Jayme Closs said she is feeling ‘stronger every day’ and enjoys spending time with her family and friends just a year after she was kidnapped by Jake Patterson.
She told ABC News that she wanted to ‘thank everyone for all the kindness and concern that people all over the country have shown me’.
‘I am very happy to be home and getting back to the activities that I enjoy. I love hanging out with all of my friends, and I feel stronger every day!’
The now 14-year-old who was abducted by Patterson last October has been enjoying hiking with friends and her aunts.
Her aunt, Jen Smith, told the news outlet that Jayme ‘continues to work very hard on her emotional well-being’ and ‘courageously reclaiming her life’.
In May, Patterson was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Jayme Closs (center, with her family) said she is feeling ‘stronger every day’ and enjoys spending time with her family and friends just a year after she was kidnapped by Jake Patterson
‘I am very happy to be home and getting back to the activities that I enjoy. I love hanging out with all of my friends, and I feel stronger every day!’ Jayme (left, front) said
Patterson (left, in court in March and right in his arrest picture in January) killed Jayme’s parents, James and Denise Closs, before abducting the teen in Barron, Wisconsin, last October. He held her hostage for three months before she managed to escape
Patterson, 22, killed Jayme’s parents, James and Denise Closs, before abducting the teen in Barron, Wisconsin.
On October 24, the FBI offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to Jayme’s location.
Before her escape, the amount to find Jayme was doubled to $50,000 by the Jennie-O Turkey Store, which is were her parents worked.
In January, after three months of being held captive, Jayme was found alive in Gordon, Wisconsin, and Patterson was taken into custody.
Patterson had tied Jayme up with tape and put her in the trunk of his car before driving to a remote cabin in Douglas County, Wisconsin, about 90 days after killing her parents.
He kept Jayme under a bed for weeks and left her without food or water before she was able to break free while he was out of the house.
In January, after three months of being held captive, Jayme was found alive and Patterson was taken into custody. Jayme was kept under a bed for weeks and left without food or water before she was able to break free while Patterson was out of the house
Patterson admitted to abducting Jayme (left) and killing her parents, James and Denise Closs (both pictured right), at their family home in Barron, Wisconsin
He pleaded guilty in March to two counts of intentional homicide and one count of kidnapping.
Patterson admitted to concocting the plan to kidnap Jayme, who he had never met, after seeing her get off a school bus near her home.
‘Jake Patterson took a lot of things that I love away from me. It makes me the most sad that he took away my mom and my dad,’ Jayme said, through her attorney, in her first public statement after she escaped.
Jayme, who did not appear in court during Patterson’s trial, described the night her parents were killed as a ‘horrifying memory’.
‘There are some things that Jake Patterson can never take from me. He can’t take my freedom. He thought he could own me and he was wrong. I’m smarter. I watched his routine and I took back my freedom. I will always have my freedom and he will not,’ she said.
Patterson said he had no intention to appeal his two life sentences for the murders of James Closs, 56, and his wife Denise, 46 and the abduction of Jayme.
Patterson took Jayme to this woodland home in Gordon, Wisconsin, where he held her prisoner for 88 days before she was able to escape
Jayme was held captive in this space under Patterson’s bed at his woodland home in Gordon, Wisconsin. He barricaded her in with tote bags weighted down by barbell weights and free weights