Monday, November 15, 2010

Matthew Hoffman

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Police cruisers blocked off a park Monday morning frequented by a man who was arrested after a 13-year-old girl was found in his home, bound and gagged but alive, four days after disappearing with her family. The whereabouts of her mother, brother and another woman remained a mystery.
Ten miles from home, a 13-year-old girl was found bound and gagged but alive four days after disappearing with her family. The whereabouts of her mother, brother and another woman remained a mystery, however.
A man was arrested Sunday at the home where Sarah Maynard was found in this central Ohio city, and authorities hope he will provide information leading to the others, Knox County Sheriff David Barber said.
“We were hopeful that we would find more than one” of the missing people in Hoffman’s house, Barber said. “Our information was definite that it was most likely that Sarah was going to be in that house.”
Barber did not say what led investigators to the two-story tan-sided house where they found the girl bound in the basement. Matthew J. Hoffman, 30, was arrested and charged with kidnapping.
Barber said more charges are expected against Hoffman, who lives at the home about 40 miles north of Columbus.
On Monday morning, Mount Vernon police cruisers blocked off Foundation Park, a public park with a lake a few blocks from Hoffman’s home, because an officer patrolling overnight had found items potentially related to the investigation, police Capt. George Hartz said. He would not say what was found, but said the park would remain closed until police had determined whether it should considered a crime scene.
Neighbors had said Hoffman frequented the park, which was once a gravel quarry and now has ponds where people fish. It was difficult Monday to see any police activity through the thick trees bordering the park.
Barber was scheduled to brief reporters Monday afternoon. His office said no updated information would be released until that time.
Hoffman was being held in the county jail, where personnel would not comment on whether he had an attorney. A bond hearing was expected to be held Monday.
Barber said the girl was hospitalized in good condition, but he would give no details and did not say if she had been sexually abused.
Sarah, her mother, 32-year-old Tina Herrmann, her 10-year-old brother, Kody, and Herrmann’s 41-year-old friend Stephanie Sprang disappeared Wednesday from Herrmann’s home in nearby Howard. Barber said DNA testing on blood found in that house was expected to begin Monday.
Authorities believe the girl had been “under the control” of Hoffman since Wednesday, when she and her brother last attended school, the sheriff said. He did not know if Hoffman was connected to either Herrmann or Sprang, but said he is not the ex-boyfriend of either woman.
“At this time, whether he’s connected to the family or whether he connected himself to the family … a lot of that remains to be seen as the investigation continues,” Barber said.
Authorities had talked to the girl but would not release any details because the investigation is ongoing, Barber said.
Authorities blocked off about a half block on either side of the home as they investigated early Sunday afternoon, keeping people from entering or leaving about a half dozen homes. But by late Sunday afternoon, the only sign of investigative activity was red and white evidence tape sealing the front door of the home.
The house with green shutters and front door and a large television antenna on the roof sits in a lower-middle-income neighborhood with two bars within a block. Holly grows through the weathered slats of the porch. A sheet covered one window, and blinds were pulled down on the rest.
Dawna Davis, 35, who lives next door to Hoffman, said she told her children to stay indoors when he was out. She said he moved in alone about a year ago and that a girlfriend lived with him temporarily with her son until about a month ago.
“He would sit and listen to us up in a tree. He had a hammock and he would sit there and listen to us,” she said. “He was just different. He was very different.”
Davis said Hoffman did tree trimming work and had built a fire Wednesday night in his backyard, where there was a mound of ashes Sunday with tree parts on it. She said he walked to Foundation Park almost every day and was a “nature person” who collected leaves.
Attempts to reach relatives of Hoffman and of Sarah were unsuccessful Sunday.
Herrmann was reported missing Wednesday when she did not show up for work at a local Dairy Queen. Barber has said blood indicating an injury had been found in her home, where Sprang’s vehicle was in the driveway.
Herrmann’s pickup truck had been found Thursday night near the Kenyon College campus, leading to a lockdown at the school.


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