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astara
December 11th, 2007, 03:54 AM
Article published Tuesday, December 11, 2007
MISSING LAWYER CASE
McConnell Hancock’s kidnap tale called false
Official says she recanted story during questioning
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Bishop Lawrence Hancock returns to the Safety Building after tending a parking meter.
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By LAREN WEBER (lweber@theblade.com) and IGNAZIO MESSINA (imessina@theblade.com)
BLADE STAFF WRITERS


A pregnant Toledo lawyer fabricated a story that she was kidnapped last week by three people, forced into a vehicle, and dumped off three days later just outside of Atlanta, law enforcement officials close to the investigation said last night.

Karyn McConnell Hancock, a former Toledo councilman, was reported missing Wednesday and turned up Saturday morning outside an amusement park in Cobb County, Georgia.

She said two white men and a black woman kidnapped her, Cobb County police said.

A law enforcement official, who declined to be named, said Ms. McConnell Hancock yesterday recanted her story while being questioned by Toledo police for more than nine hours.

Cobb County police Sgt. Dana Pierce yesterday morning said police there were “not putting any credence” in her story.

“We haven’t found any evidence to support what she is saying, and we haven’t found anything to the contrary,” Sergeant Pierce said.

Two days after the Cobb County police impounded Ms. McConnell Hancock’s car, it had not yet been processed for evidence.

Additionally, there were no suspect descriptions released in that jurisdiction, Sergeant Pierce said.

Police Chief Mike Navarre refused to answer questions yesterday regarding the case.

However, last night he said a news conference would be held this morning.

The abduction story grabbed national headlines.

Ms. McConnell Hancock’s husband, Bishop Lawrence Hancock, and her father, Toledo Municipal Court Judge C. Allen
McConnell, appeared on national television shows before and after she was found Saturday.

The couple could not be reached for comment last night; Judge McConnell declined comment last night.

J. Christopher Anderson, a Lucas County assistant prosecutor, said that if any charges are filed, they could be either misdemeanor, felony, or a combination.

Among them could be felony obstructing justice if authorities believe lies were told regarding being a victim in a criminal activity.

Other possible charges could include making false police reports, which is a misdemeanor, or inducing panic, which could be either a felony or a misdemeanor.

Ms. McConnell Hancock, 35, was last seen at her law office on North Michigan Street in downtown Toledo about 9 a.m. Wednesday. Bishop Hancock said he received a call that evening from a day-care center saying that his wife had not picked up their 3-year-old son. He reported his wife missing at 10:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Toledo police said that Ms. McConnell Hancock’s debit card was used to withdraw several hundred dollars Wednesday night and that she withdrew $1,000 cash from a credit card account Nov. 14.

On Thursday, Bishop Hancock told police, he received a two-minute phone call from his wife in which she told him she had been kidnapped near the Lucas County Juvenile Justice Center building downtown.

Family and friends held prayer vigils for Ms. McConnell Hancock’s safe return.

She was found in Cobb County, 14 miles northwest of Atlanta, about 7 a.m. Saturday. She said her abductors let her out of a vehicle that was not her own.

Cobb County police found Ms. McConnell Hancock’s 2005 black Chrysler 300 later that day about 1½ miles from where she was found.

Bishop Hancock, who was not in the room at the Safety Building when his wife was being questioned, left police headquarters twice during the afternoon to put money into a parking meter on Beech Street, where his Mercedes Benz was parked.

Each time, Bishop Hancock asked reporters to respect him and his wife by leaving them alone.

“Today and under these circumstances, this is not appropriate,” he said. He did not elaborate.

Ms. McConnell Hancock left the Safety Building through a side door about 6:30 p.m., avoiding reporters who were waiting in the lobby to talk to her.

Bishop Hancock and founder of Final Harvest Church in South Toledo.

On Sunday, Judge McConnell told the media that he thought his daughter’s abductors were targeting him. The judge said he received suspicious phone calls last month, but said he had no idea who the callers were. He said his daughter did not know or recognize her kidnappers.

Ms. McConnell Hancock flew back to Toledo Saturday evening.

Scott Wilson, a spokesman at the FBI’s Cleveland office, said that if someone is abducted and taken across state lines, it falls under federal statutes.

The FBI over the weekend said Toledo police would run the investigation. Yesterday, Agent Wilson said it was a joint investigation.

Bishop Hancock on Saturday disputed a police report that indicated he said a piece of luggage was missing from the couple’s home the night he reported his wife missing.

“[Police] came to my house and asked if any luggage was missing and I said no,” he told The Blade. “It was a communication error.”

Bishop Hancock said he looked, while police were in the home, for a small bag his wife often used. “I found the bag and told them there was none missing.”

Ms. McConnell Hancock was sued in Lucas County Common Pleas Court Nov. 27 by a former client who claimed she had negotiated a $10,000 settlement for him in a car accident case, but that he never received payment.

Ms. McConnell Hancock owes the Internal Revenue Service $97,524 for unpaid income taxes for the years 2001, 2002, and 2003, according to liens on file with the Lucas County recorder.

The records showed she owed $39,789 for 2001, $43,928 for 2002, and $13,807 for 2003.

The IRS filed liens for the 2001 and 2002 tax obligations in August, 2005, and followed up on Sept. 21, 2006, with a lien for the year 2003.

Lee Banks, chief deputy Lucas County recorder, said the liens have not been released by the IRS, which indicates that they are still in effect

disnut8
December 11th, 2007, 07:15 AM
The Runaway Bride ran AWAY from Atlanta. Now we have the Runaway Lawyer running TO Atlanta. This lawyer is absolutely crazy. Who the hell in their right mind would WANT to drive from Toledo to Atlanta? We've done that drive several times. It is boring as HELL!