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'Kidnapped' attorney lied, had a 'meltdown' says husband
By M&C US News
Dec 11, 2007, 18:12 GMT

A pregnant attorney who vanished for four days last week now says her story of being kidnapped at gunpoint and taken to Georgia was all made up, police said Tuesday. Her husband said she had "a meltdown."

Karyn McConnell Hancock, a former Toledo city councilwoman, had disappeared Wednesday and was found Saturday near Atlanta.

Her husband said Monday that his 35-year-old wife, six months pregnant with her second child, claimed she was kidnapped by two men and a woman.

Police said at a news conference that she recanted Monday after eight hours of questioning. Hancock will likely be charged with making a false police report, said Police Chief Mike Navarre.

Hancock's husband, Lawrence Hancock, said his wife has been having psychological problems for several years.

"She experienced a meltdown and attempted to handle those matters without the assistance of professional help or others. Karyn elected to leave everything because she felt that she was unable to continue," he said.

Hancock's father, C. Allen McConnell, is a Toledo Municipal Court judge, and her husband is bishop of Final Harvest Church in Toledo. The husband had said earlier that he believed the purported kidnapping had something to do with a case McConnell handled before he was a judge.

Hamcock called her husband from a restaurant pay phone Thursday afternoon, saying "they have me."

Investigators don't think her husband or anyone else knew what she was doing, authorities said Tuesday.

Hancock was found after she flagged down a motorist near at Six Flags in Austell, Ga., and the motorist called police, authorities had said. Her car was found nearby.

One of the attorney's former clients recently filed a lawsuit against her, accusing her of taking money from him that he was owed from an accident settlement. In the suit, Maurice Morris, of Toledo, said Hancock negotiated a settlement but never gave him the $10,000 settlement.

Both he and his father-in-law, McConnell, had appeared on NBC's "Today" show Monday to discuss the case. At the time, the judge said the family needed more time to find out "what went on, what went wrong and what happened with her."

 



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