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Hannah Anderson’s father says ‘healing process will be slow’

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SAN DIEGO -- Hannah Anderson has returned to California after the kidnapping ordeal her father described as “horrific.”

“The healing process will be slow. She has been through a tremendous, horrific ordeal,” Brett Anderson said at a press conference.

Anderson urged the media to give his daughter her privacy.

In interviews with law enforcement, the girl made it “very clear” that she is “a victim in every sense of the word,” San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said.

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Shel is “doing as well as can be expected” for someone who was kidnapped and held for days against her will “from the time she left Boulevard to the time she was recovered in Lake Morehead,” Idaho, Gore said.

Only after she was rescued and recovering in a hospital did Hannah learn that James Lee DiMaggio, killed Saturday by law enforcement, is believed to have slain her mother and 8-year-old brother, Gore said.

“Everybody, the FBI, our investigators, everybody are convinced that there is no way she was anything but the worst kind of victim in this,” Gore said in an interview with The Times.

Gore also spoke at a press conference Monday afternoon alongside Hannah’s father and FBI officials.

“Without you, who knows how long this would have gone on,” he said.

Gore declined to reveal many more details of the abduction, saying only that Hannah was “under extreme duress.” He told The Times there were “extensive threats” and a weapon.

He also did not elaborate on earlier statements from authorities who said they believe DiMaggio’s crime spree was planned.

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Gore said only that he does not believe it was “spur of the moment.”

In an interview, Gore said he believes DiMaggio shielded Hannah from the killings of her mother and brother by keeping her in an area of the property where she couldn’t see everything.

DiMaggio’s death ended a tense, multi-state manhunt that began Aug. 4, when firefighters found the bodies of Hannah’s mother and younger brother at DiMaggio’s burning home in the community of Boulevard, east of San Diego.

The girl’s disappearance prompted missing-child Amber Alert text messages to the public in several Western states. It was the first time in California that a statewide Amber Alert was sent by text message to almost all cellphone users.

FBI officials said they are continuing to investigate the circumstances surrounding the fatal shooting of DiMaggio in Idaho. DiMaggio fired at least once, although they declined to say whether he fired the first shot.

Gore said investigators may never know what prompted DiMaggio’s alleged crimes.

“Frequently when these terrible acts occur, these horrible crimes, with the subject dead, you just can’t come up with a motive,” Gore said. “Everybody wants a rational explanation for an irrational act, but you just can’t find one.”

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kate.mather@latimes.com

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