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Odd internet trail points back to MO boy, alleged abductor


(Updates after the jump).

Two boys reported to have been kidnapped four years apart were found by police in the same St. Louis, MO apartment last Friday, and returned to their families. Shawn Hornbeck, now 15, “vanished while riding his bike on October 6th, 2002” at age 11 according to a search and rescue website maintained by his family. Ben Ownby, 13, went missing after he stepped off his school bus last Monday afternoon. The man charged with kidnapping both boys is 41-year-old Michael Devlin.

A number of internet profiles on gaming sites and social networking services point back to Devlin and Hornbeck. Some bloggers have theorized that Devlin (who does not have a prior criminal record) may have been a sexual predator who preyed on boys of a specific age range, and that he posted the profiles with Hornbeck’s likeness to lure new young victims when Hornbeck grew older. But Hornbeck could have created profiles for himself. And it’s also entirely possible that some or any of these are fake, or set up by others.

We don’t yet know much about what happened beyond the basics: the two children each went missing, Hornbeck apparently lived with Devlin for more than four years, and both kids were discovered in Devlin’s apartment.

One user profile at gamertagpics.com, a popular networking site for XBox Live players, includes a photo of Shawn Hornbeck standing outside of Devlin’s apartment, where police found him last Friday. It appears that Hornbeck or Devlin maintained a profile with similar screenname at other Xbox gamer networks, too. After the jump, some of the profiles believed to be related, with links and screengrabs.

  • GamerTagPics — DevilDevlin (“Current Xbox Live Activity: Last seen 1/13/2007 playing Saints Row… favorite game, Halo 2”): Link, screengrab. Photo shows Shawn Hornbeck standing outside the apartment of his kidnapper, Michael Devlin. Shawn is presumed to have lived there for the last four and a half years.
  • Live.Xbox.com — devildevlin: Link (registered members only), screengrab.
  • Hapkido Halo — devildevlin: Link (scores ranking list).
  • Bungie.net (social networking site for gamers) — devildevlin: Link, screengrab.
  • Yahoo — mdevlin65@sbcglobal.net (Michael Devlin was reportedly born in 1965): Link, screengrab, larger profile photo.
  • Yahoo — kyo_kmk_forlife (an “Adult” profile): Link, screengrab.
  • Yahoo — xxdevildevlinxx: Link, screengrab.
  • Yahoo — shawn_the_pumpkin_king: Link, screengrab, larger profile photo.
  • MySpace — Shawn: Link, screengrab.
  • Mindviz — dirtbike_rider: Link, screengrab.
  • Here’s something attributed to Hornbeck on allpoetry.com: Link, screengrab.
  • Piczo (photo-sharing site): Link (content now offline).
  • The guestbook on a website set up by Hornbeck’s family to assist in the search for their lost son includes two entries some believe were posted by Shawn himself (or possibly Devlin): Link to www.shawnhornbeck.com cache (shawn devlin – Thursday, December 1, 2005 – 1:59 AM / kirkwood), screengrab.

    Steve Huff at True Crime Blog has been updating an extensive post about the digital breadcrumb trail here: Link. There’s a post about the Xbox Live networking site profile at Gamertagradio.com: Link.

    See also this AP story, Link, and “Investigators are mum, move methodically in Devlin case”, St. Louis Post-Dispatch: Link.

    Update, 1230PM PT, Mon. Jan 15: Brian Crecente at Kotaku has been doing some independent reporting around this, too:

    When contacted Monday by Kotaku, a St. Louis Post-Disptach reporter confirmed that the photo of Hornbeck used for the profile did appear to have been taken in front of Devlin’s apartment.

    According to the stats of gamertag DevilDevlin, the account has been used to play two dozen games and the last game played was Saints Row, which was accessed on Jan. 12, the day the two children were rescued. On Jan. 11, DevilDevlin played Samurai Warriors 2 and some Final Fantasy XI.

    Messages to the account have not been returned, nor have emails to Microsoft to see if the Xbox Live team has been contacted by law enforcement about the account activity.

    Link.

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