THE
teenage daughter of a woman who just revealed she abandoned her family 11 years
ago said the disclosure has angered her and she is not eager to restart their
relationship.
Morgan
Heist, who learned last week her mother Brenda Heist had surfaced in the Florida
Keys, said the news has made her recall with bitterness the years of mourning
she endured when she assumed her mother was dead and feared she'd been
murdered.
Brenda
Heist, 53, was last seen dropping her children off at school in Pennsylvania in
2002, CNN
and AP report.
"I
ached every birthday, every Christmas," said 19-year-old Morgan Heist, a
freshman at a community college outside Philadelphia.
"My
heart just ached. I wasn't mad at her. I wanted her to be there because I
thought something had happened to her. I wish I had never cried."
Brenda
Heist's mother, Jean Copenhaver, said that her daughter "had a real
traumatic time" but was doing OK.
Police
say Brenda Heist, who disappeared after dropping off her children for school 11
years ago, has been located in Florida after travelling there with homeless
hitchhikers. Picture: AP Photo/Lititz Borough Police
Brenda
Heist was released from police custody on Wednesday and is staying with a
brother in northern Florida for now, Copenhaver said.
Copenhaver,
of Brenham, Texas, said she had spoken with Heist several times since Friday,
when the 54-year-old woman turned herself in to police in Florida and was
identified as a missing person.
"She
just said she thought the family wouldn't want to talk to her because of her
leaving," Copenhaver said.
"And
we all assured her that wasn't the case and we all loved her and wanted to be
with her."
Morgan
Heist said she's not sympathetic, partly because her mother had a choice,
unlike the family she secretly abandoned.
"It's
definitely very selfish," Morgan Heist said. "She clearly did not
think of me or my brother or my dad at all with that decision. She thought of
herself."
Heist
told police she made a spur-of-the-moment decision in 2002 to join a group of
homeless hitchhikers on their way to Florida, walking out on Morgan, 8, and her
brother, then 12.
Brenda
and her husband, Lee, were living together but going through an amicable
divorce when she learned she had been denied housing support, police said. She
was crying about that in a Lancaster park when three strangers befriended her and
offered to let her join them.
Morgan
Heist said her parents had agreed to live near each other once they divorced.
Brenda Heist had been a bookkeeper at a car dealership.
"It's
more of a mystery than ever," she said. "Her life was not hard at
all."
Brenda
Heist told police she slept under bridges and survived at times by scavenging
food from restaurant trash and panhandling.
For
seven years she lived with another man in a caravan and for the past two years
has again been homeless, most recently residing in a tent community run by a
welfare agency.
But
Lititz Police Detective John Schofield said Thursday he is looking into reports
that have come in over the past day suggesting Brenda Heist's time in Florida
included much less miserable periods.
"We're
getting several calls from people down in Florida that knew her who want to say
she's not being truthful with us," Schofield said.
Heist
told a detective with the Monroe County Sheriff's Office that she had recently
been arrested in the Tampa Bay region and might be in violation of probation.
She
told the detective she used the name Kelsie Lyanne Smith and provided a date of
birth.
Jail
and court records show Kelsie Lyanne Smith, with a matching birth date, was
arrested in January on misdemeanor charges of marijuana possession, possession
of drug paraphernalia and providing false identification to law enforcement.
After pleading guilty, Smith was sentenced to time served and was released on
Feb. 13. She was also ordered to pay court costs but failed to do so and was
found delinquent on April 15.
Copenhaver
said she has not pressed her daughter about what led her to walk away from the
life she knew in Pennsylvania and then live underground for more than a decade.
"We
haven't gone into that with her," Copenhaver said. "She just needs
time to recover, and have some peace and that. She'll tell us when she's
ready."
She
agreed to pass along a message from The Associated Press, asking Brenda Heist
for an interview.
Heist
told police she contacted them after feeling like she was at the end of her
rope and tired of running.
"She's
doing OK," Copenhaver said. "She's got a long way to go. She had a
real traumatic time, but she's doing OK."
She
said Heist was born in South Carolina, then moved as her father was transferred
by the Air Force to Italy and Missouri before ending up in San Antonio, where
she graduated from high school.
When
she vanished, Lee Heist, was investigated but was cleared as a suspect. He
raised the children without her and got the courts to declare her legally dead.
He has since remarried.
Morgan
Heist is a freshman at Montgomery County Community College. Her brother
recently graduated from college.
Schofield
kept Heist's missing person flyer posted on his wall for 11 years. "I was
convinced something horrible happened to her years ago," he says.
Now he
can finally close the case.
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