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Eight Charged After Man Missing For 27 Years Found In Neighbor’s Basement
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Eight Charged After Man Missing For 27 Years Found In Neighbor’s Basement

Eight Charged After Man Missing For 27 Years Found In Neighbor’s BasementUpdate: Eight Charged After Man Missing For 27 Years Found In Neighbor’s BasementEight Charged In Case Of Man Kidnapped At 17 And Held For 27 Years In Neighbor’s BasementEight Charged In Case Of Man Missing For 27 Years And Found In Neighbor’s BasementUpdate: Eight Charged In Case Of Man Held For 27 Years In Neighbor’s BasementUpdate In Case Of Kidnapped Man Missing For 27 Years As Police Charge Eight SuspectsEight Charged In Case Of Kidnapped Man Missing For 27 YearsEight People Charged After Rescue Of Omar Bin Omran, The Man Missing Since Age 17Eight People Charged After The Rescue Of Omar Bin Omran, The Man Who Went Missing 27 Years AgoUpdate: Police Arrest Perpetrators Allegedly Responsible For Holding Man In Basement For 27 Years
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Eight suspects have been charged for their involvement in the kidnapping of Omar bin Omran, the Algerian man who was held captive in his neighbor’s basement for nearly 27 years.

Omar vanished from his family home in El Guedid, Djelfa, when he was 17. His family believed all along that he was among the estimated 200,000 people killed or up to 20,000 people abducted during the bloody Algerian Civil War, which lasted from 1992 to 2002.

Highlights
  • Eight people have been charged after Omar bin Omran was discovered living under captivity in his neighbor's basement.
  • Omar is in "good shape," and has been receiving medical care, his cousin said.
  • The 61-year-old man accused of holding Omar attempted to flee but was seized by police.

The man was rescued on May 12 after the sister of a neighbor hinted at his whereabouts in a social media post amid an inheritance dispute with her brother.

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    Eight people have been charged for their involvement in the kidnapping of Omar bin Omran, the man who went missing as a teen and was recently rescued from his neighbor’s basement

    Image credits: EnnaharTv

    Police quickly obtained a search warrant for the house, located less than a few hundred meters away from where Omar grew up, and found him hidden in a sheep pen under haystacks.

    A local court official said: “Following this report, the general prosecutor ordered the national gendarmerie to open an in-depth investigation, and officers went to the house in question.”

    “They found him in a stable, where the suspect keeps his sheep, [the cellar trapdoor] covered in hay, and he was thankfully saved,” Omar’s cousin Khaled Rgueb said.

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    The 45-year-old vanished from his home in Djelfa, Algeria, when he was 17

    Image credits: EnnaharTv

    Khaled said his cousin had appeared to be “in good shape” when he reunited with him at the local hospital where authorities sent him for treatment.

    “He is currently getting help and has been receiving medical care, both physical and psychological.”

    “He was able to speak to me and recognize me; his situation is not critical or bad. He is in good shape but he is currently receiving help to reintegrate into society and overcome what he went through.”

    According to Algerian media reports, Omar told his relatives that he was unable to escape because he was under a “spell” that his captor had cast on him. He still learned about his family’s news, including his mother’s death in 2007, by looking at them through the stable window.

    His family believed he was among the estimated 200,000 people killed or up to 20,000 people abducted during the bloody Algerian Civil War

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    Image credits: EnnaharTv

    The 61-year-old man accused of holding Omar reportedly attempted to flee but was seized by police.

    According to Algeria’s Judicial Council, eight people have been charged for the crime of abducting the man, now aged 45.

    Six suspects have been detained, while two others have been placed under judicial supervision, meaning they can remain free while facing trial.

    “A judicial investigation has been opened against the main suspect for the crime of kidnapping and luring a person, detaining a person without an order from the competent authorities and outside the cases permitted by the law, as well as human trafficking of a victim in a status of vulnerability,” the council informed.

    The secondary suspects were charged with abetting a crime by concealing the place where Omar was held captive and not informing authorities.

    Algerian officials have said the “perpetrator of this heinous crime” will be punished severely.

    Omar was finally rescued on May 12 after the sister of a neighbor hinted at his whereabouts in a social media post

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    Another horrible case of long-term abductions made headlines in 2013 when three women from Ohio, missing for more than a decade, were discovered alive in the home of Ariel Castro, a recently fired bus driver for the city school system in Cleveland.

    Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and Michelle Knight were held captive by the former bus driver, who had chained, beaten, and starved them. Amanda, who gave birth to Castro’s daughter in captivity, eventually managed to run for freedom and alert the neighbors.

    In 2023, Rudy Farias was found sleeping in front of a church, severely beaten. His mother, Janie Santana, had reported him missing when he was 17 years old on March 6, 2015.

    After the police found him, Rudy revealed that his mother had kept him at home, drugging and abusing him for years, forcing him to sleep in the same bed as her, and telling him that he “had to be her husband.” Rudy reportedly managed to steal his mother’s car and ran away because he was “tired of living like a slave.”

    “Makes you wonder about all the other missing people out there,” a social media user wrote

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    Marina Urman

    Marina Urman

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

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    Marina is a journalist at Bored Panda. Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, she holds a Bachelor of Social Science. In her spare time, you can find her baking, reading, or watching a docuseries. Her main areas of interest are pop culture, literature, and education.

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    Marina Urman

    Marina Urman

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Marina is a journalist at Bored Panda. Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, she holds a Bachelor of Social Science. In her spare time, you can find her baking, reading, or watching a docuseries. Her main areas of interest are pop culture, literature, and education.

    Ugnė Lazauskaitė

    Ugnė Lazauskaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

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    I am employed as a Visual Editor in the news team. I make sure you have the best pictures near the most interesting text. In general all day I am looking at all you favourite celebrities facies and I am geting payed for it!

    Read less »

    Ugnė Lazauskaitė

    Ugnė Lazauskaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    I am employed as a Visual Editor in the news team. I make sure you have the best pictures near the most interesting text. In general all day I am looking at all you favourite celebrities facies and I am geting payed for it!

    What do you think ?
    Add photo comments
    POST
    Libstak
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Why did he have him there and why were 7 other people involved? I mean, I can guess but I might be wrong and it is so weird.

    Wysteria_Rose
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The cousin being like "oh he's fine, he's in the hospital and is getting physical care." Um, no, I guarantee you he's not fine. He lost so many years of his life during which his mother passed away before he was freed. I would never be fine ever again.

    María Hermida
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I agree with you. I think there are situations people will never, ever, ever, get over. Even if they seem to lead a "normal" life, the pain and the fear will never disappear. Perhaps now he seems to be "fine", but I don't think he is.

    Load More Replies...
    Guess Undheit
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    They only mention the three in the US, ignoring Elisabeth Fritzl, the Austrian woman held captive and sexually abused by her father for 24 years. [ https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/apr/28/austria.internationalcrime ]

    Charlotte Sandoval
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Horrific. I hope the media gives him privacy and respect and that he can heal in peace with his family. If I were them, I'd try and move. I wouldn't want to stay anywhere near that place

    Cassie
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Eight people knew that man's whereabouts and it took an inheritance dispute for any of them to say anything, not for his benefit, but for their own. Disgusting.

    Libstak
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Why did he have him there and why were 7 other people involved? I mean, I can guess but I might be wrong and it is so weird.

    Wysteria_Rose
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The cousin being like "oh he's fine, he's in the hospital and is getting physical care." Um, no, I guarantee you he's not fine. He lost so many years of his life during which his mother passed away before he was freed. I would never be fine ever again.

    María Hermida
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I agree with you. I think there are situations people will never, ever, ever, get over. Even if they seem to lead a "normal" life, the pain and the fear will never disappear. Perhaps now he seems to be "fine", but I don't think he is.

    Load More Replies...
    Guess Undheit
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    They only mention the three in the US, ignoring Elisabeth Fritzl, the Austrian woman held captive and sexually abused by her father for 24 years. [ https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/apr/28/austria.internationalcrime ]

    Charlotte Sandoval
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Horrific. I hope the media gives him privacy and respect and that he can heal in peace with his family. If I were them, I'd try and move. I wouldn't want to stay anywhere near that place

    Cassie
    Community Member
    7 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Eight people knew that man's whereabouts and it took an inheritance dispute for any of them to say anything, not for his benefit, but for their own. Disgusting.

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