Sunday, September 6th 2009, 4:00 AM

The sicko accused of abducting Jaycee Lee Dugard recorded creepy love songs about young girls, showing his twisted fascination with children began long before the 1991 kidnapping.
"The way she walks, yeah, subtle, sexy. What can I do?" Phillip Garrido croons down the microphone in one of 20 songs on the two CDs.
"I fall victim too. A little child, yeah, look what you do."
Phillip Garrido's former business associate, Marc Lister, came forward with the CDs Friday after finding them in storage.
He said he was given the tracks several years ago because the deranged man had hopes of making it in the music industry - and Lister had connections.
He told Lister he wrote them while in a federal lockup in 1976 for the kidnap and rape of another woman.
"For every little girl in the world, they want to be in love, yeah. Please tell me that you want me," Garrido sings in another song on the album, which also features him playing bass.
"The language, the lyrics, they're suggestive and they're provocative in a lot of the songs," Lister told the San Francisco Chronicle.
"When he gave them to me, he said, 'Someday, these are going to be worth millions,' and I just thought, 'Well, Phil's just being weird again,'" Lister said.
Garrido, 58, is accused of snatching 11-year-old Jaycee from South Lake Tahoe in 1991 and fathering her two children.
His wife, Nancy Garrido, 54, has also been charged in connection with the alleged crimes. Both have pleaded not guilty.
Lister, a former glass shop owner from Antioch, Calif., said he knew Garrido for 15 years. He received the songs several years ago, and listened to them without paying close attention to the lyrics before putting them in storage.
"I will tell you about the only one," Garrido sings. "She's a dream, dream come true....with a note saying you're my baby blue."
Lister said he wanted to share the lyrics with law enforcement and raise money from the songs to benefit abused women.
He also visited the Garridos' home on Walnut Ave., where Jaycee was held captive for 18 years, several times and had met her and her two daughters.
"There was absolutely nothing that I saw that would have raised suspicion," Lister said.
Jaycee "always looked healthy to me," he said.
The elderly mother of sicko Phillip Garrido said she was told the girl her son held captive for 18 years - Jaycee Lee Dugard - and the two girls he fathered with her were her granddaughters.
Patricia Garrido, 88, told London's Sunday Mirror newspaper that her son introduced Dugard as "Allissa," his daughter by a former lover.
Garrido told his mother that the two daughters he fathered with Dugard - now 15 and 11 - also were from a previous relationship.
"I don't remember how her two little girls came to be there, but I thought they were Phillip's. He told me they were all his children," Patricia Garrido said.
She said she was unaware her son allegedly kidnapped Dugard until last month when police raided Garrido's California home.
"I didn't know she was being kept there against her will. I was in my bed, and all I knew was this smiley girl who came to see me," Patricia Garrido said.
"She always seemed happy to be there. I thought she was my granddaughter. I don't know what's happened to her now, but I love her. I hope she's okay."
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