BARRON, WIS. – Elizabeth Smart couldn't escape her fame.
Returning to her Salt Lake City home after she was abducted and held captive for nine months as a teenager in 2003, Smart was recognized by strangers at the grocery store and saw her own face on magazine covers. She had survived horrors, but then she had to begin another journey.
"I thought I could just go back to who I was before I was kidnapped. … I didn't know at that point in time that I would never be that girl ever again, and that was one of the hardest things coming home," Smart told a crowd of about 1,300 people jammed into the Barron High School gymnasium on Friday night — a community trying to understand how they could best support their own famous kidnapping victim, Jayme Closs.
Few other people in the world have any idea what it is like to be Jayme, snatched at age 13 from her home outside Barron five months ago, her captor shooting both of her parents before dragging her into his car trunk, her mouth, wrists and ankles taped.
Closs escaped nearly three months later from a cabin near Gordon, Wis., when her captor left for a while and she ran outside and approached a neighbor who was walking her dog.
Jake Patterson, 21, was soon arrested and is being held on charges of murder, kidnapping and armed burglary.
Smart, now a 31-year-old wife and mother of three, offered insight to the community over a couple of days this week, capped by a speech that captivated the crowd.
It was part of her broader effort to raise awareness and help child crime victims and their families through speaking engagements, books and her foundation.