot himself in the head,
said Aaron T. Ford, special agent in charge of the FBI's Memphis, Tenn.,
office. Mayes did not say anything before shooting himself, and he did
not brandish the gun toward the girls or officers.
The
girls only sat up and stayed in place when Mayes shot himself, said Lt.
Lee Ellington with the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries
and Parks.
"They were rather stoic in one sense and relieved," he said. "I heard the older girl tell her sister, 'Now we can go home.'"
Guntown
Police Chief Michael Hall previously said Mayes also had a sawed-off
shotgun and a rifle with him. But Albert Santa Cruz, commissioner of the
Mississippi Department of Public Safety, said Mayes had only the pistol
he used to kill himself.
Many
questions remained about what exactly happened: Investigators have not
said what the girls have told them since their rescue. Officers who were
there said the main focus was to get the girls to safety, not question
them on the scene. Authorities also have not said why Mayes may have
wanted to kidnap the children or kill their mother and sister. And it
wasn't known how they survived in the woods. continue reading
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