A NEW docuseries on Netflix details the crimes committed against young workers at fast food restaurants across the country in the early 90s to the mid-2000s.
The Don't Pick Up the Phone Netflix series captures the haunting stories of many young workers like Louise Ogborn - and has left many viewers wondering where she is now.
Who is Louise Ogborn?
Louise Ogborn is the survivor of horrific sexual crimes committed through proxy.
She was 18 years old in 2004 when she worked at a McDonald's restaurant in Mount Washington, Kentucky.
She was working a double shift when a caller asked to speak to her manager and identified himself as a police officer.
The alleged police officer - who police later identified as David Richard Stewart - told Ogborn's manager that an employee on duty had stolen a woman's bag and went on to describe the young worker.
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He offered to either have the police sent to pick up the employee and question her at the station or to allow the manager to search her at the restaurant.
Stewart was later found to be not guilty.
On October 31, 2006, he was acquitted of all charges from the case.
What happened to Louise Ogborn?
Ogborn let her employer search her, and she followed her into her office, where the impersonator instructed the manager to force her to strip naked.
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She was given an apron to cover herself with, but her clothing was later taken from her.
The fake officer then told the manager to watch as the innocent employee was forced to touch herself and to perform exercises naked to prove that she wasn't hiding anything.
When the manager told the "cop" that she had to return to duty and hadn't found anything, the officer ordered her to call her fiancé and have him come and wait with the young girl.
The manager did as she was told, and her fiancé, Walter Nix Jr, came to the restaurant to watch over Ogborn.
Nix was given the phone and was instructed by the "officer" to further assault Ogborn for several hours.
Finally, the assistant managers realized something was very wrong with the person on the other end of the phone and intervened.
Where is Louise Ogborn today?
Louise suffered from severe PTSD and trauma from the crimes and canceled her plans to attend the University of Louisville.
After several years of intense therapy, she decided to speak out and sue McDonald's for not protecting her.
She alleged that the fast food chain had failed to protect her. According to court records, McDonald's had been subjected to eerily similar crimes as early as 2002.
She claimed that they should have trained their employees about the kind of hoax calls that had harmed her.
In 2007, Louise was awarded $5million in punitive damages and $1.1million in compensatory damages and expenses.
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McDonald's countered her claims and settled with her for the $1.1million, leaving her without the punitive damages.
Today, Louise is in her mid-thirties and married to a man named Jason Bolin, with whom she shares two daughters.
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