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Teen hides under covers, foils burglary with text message

  • Story Highlights
  • Ohio girl, 13, hides in bed during home invasion
  • While intruders ransack home, teen texts mother: "OMG. They're in the house."
  • Intruders fail to notice teen even as they sit on her bed
  • Two suspects in custody after mother calls 911
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LITHOPOLIS, Ohio (AP) -- As two intruders began ransacking her house, a teenager home alone climbed into bed, hid under the covers and text messaged her mother, who called 911.

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Lauren Durnbaugh, 13, hid under her covers and sent her mother a text message during a home invasion.

The thieves, who were both arrested, even sat on the girl's bed at one point, unaware she was home.

Lauren Durnbaugh, 13, was home sick from school Tuesday when she heard someone open a rear door her mother forgot to lock. She hid as the suspects went from room to room.

"OMG. They're in the house. I think we're being robbed," Lauren said in a text message to her mother, Margo Roby, 53, who was working at a car dealership about 15 minutes away.

Roby called 911 and raced home from work, ramming her vehicle into the back of the suspects' car parked in the driveway, authorities said.

One of the suspects, Jenna Marie Burns, came out of the house and Roby wrestled with her just as sheriff's deputies and the police chief arrived, Fairfield County Sheriff Dave Phalen said.

Jewelry, a laptop computer, a digital camera and a tool box were among items the intruders had set outside apparently to be carried away from the house, about 15 miles southeast of Columbus, Phalen said.

Burns and another suspect, Jeremiah Lee Fyffe, 26, were charged with burglary. Burns also was charged with robbery. Both remained in a county jail Thursday on $100,000 bond.

Lauren said she got into bed because the believed thieves were more likely to look elsewhere for items to steal.

"You wouldn't just look in someone's bed for something," she said Thursday on NBC's "Today" show. "You would be going in their closet and looking anywhere else."

The intruders apparently were unaware that the teen was home, Phalen said.

Roby said she blamed herself for failing to lock the door when she left for work. But she's proud of how her daughter handled herself.

"After we cried, she said, 'Wow, I can't believe I did that,"' Roby said. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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