20/20 - True Crime Vault: From Classroom to Captive
Episode Date: February 5, 2025The case of a 50 year-old teacher who ran off with his teenage student, leading her across the United States. Tad Cummins is alleged to have kidnapped Elizabeth Thomas, with suggestions of using mind ...control, and planned to kayak to Mexico. Originally aired: 05/05/17 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is the 2020 True Crime Vault.
He told you you had to go.
He said if he couldn't have me, he'd kill himself.
Were you afraid he would kill you?
Yeah. They talked about hiding would kill you? Yeah.
They talked about hiding bodies and killing other people.
And you knew then?
I wasn't getting out of this.
There are new clues tonight about that Tennessee teen.
He was a teacher at this school.
Kidnapping a 15-year-old girl.
Tonight on 2020, the nationwide manhunt and girl hunt
that transfixed the country.
That 15-year-old Tennessee student on the run with her 50-year-old teacher,
a married father with children.
Did you know this whole time all this is going on that everyone,
I mean like all of America was looking for you?
She's like, if I'm not back by six, call the cops.
But tonight, what you've never heard before, her story.
You can say all day long that the devil made him do it,
but he is the devil.
He himself made him do it.
The interview her school may not want you to hear.
They knew, and they know that they knew.
And I really hope they feel guilty about it.
You don't have to be a rocket scientist to go,
there's trouble brewing in Tad Cuman's
classroom. Now she's revealing all new details from those 38 days on the road. He called me his
wife sometimes. I was going to live with him until I died. Creating new identities as John and Joanna
living, hiding in a commune. He got very angry. It was a unanimous decision. We didn't want them here.
And then the end of the road in a deserted cabin.
I thought this was going to be the end.
He's going to shoot somebody.
Now fighting him is over.
She's still fighting the town that doubts her.
Some people question whether or not you went willingly.
Good evening, and thanks for joining us.
I'm David Muir.
And I'm Amy Robach.
And this is 2020. It was one of the biggest stories of the year. The girl who went
from classroom to captive. And until now we have not heard from the young woman
who went missing. But that all changes right here tonight. Here's ABC's Eva
Pilgrim on this story from the start.
Tonight we are heading to rural Culeoka, Tennessee, where this strange and heart wrenching story begins.
Most people know everyone else who lives there.
If there are six degrees of separation in the world,
there's only about one degree of separation here.
In this farming community of about 5000,
you'll find a post office,
gas station and not much else.
It's very small, very small air. Nothing ever happens there, I don't know.
Until of course it does. 15 year old girl and 50 year old man.
At the center of a nationwide amber alert. It's been a year and a half now since 50 year old
high school teacher Tad Cummins ran off with his 15 year old student. Today, some squarely
blame him. The guy's pervert should be drug out in the streets and be... Others aren't so
sure. I think they took advantage of each other in a way, a weird way. We've heard a
lot of people say, well she went willingly. She probably did. She got pulled in just as well as she got
pulled in. Many have made up their minds both in
this small town and across the country,
and it's to them that Elizabeth Thomas,
now 17, wants to speak to directly tonight.
Why talk now about what happened?
Because I think it's time to.
It's a year later.
People saw the story play out.
They think they know what happened and they think that I'm a year later. People saw the story play out. They think they know what happened.
And they think that I'm a whore.
They think that I like old men, and that's not the case.
Before fate brought Elizabeth into Tad Cummins class,
she had been homeschooled her whole life.
She was somewhat of a tomboy, played really rough.
She could switch to being really nice and sweet.
Paige Griffith told us at the time
of Elizabeth's disappearance
that she had been a kind of surrogate mom
and her daughter Erin was Elizabeth's close friend.
She'd come over to my house and we would talk
and watch TV and eat junk food
and we just hung out together.
That's Elizabeth on the left play fighting with Erin
in the back of a car. Yeah you were. No Her sister Sarah gave me a tour of Elizabeth's bedroom.
During the day she went missing it told its own story of an adolescent caught
between two ages. That's her Xbox. On the one hand the teen who bought herself an
Xbox with money from her after school job.
She just stayed up playing games.
On the other, a child.
She made this baby.
Still enchanted by princesses and ponies.
Yet the home movie, Smiles, masks what Elizabeth says is a dark reality.
We had a lot of stuff go on behind closed doors. It shouldn't
have abusive, very violent, very physically violent.
I know escape because you were homeschooled.
The abuse so severe, she says the kids finally report their own mother to child
protective services. Kimberly Thomas is removed from the
home and is facing multiple counts
of child abuse and neglect.
She denies the charges,
telling a local TV station.
I'm not guilty of those.
How did you find out what was going on at home?
There's two sheriff's deputies in my yard
and their father Anthony Thomas,
often working around the clock as an
exterminator to support
his five children, insisting when we spoke to him last year that he didn't know how bad
things had gotten at home.
It's hard for you to talk about, isn't it?
Yeah.
You don't like to think about what was happening.
So I'm going to take a break.
Yeah,
their mother's removal is a welcome relief, but soon Elizabeth is pushed into the teenage shark tank known as high school.
First thing they did was call me ugly once I came to school. I mean, it's just
boys being stupid but I just
dated myself. Was it easy making friends? I mean they all had their little cliques
can't really disrupt that. Elizabeth eventually finds one person she thinks
she can trust. A popular and friendly health teacher, Tad Cummins.
And that ladies and gentlemen is how I felt tonight.
She was in his class, health, and he began to help her make this transition from home school to public school.
50-year-old Tad Cummins is quite the charmer.
Maury County District Attorney Brett Cooper went to high school with him.
It's kind of funny, kind of a cut-up, pretty outgoing guy.
So you knew him, you saw him around. He and Jill, his wife, they were high school sweethearts and
married the year they graduated high school. And they've been together the 31 years since.
His wife Jill spoke to us when this first happened. God is the center of our marriage and our life and our faith is the most important thing
to us.
And I think it was to him too and it still is.
Cummins had even done mission work in the rainforest of Panama.
He teaches Sunday school and sings in the church choir.
What was it like growing up with him?
He was your all-American dad.
No matter what we were going through, he was the one you could call and fix it.
Ted Cummins flourishes in the classroom.
Watch this YouTube video of him teaching how to perform CPR.
See the difference so that I'm actually taking my weight off of it.
He was the cool teacher like
everybody loved him. He was everyone's friend.
Everyone's mentor helped so many
people through so many things.
And for Elizabeth, he's an encouraging
adult role model showering her with
attention even gifts. He gave me a Bible and.
It was just something from him. That kindness even extending outside the
classroom, taking Elizabeth to church on Sundays with his wife. Why did he decide
to take her to church? Our preacher's wife was going to be talking about abuse
and how to get past it, get over it, and decided to invite Beth. We were helping
her, I thought.
Did you ever think anything of their interactions together?
It was like a father-daughter relationship.
It's the way I saw it too, is the way he would explain it.
In fact, I called her our third daughter sometime.
It all seems benign until that one day
in the school cafeteria.
I was standing there with a few friends,
and then they said, are you hungry?
And I went, I don't have a soul or if I did, like I'd be hungry or something
like that.
And then he came to me and he pointed at me and said, my soul sees your soul.
Was he trying to scare her or seduce her?
Coming up, a health teacher grooming a young student.
What would be his next move?
Did you tell somebody?
No.
Why?
I don't want to tell my parent
that a grown man kissed me,
and I don't want to tell friends
that a grown man kissed me.
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Churchgoing family man, Tad Cummins, seemed like a model citizen,
but look closer and you'll find some cracks in that wholesome and happy facade.
Tad was kind of a bully about things.
Chandler Anderson worked with Cummins
back when Cummins worked as a respiratory
therapist at a local hospital. He
would say things like you're stupid.
You know you shouldn't be in the ER
in front of other people.
Oh yeah, in front of other people.
I have seen Tad be told no.
Previously, and I've seen the rage and anger he gets.
Anderson says Cummins had a problem with authority.
He didn't have enough of it.
He says that's why Cummins switched careers
and took a big pay cut.
If money is not the central issue and feeding your ego is,
that's what he chose.
That's why he became a teacher.
Who tells a teacher.
Who tells the teacher? No, certainly not students and certainly not a student
like Elizabeth Thomas still reeling from the abuse. She says she suffered at
home and who believes she's finally found an adult she can trust. He made me
feel like I didn't have anyone else and no one really cared about me like he did. Jason Watley, the Thomas family attorney
spoke to us after Elizabeth went missing. He was specifically grooming
this child for a very specific purpose and that was a relationship. He chose a
girl that was clearly having issues because she went to him for quote unquote
counseling. She was the perfect victim. I was feeling real low and I was wanting to get on antidepressants and try to go to a
therapist and he told me no and not to do it because it changed who I was.
So he convinced you not to get help?
Yes.
What did he suggest you do instead?
Come to him.
I think it's another example of showing sort of to the community, to his wife, to everyone else,
I'm trying to help this child. She comes to me at school, I counsel her, I'm going to make her a better person.
We know that's all phony.
As part of the seduction, Cummins portrayed himself as an international man of mystery.
Apparently he told a lot of tales about his fictitional background.
He's a CIA operative, he's an FBI agent, he's a millionaire.
He would describe it as he went in and he killed people and he saved people and
he killed Bin Laden.
He was telling you he did all of these crazy yes and I knew that
it wasn't real how did you view him at that point kind of like a guardian or a
mentor but tad Cummins seems bent on bulldozing the boundaries of
appropriate behavior how are you guys communicating we did via Instagram
Cummins posts you're all my heart ever talks about it was love at first sight of appropriate behavior. How are you guys communicating? We did via Instagram.
Cummins posts,
"'You're all my heart ever talks about.
"'It was love at first sight, at last sight.'"
Then there's Elizabeth's response,
"'I look forward to going to school just to see you.
"'I love you.'"
Most of them from him would be sexual text.
He would sexually text you?
Yes, like sexting. But their verbal communication
is just as cringe-worthy, especially when they're alone in his classroom, which is becoming
an alarmingly regular occurrence. I can't remember the conversation and then next thing
I know he said, you look pretty nice naked. When did he take it from saying things like that to you
to something more?
Whenever he first kissed me.
That was whenever I realized this is getting too far.
In his classroom?
Yes.
Did you tell somebody?
No.
Like, I didn't want anyone to really know.
I was scared of what would happen if anyone did know.
From there, she says, it would escalate
to unspeakable things
that would take place in his classroom closet.
He'd open up the closet door, and he'd look at me
a certain way, and I knew if I didn't go that he'd be upset.
And I was afraid to see him angry,
and I've seen him angry since then,
but he doesn't take no well.
At least one other student is afraid too.
A student reported seeing Elizabeth Thomas kissing Tad Cummins inside of his classroom.
The student was very disturbed by what she saw and she immediately went to report it to school officials.
The school investigates, but Elizabeth denies everything.
The reason that children that are being abused by teachers
will not admit that something happened is fear
because he's now guilt tripping her regularly.
You can't tell anybody, you know, you'll be ruined,
your reputation in school will be ruined, I'll be fired.
Curiously, the school takes an entire week to alert police
and during that investigation for some reason,
Elizabeth says the school allowed her
to go on a class field trip unprotected.
He was the only chaperone there.
He was the only chaperone.
There were no other adults there.
No other adult, other than the bus driver,
but he was on the bus at all times.
Elizabeth says he took the opportunity to proposition her for sex, but she refused.
The school finally tells Cummins and Elizabeth not to contact each other.
Cummins then tells detectives their relationship is that of a father figure at
school and denies ever kissing her.
Five days later, after the school reprimands him for allowing Elizabeth to come back to his classroom,
Cummins is suspended.
How did he explain it to you?
That he was, it was either someone telling a lie
or thought they saw something that they didn't
and then it absolutely did not happen.
I had no reason not to believe him.
31 years of marriage, you know, with no problems. Why would you not believe him? And when all the students found out
this was happening? There was a lot of names and teasing that came around and a
lot of bullying outside and inside of school. How did they feel towards Tad as
all this was happening? They felt like I ruined his life. Did the teachers know
about what was going on? A lot of them were made aware and they also did a lot of the teasing and a lot of the name-calling
The teachers were doing the teasing a lot of them were
Meanwhile Cummins now in exile from the school begins acting strangely at home
He always made the coffee the night before we would go to bed and he started telling me how to make the coffee
And I and I was like, why are you telling me this and I
was in tears because I thought that he was afraid he was gonna go to jail.
He was planning to go somewhere. Apparently the teacher had convinced
himself and his favorite student that there was only one way out with each
other on the open road.
He told you you had to go.
He said if he couldn't have me, he'd kill himself.
Anytime you threatened himself, you threatened my family.
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It is a quiet Monday morning near Columbia, Tennessee.
And Jill Cummins says she and her husband Tad spent an otherwise uneventful weekend.
Out to eat, a trip to the movies church on Sunday.
We were together all the time. We spent lots and lots of time together, but
everything was normal between us. But of course, everything is not normal.
Cummins has been suspended from the Coleoka Unit School for inappropriate
conduct with 15 year old Elizabeth Thomas. You could cut the tension in
their home with a Tennessee steak knife.
We were both so stressed during those five weeks. We would cry about it, pray
about it. But as hard as he prays, Cummins still can't shake the obsession
with his young student, even forcing her to send him secret messages through
social media. Anytime that I wouldn't post for a few hours, he would go crazy and say that I was cheating on him,
saying if he found out that I was with another boy,
he'd kill them.
And so he cobbles together this plan to run off.
He borrows Jill's car a silver Nissan Rogue,
saying he needs it to go to an out of town job interview.
He took your car.
He did, because he was going out of town job interview. He took your car. He did because he was going out of town.
Not far, but far enough that he didn't
want to drive the Jeep and he took the
road back at the Coneoka Unit School.
Elizabeth says she is under siege.
Her fellow students are blaming
her for Cummins suspension.
Turns out Cummins is blaming her too.
No longer Mr. Nice Guy.
The teacher issues a deadly ultimatum. Go on the run with me or else.
So he started calling my phone. Sometimes I'd be threatening to kill himself or ending someone else's life if I didn't go.
Did you feel trapped?
I did. He threatened to shoot himself or use the guns.
Elizabeth says she reluctantly agrees
to leave with Cummins on a ride to nowhere.
In this surveillance video obtained by 2020,
Elizabeth can be seen leaving her home.
You meet him at the Shoney's.
Yes, I felt really bad about leaving
and I didn't want to leave,
but I knew if I didn't, something would happen.
So I went to Shoney's at 8 o'clock.
He was supposed to be there, and he was late.
I left a bag on the ground.
The student is smarter than the teacher thinks she is,
because in the bag is a small clue.
Elizabeth says Cummins tells her to write a note, a note she
writes in a way she hopes will tip off authorities.
He told me to write that I was going to New York.
That way it seemed like the police would go up there.
He thought they were dumb, but they weren't.
And that was his plan?
That was his plan.
But I wrote that I was going to New York City,
and I made it sound unbelievable,
so they knew I was going the opposite way.
And she's got another shrewd move up her sleeve,
signposting her precarious predicament for her sister Sarah.
I just told Sarah that call the police if I'm not home by six.
That was another clue.
I just wanted the police to be called because I knew once I got in that car I wasn't getting out.
At 832, Cummins stops at a local gas station and fills up his tank.
He then picks up Elizabeth at the show. Nees restaurant. But as soon as we want to leave, he set a gun in the
middle console and I knew that I wasn't getting out of the car. He
immediately pulled the gun out. The gun set in the middle console and you knew
then I wasn't getting out of this.
It's around 10 p.m. That night. Elizabeth's frantic father has spent hours searching
for his missing daughter.
And he calls the local sheriff as thoughts of the kissing
incident raced through his head.
I said, you guys need to hunt down Ted Cummins
and see if he's in town.
See where he is.
Cummins' wife, Jill, has also called the sheriff.
An arrest warrant is issued, and Cummins wife Jill has also called the sheriff. An arrest warrant is issued and Cummins officially becomes a wanted man.
The TBI issued an amber alert for Mary Catherine Elizabeth Thomas.
Their disappearance and ensuing cross-country trek would flummox authorities for well over a month.
The details and the direction their journey took being told by Elizabeth
for the first time here tonight.
So there's Nashville.
I think we took 65 down.
OK, Columbia is right here.
I think.
You made me throw my phone off
the bridge and his phone as well.
That way the police couldn't track us
and then he disconnected the GPS by a screwdriver
in the glove compartment.
And he broke off the front.
And then he unhooked the radio.
It was like a kidnapping.
I had to stay in the car with him at all times.
Indicator, I'm pretty sure, is where we stopped by this big hotel.
And there was an abandoned van.
And he took their license plate. and then we began driving to Mississippi. Did you stay in
Mississippi? Yes. One night. One night. Just a hotel? Two beds, one bed? One bed. And
did you have to sleep next to him? Yes. At the hotel I would shower every morning
because I felt dirty and disgusting every morning. And he didn't help that at all.
When you say he didn't help that, what do you mean?
The things he would make you do.
It wouldn't help the way that I was feeling.
And I'd just try to shower to get away from him, but sometimes he wouldn't let me shower alone.
It's hard to be in the same space with him at the exact same time.
Was there any moment that you thought maybe I can run out of this room while he's sleeping?
He made me sleep naked,
and my clothes would be put somewhere else,
and he was a light sleeper,
so if I moved, he'd be awake,
and I couldn't even use the bathroom at night
without him having to stand right there.
And this whole time, as this is all happening,
how was he treating you?
He was really mean,
and said hurtful things a lot of the time.
He called me his wife sometimes and he said that we were going to get married
and that I was going to live with him until I died.
Day after day, night after helpless night,
Elizabeth says Cummins is in complete control.
The threat of his firearms ever present.
He's even controlling what Elizabeth can eat.
I wasn't allowed to eat hamburger buns or things that had like high calories or something that was too much.
I mostly was allowed to eat salad.
So why was he making you eat this way?
So I'd stay small. He told me that he likes skinny girls.
And I ate what he told me to because if if I didn't, I wouldn't get it at all.
Did you ever stay more than one night anywhere?
Well, so I'm just gonna dot each place
that we stayed the night.
I know, I think we stayed three nights in Colorado.
So I'm gonna say right here, right here,
I know we went to Aspen.
And then Utah, that's where he started buying alcohol.
He started buying alcohol?
Yeah, for me, because I was having problems
and he was done dealing with them.
Like, I don't want to do stuff with them anymore.
I just didn't, I was just done and he didn't want that.
Their journey takes them across nine states
all the way to California.
From each state that I took, I had rocks,
and I'd write what county or wherever we were,
and then what state.
That way, if Nye got rescued,
he could be charged for each one that he was in.
When we come back, authorities are closing in
and Cummins hatches yet another insane plan.
A plan to paddle south of the border.
The waves were getting really bad.
The boat would nearly go under.
Were you scared?
I was terrified.
I mean, that's.
The boat kept going down.
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He gave me a calendar and I used it to mark down where we were and where we were at.
And I used it every day.
And then I just stopped marking because I didn't think we were ever going to leave.
No longer counting the days until she is found, Elizabeth Thomas is losing hope of ever seeing
her family again. Did you know this whole time all this is going on that everyone,
I mean like all of America was looking for you?
I saw it on Fox News one time in the hotel.
A manhunt is underway.
I remember it was a girl announcing it, a nationwide
Ambler alert.
I know it was for me.
Meanwhile, back in Tennessee,
Tad's abandoned wife Jill is quickly coming undone.
Please do the right thing
and turn yourself into the police and bring Beth home.
With the entire country on high alert,
Tad Cummins, now perhaps the most wanted man in America,
panics and decides to go to a place
many a fugitive have gone before.
You want to go to Mexico case apparently that's 3 land and he
wanted to go to try to go to Panama that's where he was
before mission trips.
Yeah, this is as you can see we're coming out here.
There's good waves this is an easy for to 8 foot swell real
close together.
Brian Zocca is the owner and captain of Elgato Sports Fishing, a charter boat company located
about 20 miles from the Mexican border.
Is it easy to take a boat from here into Mexico?
No, it's not.
You have to have the right boat, you have to have the right weather, you have to have
the right skills in navigation, otherwise you're not going to make it.
Turns out, Tad Cummins would have none of those things,
so he got a kayak and he wanted to
kayak all the way to Panama. Yep,
you heard correctly.
He takes a humble man powered kayak.
Clearly not a geography teacher.
Elizabeth says Cummins devises a plot
to paddle some 3000 nautical
miles to Panama.
You were in the kayak with him?
Yes. The waves were getting really bad.
To where like once they'd hit the bottom of the boat, the boat would nearly go under.
Whichever way you tried to go, it would pull you the other direction.
Were you scared in the water?
I was terrified because the boat kept going down.
At what point did you decide, okay, this is a bad idea of turning around?
Whenever one wave nearly killed us, like took us over.
Once we finally got out of it, I was so happy.
What did he do then?
He decided we were gonna go to a commune.
So which commune did you go to then?
Black Bear.
Because nobody would recognize us.
It was the last free place on earth
where people come to be free or something like that.
How did he know about that? He looked it up and
it said Black Bear Ranch was the closest one in California.
Black Bear Ranch, a remote commune deep in the woods of Northern California, is located so far off the grid it feels like another world.
We're an off the grid homesteading community. We don't have any television, radio, cell phone, internet.
There's no newspaper delivery or other contact with the outside world besides what comes in and out of the driveway. The reclusive residents are reluctant to let us use
our cameras, only allowing us to shoot this video on their older model iPhone.
Those are chickens up there. Yeah, chickens and ducks. Our guide who goes
by the name April showers gives us a tour and talks all about the peculiar
couple who introduced themselves as John
and Joanna. They tell everyone they are 44 and 24 years old. Several weeks ago
this couple arrived and they failed to identify their true selves and identities.
I knew that once I was at Black Bear Ranch I couldn't go anywhere. There was
literally nobody out there.
They take the pair in, giving them a bed here
in the main house and sharing their food.
They liked me a lot, a lot of them did.
It was kinda because I didn't argue,
I cleaned up after myself, I didn't make too much noise,
I was quiet.
And while Tad Cummins has left so much behind him,
one thing he hasn't shed is his hot temper.
He brought that into our sacred space, this terrible behavior and acting on the wrong impulse and
a perverted instinct I would say. So they didn't fit in here very well. No, they didn't fit in here
very well. Very quickly things go south at Black Bear.
Elizabeth and Cummins are kicked out.
Turns out Cummins didn't have much of a communal spirit.
He got very angry and almost blew a gasket.
That's pretty scary.
Yeah, he blew a fuse right there.
He got mad and took out his knife
and then dropped it on the ground,
started screaming at April. I thought this was gonna be and this is
where he's gonna shoot somebody. It's a risky proposition alienating the
peaceful residents of this commune with so little to their name and so much at
stake. Do you food eggs and two oranges? Actually, you had eggs and two oranges
I had two food eggs and two oranges. Actually you had eggs and two oranges.
And $10 yeah. Nothing inside.
Out of hope and full of desperation,
who's going to find me?
Elizabeth heads back down that hellish
Hill never in a million years expecting
to meet her unlikely hero.
I saw a photo of the guy and I was like, that's definitely him.
When 2020 continues.
He told me to stay in the car and put
sunglasses on and keep my head down.
It's now 36 days since Ted Cummins and
Elizabeth Thomas disappeared from Tennessee.
He didn't want people to be able to recognize me.
And he would wear sunglasses, try to do the same.
Cast out of Paradise, AKA the Black Bear
Commune in Northern California, running out of options, a desperate Cummins sets
off for the nearby village of Cecilville.
They're from Colorado.
Cummins sees a familiar face.
Griffin Barry.
It turns out Griffin had given
Cummins gas and directions to the
Black Bear Commune a week earlier.
Did you remember?
No, I couldn't remember his name.
I was like what's your name again?
You know, I'm saying he's like yeah,
we had a house fire. I think they like lost his job.
They're just trying to start a new life.
But I was like, I'll help you out.
I put him in the cabin.
Griffin, ironically a native of Nashville, Tennessee,
is the caretaker of this forested California property
and gives the couple he thinks is just down on their luck
a place to stay.
Can you show us the cabin.
It's it's it's at the end.
So this is where they stayed.
Those bottles into the last time on this year. So that's
what they were using to have clean water.
We had a little phone kind of mattress saying that he laid on and then we had this thing
that we grabbed from Black Bear Ranch,
which is kind of like a seat
padding that I laid on and he
pushed him together and we had
a little comforter. The wood
cabin is unfinished and has
no heat or insulation.
It does little to keep out the cold.
It was really cold in California. insulation. It does little to keep out the cold.
It was really cold in California. It got real cold at night especially. To make some extra money, Griffin Berry puts them to work collecting river rocks for a
masonry project. When I was trying to strike up a conversation I picked them
up in the morning I was like what's the morning. I was like, what's your name? And she was like, Joanna.
It was almost with like an accent.
The quiet girl and weird accent seem odd.
So strange that Griffin tells a neighbor nearby,
something seems off.
I was like, that girl won't talk, you know,
to me really or anything.
That night, the same neighbor makes a startling discovery,
finding this amber alert.
I saw a photo of the guy, and I was like,
that's definitely him.
Then what did you guys decide to do?
We went and called the police.
Finally, police have the tip they've been hoping for.
Authorities race to that small town in Northern California and a SWAT team surrounds the cabin.
I came out of the cabin and it was early morning.
I think he went to go wash out our dishes from the night before.
But then I saw someone up on the hill.
As the sun is rising, Elizabeth spots a camouflage hat.
I knew it was the police.
And as soon as he walked over there,
he walked around that bush, and then all you hear is, hands up,
it's over.
That's what they said to you?
They said, put your hands up, get on the ground.
38 days after Elizabeth left her home in Tennessee,
she is finally rescued.
The day that the police show up.
That was the best day of my life.
The police pounce on Cummins,
but before he's let away, he whispers to Elizabeth,
still trying to exert control over his would-be teenage bride.
He said not to tell them that we have done anything,
that he forced me to go, say that I went willingly,
say that he was trying to protect me.
That was his story. He was trying to protect you.
He was, and he told me to go along with it.
I could tell you that her mood kind of was escalated.
You know, it was a very traumatic experience for her.
It was kind of a roller coaster of emotions for her.
Did she even feel relieved at all?
You know, I really don't know.
Elizabeth says it's important for her
to now reveal what she endured,
no longer afraid of what her teacher can do to her.
I know he's a bad man and I blame myself a lot,
but now I know that he's at fault.
He himself made him do it.
Other people don't choose your actions, you do.
Less than 24 hours after being found,
the already well-traveled Elizabeth is on a plane
for the very first time, heading home to Tennessee.
What was that like?
Overwhelming.
A lot to take in, and so many people bombarding you
with so many questions.
They have perceptions of what they think you're like and what you've done.
Yeah.
Elizabeth enters inpatient counseling, and for her family, relief is replaced with anger at the adults who they say let her down.
Still to come, the tables have turned, silenced no more.
Elizabeth takes aim at her school.
Why didn't they notice?
They knew and they know that they knew.
Can you just tell us why you didn't
call authorities right away when you found out
about the Tad Cubings incident?
Do you have any comment?
What that school is telling 20-20 tonight.
Next.
["The Tad Cubbings Incident"]
Came back to Tennessee and the FBI and the TPI were there
and they were trying to joke around with me
and making things a lot easier for the transition home.
April 21st, 2017, after 38 days on the run,
Elizabeth Thomas safely back in Tennessee.
Her family begins to demand answers.
How could this have happened at their daughter's owned school?
Did the school drop the ball?
That's an understatement in my opinion.
And they're now suing the school board for failing to protect her from Tad Cummins. To this day,
the school board nor the school has not even apologized for not even letting me know.
Last year, we tried to get some answers of our own from school principal Penny Love. Here she is
on her Twitter page, that big smile front and center,
but we find someone not so willing to smile for the camera
or even get out of her car.
Can you just tell us why you didn't call authorities
right away when you found out
about the Tad Cummings incident?
Do you have any comment?
And even though her school took a full week
to call police after Tad Cummings was seen kissing
his 15 year
old student in his classroom. Principal Love spared no time calling the cops on
us. As for that lawsuit, the school board referred us to the response it filed in
court that it denies it failed any of its obligations or permitted conditions
to empower a predator
and blamed what happened to Elizabeth solely on Tad Cummins.
Why didn't they notice?
Elizabeth insists adults around her could have saved her from those 38 days of horror.
They knew and they know that they knew and I really hope they feel guilty about it and I pray that one day they might say something and speak up that they knew and
if they don't that's
Great shame on them as for Cummins wife Jill some question whether she could have done more
They see that you knew her that you interacted with them and they say, how did she not know something was up? No one knew. So you never suspected anything? No. Not once?
No. Tad Cummins pleaded guilty earlier this year to transporting a minor across state lines for sex
and faces at least 10 years in prison. He can say all day long that the devil made him do it,
but he is the devil.
You had to see him in court.
I did.
And I made that choice.
And I wanted him to know that I'm stronger
than what he thinks I am, that I'm not his puppet anymore.
Today, Elizabeth is 17, back in her hometown in Tennessee,
and still living under that small town microscope.
Do you feel like people judge you?
They do. A lot of them do.
We tend to sometimes blame victims.
When something as horrible as this happens,
the person that it happens to is not the shameful one.
Elizabeth is focusing on what she can't.
Moving on, which for her means being like any other teenager.
She works at a coffee shop, has a boyfriend and a new puppy, spends her free time at the local Sonic, and is working towards her GED.
What are your dreams for your life?
To have a family and protect them, make them have a better life.
I'm a stronger person than I was, and I'm not afraid.
Strong and not afraid.
2020 reached out to Tad Cummins' attorney to comment about tonight's interview.
They declined to comment. Tad Cummins and his wife are now divorced.
And we do know that his sentencing is later this fall.
In the meantime, that is 2020 for tonight. Thanks for watching. I'm David Ruo. And I'm Amy Robach. For all of us here at 2020
in ABC News, have a great night. You've been listening to the 2020 True Crime Vault. You
can find all new broadcast episodes of 2020 Friday nights at 9 on ABC.