Canton, NY – Police: NY Couple Arrested In Amish Girls’ Kidnapping Planned To Abduct Other Children

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    In this Friday, Aug. 15, 2014 photo, deputies from the St. Lawrence County Sheriff’s Department escort Nicole F. Vaisey, left, and Stephen M. Howells II, to their arraignment on first-degree kidnapping charges at Fowler Town Court in Fowler, N.Y. The couple accused of kidnapping two young Amish sisters were prowling for easy targets and may have also planned to abduct other children, St. Lawrence County Sheriff Kevin Wells said Saturday. (AP Photo/Watertown Daily Times, Melanie Kimber Lago) Canton, NY – The northern New York couple charged in the kidnapping of two young Amish sisters were prowling for easy targets and sexually abused the girls before letting them go, authorities say.

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    The couple were arrested and arraigned Friday on charges of kidnapping with the intent to physically or sexually abuse the 7-year-old and 12-year-old sisters.

    St. Lawrence County District Attorney Mary Rain said Saturday that the girls were sexually abused, and the county sheriff said Stephen Howells Jr. and Nicole Vaisey may have planned to abduct other children.

    “We felt that there was the definite potential that there was going to be other victims,” St. Lawrence County Sheriff Kevin Wells said.

    Howells, 39, and Vaisey, 25, are being held without bail and have a preliminary court appearance scheduled Thursday.

    The sheriff said the Hermon couple “were targeting opportunities” and did not necessarily grab the girls because they were Amish.
    Mary Rain, left, District Attorney for St. Lawrence County, left, and county Sheriff Kevin M. Wells are followed by a pair of FBI agents while on their way to a news conference Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014 in Canton, N.Y. Wells briefed the media on the arrest of two people in suspected connection with the abduction of two young Amish sisters from their family’s roadside vegetable stand on Wednesday, Aug. 13. (AP Photo/Watertown Daily Times, Melanie Kimber Lago)
    “There was a lot of thought process that went into this,” Wells said. “They were looking for opportunities to victimize.”

    The sisters were abducted Wednesday from a farm stand in front of the family’s home in Oswegatchie, near the Canadian border. They were set free by their captors about 24 hours later and turned up safe at the door of a house 15 miles from where they were taken.

    Vaisey’s lawyer, Bradford Riendeau told The New York Times that Howells had abused Vaisey and treated her submissively. He said she made a “voluntary statement” to investigators after her arrest and was obtaining an order of protection against him.

    “She appears to have been the slave and he was the master,” Riendeau told the newspaper.

    There was no answer Saturday at the St. Lawrence County Conflict Defender’s Office, which is representing Howells.
    A Sheriff’s Department vehicle is parked beyond the evidence tape at a home in Hermon, N.Y., Saturday, Aug. 16, 2014 as authorities search for evidence in the home shared by Stephen Howells II and Nicole F. Vaisey. The couple were arraigned on Friday, Aug. 15 on charges of first-degree kidnapping with the intent to physically harm or sexually abuse the victims. (AP Photo/Watertown Daily Times, Melanie Kimber Lago)
    Wells said the girls were able to provide details to investigators about their time in captivity.

    The Associated Press generally does not identify people who may be victims of sexual abuse.

    The kidnappings touched off a massive search in the family’s remote farming community. Searchers scoured the community of about 4,000 people, but were hampered by a lack of photos of the girls.

    The Amish typically avoid modern technology, and the family had to work with an artist who spoke their language, a German dialect known as Pennsylvania Dutch, to produce a sketch of the older girl.


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    9 Comments
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    yaakov doe
    Member
    yaakov doe
    9 years ago

    They look lite there’s something wrong with them. Up in the North country are are inbred families that live in isolation and sunsist by growing their own food and poaching game. I beleive the locals refer to them as “ridge runners”.

    9 years ago

    If they lived in Ramapo and were Frum, the court would set them free and the judge would give them community service. The girls would be paid big gelt and blamed for the abuse.