SAN DIEGO — The husband of a woman whose body was found in a
burned house near the U.S.-Mexico border pleaded Tuesday with his friend who is
suspected of killing his wife and abducting one or both of their children to
turn himself in.
"Jim, I can't fathom what you were thinking," said
Brett Anderson, addressing his short statement at a news conference to his
friend James Lee DiMaggio, the subject of a growing manhunt. "The damage
is done."
Anderson also pleaded with his missing daughter, 16-year-old
Hannah Anderson, who authorities said was in grave danger, to run away from
DiMaggio if she got the chance.
Anderson did not make reference to his 8-year-old son Ethan,
who was also missing.
The remains of a child were found in the burned house with
the children's mother, 42-year-old Christina Anderson.
An autopsy was performed Tuesday, but authorities said it
could still take a few days for DNA testing to determine if the child was
Ethan.
"It is a possibility that it's Ethan," said sheriff's
Lt. Glenn Giannantonio. "Right now we just don't know. And we're praying
that it isn't Ethan."
The San Diego County Sheriff's Department has said DiMaggio
and Christina Anderson had been in a close, platonic relationship.
Sheriff's officials referred to Brett Anderson, who arrived
from out of town to talk to investigators Tuesday, as her ex-husband, but he
told The Associated Press that the couple had still been married.
On Sunday night, authorities found Christina Anderson's body
near a dead dog when they extinguished flames at the rural home of DiMaggio in
Boulevard, a remote hamlet 65 miles east of San Diego.
The child's body was found later as they sifted through
rubble.
An Amber Alert advised freeway motorists, television viewers
and mobile phone subscribers about a blue Nissan Versa with California license
plates that DiMaggio was believed to be driving.
The California Highway Patrol
said the suspect could be headed to Texas or Canada.
The FBI joined the search and the Amber Alert was later extended
to Mexico's Baja California state, which borders Boulevard.
Monday marked the first time that mobile phone users were
notified of a statewide Amber Alert in California through their phones, CHP
spokeswoman Jamie Coffee said. The alert system, which was introduced in
December, sends messages automatically, based on the phone's location, not the
phone number.
Christina Anderson grew up with her mother and stepfather in
the east San Diego suburb of Santee, and she aspired to a career in child
psychology, said her ex-husband, James Chatfield of La Grande, Ore.
The
marriage lasted four years, until 1992, and Chatfield said he lost touch.
"She was a high school sweetheart," he said.
"It was a marriage of convenience that just didn't work out."
Chatfield said he helped Anderson's current husband move to
The Dalles, Ore., in the early 1990s, but they lost contact.
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