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Posted: 5/7/2013 12:43:29 PM EST
FILE - This Aug. 27, 2009 file family photo provided by Carl Probyn shows his stepdaughter, Jaycee Lee Dugard, who went missing in 1991. The California couple charged with kidnapping and raping Jaycee Dugard and holding her captive for 18 years are due back in court Thursday, April 7, 2011, as prosecutors and defense lawyers continue talks on a possible plea deal. Dugard was abducted in June 1991 on her way to school in South Lake Tahoe. Then 11, she was held for 18 years by Phillip and Nancy Garrido. She was raped repeatedly by Garrido and gave birth to two daughters. Dugard was freed after she and her two children appeared in public with Phillip Garrido and a police interrogation revealed her identity. Convicted of kidnapping and rape, Garrido was sentenced to 431 years in prison and his wife 36 years to life. (AP Photo/Carl Probyn, File)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 12:23:36 PM EST
These undated handout photos provided by the FBI show Amanda Berry, left, and Georgina "Gina" Dejesus. Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath said he thinks Berry, DeJesus and Michelle Knight were tied up at the house and held there since they were in their teens or early 20s. Berry and the two other women who went missing a decade ago were found on Monday, May 6, 2013 elating family members and friends who'd longed to see them again. (AP Photo/FBI)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 10:43:30 AM EST
FILE - In this Wednesday, April 24, 2013 file photo, Saqa Farah, the mother of 12 children from a nomadic goat herding family in northern Somalia, holds her 1-year-old baby Abdi Noor Hussein who is suffering from measles, in the isolation ward of the Benadir hospital in Mogadishu, Somalia. A new report from the aid group Save the Children released Tuesday, May 7, 2013 says more than 1 million babies die on their day of birth every year and the 14 countries with the highest rates of first-day deaths all being in Africa, with the top five being Somalia, Congo, Mali, Sierra Leone and Central African Republic. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 10:32:41 AM EST
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, right, speaks as he poses for a family photo with his counterpart from France, Pierre Moscovici, left, as part of the 25th meeting of the German French Finance and Economy Council in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, May 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 10:32:41 AM EST
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, second right, lifts a fist as he poses for a family photo with his counterpart from France, Pierre Moscovici, second left, the President of the Federal Bank of France, Christian Noyer, left, and the President of the German Federal Bank, Jens Weidmann, right, as part of the 25th meeting of the German French Finance and Economy Council in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, May 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 9:43:23 AM EST
This image provided by the FBI shows an undated photo of Georgina "Gina" Dejesus. Police Chief Michael McGrath said he thinks Amanda Berry, DeJesus and Michelle Knight were tied up at the house and held there since they were in their teens or early 20s. Berry and the two other women who went missing a decade ago were found on Monday, May 6, 2013 elating family members and friends who'd longed to see them again. (AP Photo/FBI)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 9:43:23 AM EST
This image provided by the FBI shows an undated photo of Amanda Berry. The voice of the long-missing woman was frantic and breathless, choking back tears. "Help me. I'm Amanda Berry," she told a 911 dispatcher. "I've been kidnapped and I've been missing for 10 years and I'm, I'm here, I'm free now." Those words led police to a house near downtown Cleveland where Berry and two other women who went missing a decade ago were found on Monday, elating family members and friends who'd longed to see them again. (AP Photo/FBI)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 9:43:23 AM EST
These undated handout photos provided by the FBI show Amanda Berry, left, and Georgina "Gina" Dejesus. Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath said he thinks Berry, DeJesus and Michelle Knight were tied up at the house and held there since they were in their teens or early 20s. Berry and the two other women who went missing a decade ago were found on Monday, May 6, 2013 elating family members and friends who'd longed to see them again. (AP Photo/FBI)
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Posted: 5/7/2013 9:35:26 AM EST
The photo provided by Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Duesseldorf, western Germany, shows Elena Zhidkova as Venus in front of the choir in a scene of the the opera 'Tannhaeuser' during the dress rehearsal on April 30, 2013. The modern production of Richard Wagner’s opera Tannhauser has caused a stir in Germany because of Nazi-themed scenes showing people dying in gas chambers and a family getting their heads shaved and executed. A spokeswoman for the Duesseldorf opera house said Tuesday that members of the audience “booed and were shocked” by Saturday’s, May 3, 2013 opening performance. (AP Photo/Deutsche Oper am Rhein, Hans Joerg Michel) Mandatory Credit
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Posted: 5/7/2013 9:35:26 AM EST
The photo provided by Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Duesseldorf, western Germany, shows Markus Eiche, left, as Wolfram and Elisabet Strid as Elisabeth in a scene of the the opera 'Tannhaeuser' during the dress rehearsal on April 30, 2013. The modern production of Richard Wagner’s opera Tannhauser has caused a stir in Germany because of Nazi-themed scenes showing people dying in gas chambers and a family getting their heads shaved and executed. A spokeswoman for the Dusseldorf opera house said Tuesday that members of the audience “booed and were shocked” by Saturday’s, May 3, 2013 opening performance. (AP Photo/Deutsche Oper am Rhein, Hans Joerg Michel) Mandatory Credit
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Posted: 5/7/2013 9:35:26 AM EST
The photo provided by Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Duesseldorf, western Germany, shows Markus Eiche, left, as Wolfram and Thorsten Gruembel as Landgraf performing in front of the choir in a scene of the the opera 'Tannhaeuser' during the dress rehearsal on April 30, 2013. The modern production of Richard Wagner’s opera Tannhauser has caused a stir in Germany because of Nazi-themed scenes showing people dying in gas chambers and a family getting their heads shaved and executed. A spokeswoman for the Duesseldorf opera house said Tuesday that members of the audience “booed and were shocked” by Saturday’s, May 3, 2013 opening performance. (AP Photo/Deutsche Oper am Rhein, Hans Joerg Michel) Mandatory Credit
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Posted: 5/7/2013 3:50:29 AM EST
(L-R) Josefa Idem, Anna Maria Cancellieri, Cecile Kyenge, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, Prime Minister Enrico Letta, Emma Bonino, Beatrice Lorenzin, Maria Chiara Carrozza and Nunzia De Girolamo pose for a family photo after 21 ministers were sworn in, at Quirinale palace in Rome in this April 28, 2013 file photo. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/Files
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Posted: 5/7/2013 3:50:29 AM EST
(L-R) Josefa Idem, Anna Maria Cancellieri, Cecile Kyenge, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, Prime Minister Enrico Letta, Emma Bonino, Beatrice Lorenzin, Maria Chiara Carrozza and Nunzia De Girolamo pose for a family photo after 21 ministers were sworn in, at Quirinale palace in Rome in this April 28, 2013 file photo. REUTERS/Remo Casilli/Files
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Posted: 5/6/2013 1:38:17 PM EST
Casaundra Dotts Ho, right, and her husband Ben, pose for a family photo Saturday, May 4, 2013 after Casaundra Dotts Ho graduated in the Washington State University College of Veterinary Medicine commencement ceremony, at Beasley Coliseum in Pullman, Wash. The couple got married Friday, and she wore her wedding dress under her graduation robe during the commencement ceremony. (AP Photo/Moscow-Pullman Daily News, Dean Hare)
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Posted: 5/6/2013 1:23:30 PM EST
Family members stand near a boy injured in an explosion at a local hospital in Pakistani tribal area of Parachinar, Monday, May 6, 2013. A bomb blast tore through a political rally held by an Islamist party in northwest Pakistan Monday, killing many people and wounding dozens more as the country’s already bloody election race gets even more dangerous ahead of the May 11 vote. (AP Photo/Ali Murtaza)
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Posted: 5/6/2013 11:13:29 AM EST
This 1965 photo provided by Anne D’Innocenzio shows her in the arms of her father, with her mother, sister and brother on a ship heading home from a family sojourn in Italy. As an adult, D’Innocenzio continues to enjoy vacationing with her mother, even though their travel styles sometimes differ and their roles have reversed a bit, with D’Innocenzio doing more of the caretaking for her aging parent. (AP Photo)
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Posted: 5/6/2013 11:13:29 AM EST
This 2012 photo provided by Anne D’Innocenzio shows her on the right with her sister Donna in the middle and mother Marie on the left in Rudesheim, Germany, on a port call they made while taking a Rhine River cruise together. D’Innocenzio grew up taking family trips with her parents and siblings, and continues to enjoy vacationing with her mother, even though their travel styles sometimes differ and their roles have reversed a bit, with D’Innocenzio doing more of the caretaking for her aging parent. (AP Photo)
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Posted: 5/6/2013 6:08:39 AM EST
In this image provided by Anna Tabakh, she, foreground left, and her older brother Ilya, foreground right, stand with their family after arriving at the Kansas City airport in December 1990, a year before the collapse of the Soviet Union. At age 5, Anna didn't know a word of English, en route with her parents from the Soviet Union to a new home in Kansas City, Mo. The beginning was traumatic, she says, now 27, but the transition to American life was relatively smooth - a result that some social scientists would say was partly due to her age. Back row from left are her mother, Diana Tabakh; her aunt, Mila Portman; cousin, Boris Portman; and her father's cousin, George Portman; and her father, Eugene Tabakh. (AP Photo/Anna Tabakh)
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Posted: 5/6/2013 6:08:39 AM EST
In this image provided by Anna Tabakh, she and her older brother, Ilya, stand with their family after arriving at the Kansas City, Mo. airport in December 1990, a year before the collapse of the Soviet Union. At age 5, Anna didn't know a word of English, en route with her parents from the Soviet Union to a new home in Kansas City, Mo. The beginning was traumatic, she says, now 27, but the transition to American life was relatively smooth - a result that some social scientists would say was partly due to her age. (AP Photo/Anna Tabakh)
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Posted: 5/6/2013 4:43:17 AM EST
In this image provided by Anna Tabakh, she, foreground left, and her older brother Ilya, foreground right, stand with their family after arriving at the Kansas City airport in December 1990, a year before the collapse of the Soviet Union. At age 5, Anna didn't know a word of English, en route with her parents from the Soviet Union to a new home in Kansas City, Mo. The beginning was traumatic, she says, now 27, but the transition to American life was relatively smooth - a result that some social scientists would say was partly due to her age. Back row from left are her mother, Diana Tabakh; her aunt, Mila Portman; cousin, Boris Portman; and her father's cousin, George Portman; and her father, Eugene Tabakh. (AP Photo/Anna Tabakh)