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Austin Reed Sigg

This booking photo released by the Westminster, Colo., Police Department shows Austin Reed Sigg. (AP Photo/Westminster Police Department)

Jessica Ridgeway

This image provided by the Westminster Colorado Police Department shows 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway. (AP Photo/Westminster Colorado Police Department)

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Police: Teen arrested in killing of Colorado girl

Jessica Ridgeway disappeared Oct. 5

Updated: Wednesday, 24 Oct 2012, 3:02 PM EDT
Published : Wednesday, 24 Oct 2012, 1:38 PM EDT

WESTMINSTER, Colo. (AP) — A teenage boy who lived just a mile from a 10-year-old Colorado girl who was abducted and killed earlier this month has been arrested in her death, along with a May attack on a runner, authorities said Wednesday.

Police in the Denver suburb of Westminster said they arrested 17-year-old Austin Reed Sigg on Tuesday night after receiving a phone call that led them to his home. They declined to elaborate on the details of the arrest, but investigators were searching his home Wednesday.

Sigg lives about a mile from the residence of Jessica Ridgeway, who disappeared Oct. 5 while walking to school. Her body was found five days later in a field at a park.

"We worked on this case nonstop, around the clock, since Oct. 5, the day of her abduction," Police Chief Lee Birk said at news conference. "I believe we've made a significant step towards justice for Jessica."

The break in the case came a day after police said Jessica's abduction was linked to the May 28 attempted kidnapping of a 22-year-old runner at another park, the Ketner Lake Open Space.

In that case, a woman fought off a stranger who grabbed her from behind and put a rag over her mouth that smelled of chemicals. Westminster investigator Trevor Materasso said Tuesday police haven't been able to determine if the substance on the rag was meant to subdue the woman.

Authorities didn't say why they think the two cases are linked, but they noted Sigg will be charged in both crimes. His first court appearance is set for 8 a.m. Thursday.

Reached by phone Wednesday, Sigg's mother told The Associated Press he turned himself in.

"I made the phone call, and he turned himself in. That's all I have to say," said Mindy Sigg, before she broke down in tears and hung up the phone.

It wasn't immediately clear if her call was the one that police said led them to Austin Sigg's home.

Authorities said they notified the Ridgeway family of the arrest Wednesday morning.

"We hope and pray that this arrest brings them some measure of closure in dealing with this enormous loss that they've suffered," Birk said.

Jessica was walking down a quiet street in her modest neighborhood when she was last seen alive. Her school backpack was found three days later in Superior, another Denver suburb about seven miles northwest of her home.

After her disappearance, more than 1,000 officers and 10 agencies, including the FBI, investigated the case, following up on more than 4,000 leads.

While authorities searched for her killer, high school students volunteered to walk younger students to class to keep them safe and more parents were waiting at bus stops with their children and dropping them off at school.

The number of suspected abduction attempts reported to police also increased, possibly because more children and parents were on alert for suspicious behavior.

___

Associated Press writer Dan Elliott contributed to this report.

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