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Ryan Edward Dougherty, left, is brought to an advisement hearing at the Pueblo County Sheriff's Office detention center in Pueblo, Colo. on Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011. (AP / The Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) Dylan Dougherty Stanley awaits advisement at the Pueblo County Sheriff's Office detention center in Pueblo, Colo. on Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011. (AP / The Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) Lee Grace Dougherty, 29, laughs while awaiting advisement at the Pueblo County Sherrif's Office detention center in Pueblo, Colo., Aug. 11, 2011. (AP / The Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) Lee Grace Dougherty, 29, centre in wheelchair, is surrounded by police as she is wheeled from Spanish Peak's Medical Center to a police vehicle in Walsenburg, Colo., Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. (AP / Ed Andrieski) The Colorado State Patrol officer takes a photo of the trio's vehicle after it crashed during a police chase near Walsenburg in southern Colorado on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. Police are pictured at the scene where three fugitive siblings wanted in Florida and Georgia crashed their automobile, left, and were arrested near Walsenburg, Colo., on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. (AP / Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) The Colorado State Patrol officer takes a photo of the trio's vehicle after it crashed during a police chase near Walsenburg in southern Colorado on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011.

Mom devastated after fugitive children's capture

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CTV News Video

CTV National News: Tom Walters on the siblings
The 'Dougherty Gang,' three fugitive siblings on the run from police after a violent crime, have been taken into custody in Colorado.
Extended: Siblings captured after crash
This unedited video shows police officials investigating after a trio of fugives was captured near Walsenburg in southern Colorado after a short chase that ended in a crash
CTV News Channel: Charlene Graham, chief
A police chief with the Pueblo County Sherriff's Office in Colorado says the siblings have been caught and are in custody. She says shots were fired but there were non-life threatening injuries and no officers were injured.

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Ryan Edward Dougherty, left, is brought to an advisement hearing at the Pueblo County Sheriff's Office detention center in Pueblo, Colo. on Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011. (AP / The Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) Dylan Dougherty Stanley awaits advisement at the Pueblo County Sheriff's Office detention center in Pueblo, Colo. on Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011. (AP / The Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) Lee Grace Dougherty, 29, laughs while awaiting advisement at the Pueblo County Sherrif's Office detention center in Pueblo, Colo., Aug. 11, 2011. (AP / The Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) Lee Grace Dougherty, 29, centre in wheelchair, is surrounded by police as she is wheeled from Spanish Peak's Medical Center to a police vehicle in Walsenburg, Colo., Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. (AP / Ed Andrieski) The Colorado State Patrol officer takes a photo of the trio's vehicle after it crashed during a police chase near Walsenburg in southern Colorado on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. Police are pictured at the scene where three fugitive siblings wanted in Florida and Georgia crashed their automobile, left, and were arrested near Walsenburg, Colo., on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. (AP / Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney) The Colorado State Patrol officer takes a photo of the trio's vehicle after it crashed during a police chase near Walsenburg in southern Colorado on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011.

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Ryan Edward Dougherty, left, is brought to an advisement hearing at the Pueblo County Sheriff's Office detention center in Pueblo, Colo. on Thursday, Aug. 11, 2011. (AP / The Pueblo Chieftain, Mike Sweeney)

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Date: Thu. Aug. 11 2011 1:10 PM ET

PUEBLO, Colo. — The Florida mother of two brothers and a sister captured in Colorado after an intense nationwide search said she is devastated after the weeklong manhunt and arrest of her children.

Barbara Bell of East Palatka, Fla., spoke briefly Thursday to The Associated Press but declined to discuss their ordeal, saying she didn't think it would help them in the long run.

"Thank God they're not tried by the media," she said. "They're tried in a court of law and their story will come out at that time."

Bell hung up the phone shortly after a reporter called, saying she needed to keep the line open for concerned family members to reach her.

"I'm devastated and I'm trying to be strong for other family members," Bell said. "Throughout all of this, I think everybody just wanted it to stop. And now it's over."

Her children -- Lee Grace Dougherty, 29, Dylan Dougherty Stanley, 26, and Ryan Edward Dougherty, 21, -- face four Colorado state charges each of first-degree assault on a peace officer.

They were scheduled for a first appearance in court Thursday in Pueblo, Colo. Authorities said the trio will appear by video from the jail, and won't be transported to the courtroom.

The siblings also have no-bond warrants in Georgia and Florida on charges they robbed a bank in Georgia and shot at a police officer in Florida.

"At first it was like, 'Wow, you know, they're shooting at me. And then it turned to I just want to catch them before they hurt anybody," said Zephyrhills, Fla., police officer Kevin Widner said of the confrontation.

"These three have a big legal mess in front of them and at some point they'll face charges in all those jurisdictions," FBI Special Agent Phil Niedringhaus said.

After images of the trio were broadcast on television, someone tipped Colorado state troopers and the Pueblo County sheriff around 9 a.m. Wednesday that the suspects might be at a campground south of Colorado Springs, Colo.

A Pueblo County sheriff's detective spotted the car near an interstate highway that day, followed it discreetly until state troopers joined him, and the chase was on.

AK-47 rounds were fired at the four patrol cars during the pursuit south on the interstate, where speeds exceeded 100 mph, said Lt. Col. Anthony Padilla of the Colorado State Patrol.

In Walsenburg, Colo., troopers deployed spiked stop strips across the interstate. A tire was punctured on the Subaru the siblings were driving, sending it rolling and crashing into a guardrail.

Lee Dougherty was shot in the leg after she pointed a gun at a police officer near the car, authorities said, adding that she was trying to escape on foot. Another one of the suspects was apprehended after a brief foot chase.

Three highway workers reportedly helped track and capture that sibling. Dave Dallaguardia told ABC's "Good Morning America" Thursday that he followed Ryan Dougherty in his truck even after the fugitive had motioned at him as if he had a gun.

Dallaguardia said he had no idea he was chasing one of the Dougherty siblings and his wife later scolded him for pursuing him. He said he and his co-workers came from small, blue-collar towns.

"If you need to lend a hand, you lend a hand and help people out," Dallaguardia said.

Lee Dougherty was treated at a Walsenburg hospital for a gunshot wound and her brothers received treatment for injuries suffered in the crash. They were later transferred to Pueblo County Jail.

The trio reportedly had bought camping gear and were hiding out in the remote San Isabel National Forest in southern Colorado.

Jenny Neal, 38, a clerk working at the time the siblings went to the Sinclair gas station in Colorado City, Col., said she had not been paying attention to the news so she didn't know who they were. She said she learned that it was Dylan Dougherty Stanley who went into the store, by himself, and bought vitamin water, sunflower seeds and gas.

"He was perfectly polite and friendly and, you know, completely calm and courteous and I really didn't think anything about it," she said.

Moments later, Neal said she saw patrol cars speeding down the highway and thought something was up, but it wasn't until a detective went into the store and asked to review video footage that she found out who her customer was.

Neal said she has wondered what would have happened had she known who they were and her demeanour had not been so calm.

"It's probably better that I didn't know anything, you know. I mean, it could've been different had I recognized them and been nervous or anything. It's a scary thought," she said.

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