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Erin Andrews Leads Stalking Roundtable

ByGARY WYNN and ALI EHRLICH
October 04, 2009, 9:26 PM

Aug. 5, 2010 — -- In her first appearance as a "Good Morning America" contributor, Erin Andrews directly confronted an issue that had a drastic impact on her own life: stalking.

Andrews, who is also a sideline reporter for ESPN, was thrust into the national spotlight last summer when a former Illinois insurance executive named David Barrett recorded several videos of Andrews through the peephole of her hotel room and posted the videos on the Internet.

Garrett pleaded guilty to interstate stalking in December of 2009. But while Garrett has been quiet behind bars, Andrews took up the cause of promoting stalking awareness and campaigning for tougher anti-stalking laws.

Not limited to those in the public eye, stalking affects up to 3.4 million people over the age of 18 every year in the U.S.

For her first report with "GMA," Andrews sat down with three women who were the victims of stalking. For this report, victims asked that some names be changed and their last names not be revealed.

If you or someone you know are the victim of stalking, you can visit the National Center for Victims of Crime, call its helpline at 1-800-FYI-CALL (1-800-394-2255) or visit www.safehorizon.org.

Michele said she was stalked by an ex-boyfriend for two years.

"It basically was phone calls in the beginning," she said. "Lots and lots of phone calls. 'I love you. I miss you. Why did we break up?' But then very shortly it turned to death threats."

Sarah was stalked after a disagreement with a family member. She received hundreds of threatening calls a week and she said it took a full year before she could convince law enforcement to intervene.

"I thought he was going to kill me," she said. "I thought he was going to come up and kill me."

Since her stalker was a family member, Sarah had a difficult time convincing anyone to take her seriously.

"I felt like I was using that word [stalker] from the beginning and that other people were invalidating it. It was a family member. So, people just kept saying, 'Well, this is a family issue.' Especially the police. They love to say, 'Well, this is a family issue. Can't you just work it out?'" she said. "And you know, the definition of New York State stalking law fits exactly perfectly into what he was doing to me."

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