Melissa Torrez didn't even think when teenagers in
her apartment complex said a man had just grabbed her 4-year-old girl and drove
away.
She jumped in her car and began chasing the brown
Buick through traffic, zigzagging on Interstate 40 at high speeds and staying
with the car even as it bluffed trying to exit in an attempt to lose her.
Many called Torrez a hero after her story came out
Wednesday. But Torrez said Friday that she was just a mother following her
instincts.
"My mind went black. I grabbed my keys,"
said the 27-year-old mother of three. "I just got in my car and I ... went
looking for her."
Torrez said she remained only focused on getting her
daughter back and quickly drove around the complex as teenagers chased the
suspected abductor, later identified by police as 31-year-old David Hernandez.
The teenagers pointed out his whereabouts, she said.
Torrez said she eventually found a man in a brown
Buick who led her on a high-speed chase throughout Albuquerque.
"I felt like I was flying ... as if I didn't
have my soul or something," she said.
The frantic mom was able to corner the man in the
Buick at an apartment complex with no exit. She said as she drove toward his
vehicle, she lost control of her car and struck his car.
"I wasn't trying to hit it because I thought my
daughter was inside," Torrez said.
Torrez said the man got out of the car and raised
his hands but took off running when police arrived. She then ran toward the car
to search for her daughter but the vehicle was empty. An empty infant car seat
was the only thing left.
According to a police report, Hernandez pushed the
4-year-old out of the car at the Saint Anthony's Plaza Apartment complex
shortly after the abduction "presumably once he noticed Torrez had been
notified and was following him."
Authorities said the child was uninjured.
Torrez said she found out that her daughter was safe
when neighbors called her.
Police arrested Hernandez the next day following a
massive manhunt that involved Homeland Security Investigations and the newly
created multiagency called Sexual Predator and Exploitation Enforcement Detail,
or SPEED, a task force aimed at finding missing and abducted children.
Hernandez was charged with kidnapping and child
abuse. He told reporters Thursday he was innocent.
It was unclear if he had an attorney.
Police were also investigating a possible connection
to the abduction and sexual assault of a 6-year-old from the same apartment
complex last week. The suspect in that case was described as a male in a silver
or grey vehicle.
Torrez said the ordeal has left her on edge.
"I'm overprotective, but I'm even more overprotective now," she said.
"That's my baby."
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