Timothy White Popular Books

Timothy White Biography & Facts

Timothy James White (November 1, 1974 – April 1, 2010) was an American man who was abducted in 1980 by pedophile Kenneth Parnell and held for several weeks before he was rescued by fellow child captive 14-year-old Steven Stayner, who escaped and guided the 5-year-old to safety. Kidnapping Seven years prior to White's kidnapping, Parnell kidnapped seven-year-old Steven Stayner as he walked home from school. As Stayner aged, Parnell lost interest in him and was motivated to kidnap another younger boy. Parnell enlisted Stayner as an accomplice in a few earlier kidnappings which failed due to Stayner failing to follow directions (Stayner later admitted he intentionally sabotaged the aborted kidnappings in order to spare other children his fate). Thinking Stayner was an incompetent criminal, Parnell cajoled one of Stayner's teenage friends, a local boy named Sean Poorman, into being an accomplice, promising him drugs and money. On February 13, 1980, Poorman noticed 5-year-old White, who was playing outside his parents' house in Ukiah, California. and ushered him into Parnell's getaway car. When White refused and attempted to run indoors, Poorman shoved the boy against a chain link fence, forced him to loosen his grip, then dragged him kicking and screaming into the car. Parnell made quick work in grooming White, as he had done with Stayner's abduction, repeatedly trying to get White to think his new name was "Tommy". Parnell paid off Poorman with the promised cash and marijuana, then ordered him to leave and never speak of the incident. Parnell also dyed White's blond hair dark brown in order to mask his appearance from the forthcoming missing child posters. Ultimately, Parnell would pass White off as his younger son and Stayner's brother. White forged a bond with Stayner during the 16 days he was held captive and spoke favorably of how the older boy took care of him. Stayner, determined to not see another child suffer the systematic sexual abuse that he endured, sought to return White to his parents. Escape On March 1, 1980, Stayner and White escaped while Parnell was at work. Parnell lived in remote backcountry; they walked a quarter of a mile down a road until a passing truck driver took them to Ukiah. White was able to direct the driver to a babysitter's house, but no one was home. Since White couldn't recall where his parents lived, Stayner went to a phone booth and found the address of the Ukiah police station. At the station, Stayner told White to walk inside and tell them who he was. White approached the door, but got scared and ran back to Stayner. Officers observed this, stopped the boys from leaving, and soon learned their identities. Parnell was convicted of abducting Stayner and White in separate trials. He was sentenced to seven years for the kidnapping of White, and seven months for kidnapping Stayner, and was paroled after five years. Parnell was not charged with sexually assaulting Stayner because those offenses had occurred in another county and were outside the jurisdiction of the Merced County prosecutor. Authorities were satisfied that White had not been sexually assaulted. The White family maintained contact with the Stayners, and when Stayner died in a motorcycle accident in 1989, a then 14-year-old White was a pallbearer. Later life and death White became a Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department Deputy in 2005. Like Stayner, he gave lectures to children about his experience and the dangers of kidnapping. In 2004, Parnell was tried for human trafficking and attempting to kidnap a child, and White was summoned to testify. Also summoned was an adult Sean Poorman, who reacted with shock, not having seen White since the 1980 kidnapping. The two spoke briefly and hugged, White having forgiven Poorman. White married a woman named Dena and had two children. He died on April 1, 2010, from a pulmonary embolism. On August 28, 2010, a statue of White and Stayner was dedicated in Applegate Park in Merced. Residents of Ukiah also erected a statue representing White and Stayner escaping hand in hand. See also List of kidnappings List of solved missing person cases References Further reading Echols, Mike (1999). I Know My First Name is Steven. Pinnacle Books. ISBN 0-7860-1104-1. External links I Know My First Name is Steven at IMDb Kenneth Parnell and a chronology of his crimes. Discover the Timothy White popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Timothy White books.

Best Seller Timothy White Books of 2024

  • Black and White synopsis, comments

    Black and White

    T. Thomas Fortune, Robin D. G. Kelley & Seth Moglen

    Featuring a new foreword by Robin D. G. Kelley, this updated edition of the classic exploration of the economic inequality that fuels systematic racism, from one of the leading Bla...

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    Fight of the Century

    Michael Chabon & Ayelet Waldman

    The American Civil Liberties Union partners with awardwinning authors Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman in this “forceful, beautifully written” (Associated Press) collection that b...

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    Daring to Fly

    Lisa Millar

    'The utterly inspirational story behind one of our country's most superb journalists. To have played even the tiniest of roles in helping to ignite Lisa's early fire for journalism...

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    Operation White Rabbit

    Dennis McDougal

    A search for the truth behind the DEA’s life imprisonment of acid's most famous martyr.  Operation White Rabbit traces the rise and falland rise and fall againof the psychedel...

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    Second Chances in New Port Stephen

    TJ Alexander

    A trans man returns to his Florida hometown for Christmas after his career goes up in flames, only to cross paths with his high school ex in this charming romcom about family and s...

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    Lone Assassin

    Helmut Ortner & Ross Benjamin

    Living as a carpenter who had spent time working in a watch factory, Georg Elser was just an ordinary member of society living in Munich. That is, however, until he took it upon hi...

  • Come Take Stroll Through Sea Oaks synopsis, comments

    Come Take Stroll Through Sea Oaks

    Timothy J. White

    Come take a stroll through the Award Winning Landscape Design of Sea Oaks with us. Learn about some of the special natural landscaping we all so enjoy and yet probably take for gra...

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    Love and Hate in the Heartland

    Mark Phillips

    Meet the “deplorables.” Meet the majority that was silent until the election of President Donald Trump. Meet the Middle Americans whom globalism and the modern economy have left be...

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    Surviving Autocracy

    Masha Gessen

    “When Gessen speaks about autocracy, you listen.” The New York Times “A reckoning with what has been lost in the past few years and a map forward with our beliefs intact....

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    Race Against Time

    Jerry Mitchell

    “For almost two decades, investigative journalist Jerry Mitchell doggedly pursued the Klansmen responsible for some of the most notorious murders of the civil rights movement. This...

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    Homegrown

    Jeffrey Toobin

    The definitive account of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and the enduring legacy of Timothy McVeigh, leading to the January 6 insurrectionfrom acclaimed journalist Jeffrey Toobin.T...