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Jayme Closs

Jayme Closs to receive $25,000 reward after escaping captor, company cites teen's 'bravery'

Haley BeMiller
USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin

BARRON, Wis. – Jayme Closs will receive at least half of the $50,000 reward established during her 88-day disappearance.

Hormel Foods announced Wednesday that the company, which owns Jennie-O Turkey Store in Barron, will donate its $25,000 contribution to the reward to the 13-year-old who escaped her alleged captor on Jan. 10.

“Her bravery and strength have truly inspired our team members around the world," Hormel Foods CEO Jim Snee said in a statement. "Barron is an incredibly strong community and one that never lost hope. We celebrated with the community, and the world, that Jayme is home."

Jennie-O President Steve Lykken said the company hopes a trust fund can be established for Jayme's current and future needs.

Police say Jayme freed herself from the Douglas County home of Jake Patterson on Jan. 10, nearly three months after he shot and killed her parents, James and Denise Closs, and dragged her from the family's Barron home. 

Jayme Closs smiles with the family pets at her aunt's home Saturday, two days after escaping from a cabin in Gordon in Douglas County.

After fleeing Patterson's residence in Gordon, Jayme stumbled upon Jeanne Nutter, and the woman and her neighbors contacted authorities. The neighbors, Peter and Kristin Kasinskas, told CNN the reward should go to Jayme – a sentiment echoed by many on social media.

The FBI set a $25,000 reward for information on Jayme's whereabouts early on in the investigation. That amount was doubled with the donation from Jennie-O, where James and Denise Closs both worked for 27 years. 

USA TODAY Network-Wisconsin has reached out to the FBI for more information on the agency's plans for its portion of the reward. 

More:Jake Patterson, accused of abducting Jayme Closs, isolated himself after high school

 

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