AC. The Girl Who Loved Purple: How the Abduction of 10-Year-Old Jessica Ridgeway Exposed a Teenage Predator and United a Community in Grief

On a quiet Friday morning in October 2012, the first snow of the season drifted gently over Westminster, Colorado. It was the kind of snowfall that usually brings excitement to children and a sense of calm to neighborhoods preparing for winter. Inside a modest home on Moore Street, 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway was getting ready for school, unaware that her ordinary routine would soon become the center of one of the most heartbreaking moments in the town’s history.

Jessica was known for her warmth and thoughtfulness. Friends and family described her as someone who noticed others, who cared deeply, and who tried to include everyone around her. She loved the color purple, wore purple-framed glasses, and enjoyed children’s television shows like many kids her age. She dreamed of becoming a cheerleader, not for the attention, but because she wanted to encourage people and make them feel supported.

That morning, she put on her black winter jacket with its pink lining, zipped it carefully, slipped on her boots, and grabbed her backpack. A small keychain bearing her name hung from the zipper. Before stepping outside, she said goodbye to her mother, Sarah, who watched from the window as Jessica walked down the snow-covered sidewalk toward her friend’s house. It was a familiar routine, one they had repeated countless times without concern.

Sarah, exhausted after an overnight work shift, went to sleep believing her daughter was safe on her short walk to school. Nothing about that morning suggested otherwise.

Jessica never arrived.

A Disappearance That Went Unnoticed for Hours

Murder of Jessica Ridgeway - Wikipedia

For several hours, no one realized something was wrong. Jessica did not reach her friend’s house and never made it to Witt Elementary School. A call from the school reporting her absence went unanswered while Sarah slept. It wasn’t until later that afternoon, when Jessica still hadn’t returned home, that alarm quickly turned into panic.

By early evening, Jessica was officially reported missing.

News of her disappearance spread rapidly through Westminster and neighboring towns. Within hours, hundreds of volunteers organized searches, walking streets, parks, and open areas. Neighbors who had never spoken before worked side by side, driven by a shared urgency. Purple ribbons appeared across the city—tied to trees, mailboxes, fences, and jackets—symbolizing hope and unity, and reflecting Jessica’s favorite color.

The group of volunteers came to be known as “Jessica’s People.” They searched tirelessly, believing that community effort could bring her home.

As the days passed, concern deepened.

A backpack was discovered miles away in Superior, Colorado. Inside were personal items Jessica relied on daily, including her glasses. For investigators, this discovery signaled that the situation was far more serious than a child who had simply wandered off. The focus shifted from searching for a lost child to investigating a possible crime.

From Search to Investigation

Austin Sigg pleads guilty in death of Jessica Ridgeway in Colorado | CNN

Five days after Jessica vanished, authorities confirmed devastating news. Evidence found in an open space in a nearby city led investigators to conclude that Jessica would not be coming home. The case officially transitioned from a missing child investigation to a criminal inquiry.

Law enforcement agencies worked quickly, analyzing physical evidence and reviewing prior reports. Investigators discovered similarities between Jessica’s case and an earlier incident involving a local jogger who had narrowly escaped harm months earlier. DNA evidence linked the two cases, suggesting a pattern and indicating that the person responsible was likely someone familiar with the area.

The FBI assisted local police, releasing a behavioral profile and asking the public to be alert to unusual changes in people they knew. Among the items released to the media was an image of a small wooden cross found near the investigation site—an object investigators believed might be recognizable.

That image would soon prove critical.

A Recognition That Changed the Case

Teen convicted of killing 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway sentenced to life

On October 19, a woman watching the news recognized the wooden cross immediately. She knew it belonged to a teenage boy she was familiar with: 17-year-old Austin Sigg. Sigg had dropped out of high school and lived not far from where Jessica disappeared. He was known to have an intense interest in death and forensic topics, interests that had raised concern but never alarm.

When questioned by police, Sigg appeared calm and cooperative. He denied any involvement and voluntarily provided a DNA sample. Due to a procedural error, the sample was misplaced, and he was temporarily cleared. However, investigators remained uneasy, and the investigation continued.

Just days later, the case took a decisive turn.

On October 23, Sigg confessed to his mother, Mindy. He told her directly that he was responsible for Jessica’s death and claimed to have evidence proving it. Faced with an unthinkable reality, Mindy made a decision that would define her role in the story.

She contacted authorities and reported her own son.

During the call, her voice shook as she told the dispatcher what she had been told. It was an act of accountability that drew national attention, highlighting the painful complexity of responsibility when confronted with undeniable truth.

Confronting an Unimaginable Reality

Colorado teenager gets life in prison in Jessica Ridgeway murder

Once in custody, Sigg provided a detailed confession to investigators. He admitted to planning harmful actions and described his behavior in detached terms that alarmed professionals. Psychological evaluations later revealed severe emotional disturbances and a lack of empathy, characteristics that experts noted were consistent with escalating violent behavior.

Evidence collected from his home supported his confession, confirming details he had provided voluntarily. Authorities emphasized that this was not a case of community failure, but rather an example of how deeply hidden dangerous behavior can sometimes be.

For Jessica’s family and the broader community, the confession brought answers but no comfort.

Justice Through the Legal System

Sigg ultimately pleaded guilty to all charges, sparing Jessica’s family a prolonged trial. In November 2013, he was sentenced to life in prison plus additional consecutive years. Because he was a minor at the time of the crime, the sentence included the possibility of parole decades in the future, though legal experts noted that release was highly unlikely.

The court emphasized that the sentence reflected both the severity of the crime and the need to protect the public.

Jessica’s parents addressed the court with dignity and strength, focusing not on anger, but on the love they held for their daughter and the hope that her story might prevent future tragedies.

A Legacy Defined by Kindness, Not Harm

Austin Reed Sigg was 17 at the time of the killing and was charged as an adult.

Jessica Ridgeway’s life is remembered not through the actions that ended it, but through the impact she continues to have.

A memorial park in Westminster honors her memory with purple playground equipment and engraved messages, including some of her favorite jokes. It is a place designed for laughter, play, and togetherness—values that reflected who Jessica was.

Her story also inspired the creation of the Lassie Project, a nonprofit initiative and mobile application aimed at improving the speed and effectiveness of missing child alerts. The project empowers communities to respond quickly when a child goes missing, using technology to mobilize help in the earliest and most critical moments.

Jessica’s younger sister, Anna, grows up surrounded by stories of her sister’s kindness, creativity, and love. Family members describe Jessica as a guiding presence, someone whose spirit continues to shape their lives.

Remembering a Bright Light

Jessica Ridgeway was a child who believed in kindness and connection. She loved purple, dreamed big, and cared deeply about others. While her life was tragically brief, her influence has endured in meaningful and constructive ways.

In the face of loss, a community came together. Neighbors became protectors. Parents became advocates. Grief turned into action.

Jessica’s story is not only a reminder of vulnerability, but also of responsibility, unity, and the power of collective compassion. Her memory continues to inspire vigilance, empathy, and hope—ensuring that a girl who wanted to make the world kinder still does so, every day.