Updated: Thursday, 13 May 2010, 11:20 PM PDT
Published : Wednesday, 12 May 2010, 7:52 PM PDT
Glendale - A Glendale woman whose disappearance sparked a massive search made up a story that she'd been abducted at knifepoint and fled because of stress, police said Thursday.
Nancy Salas was reunited with her family in Glendale Thursday night, nearly two days after she went missing. She was last seen around 6:30 a.m. Wednesday after telling her family she was going on her usual run.
Salas turned up in a carpet store in Merced in central California Thursday, Glendale police Sgt. Tom Lorenz said.
The young woman was in tears and asked an employee to call 911, showroom coordinator Melanie Mittelsteadt told the Merced Sun-Star. Salas told police she'd been abducted by a man at knifepoint during her run and was driven to Merced, Lorenz said.
Salas retracted her story shortly before she was set to be reunited with her family back in Glendale late Thursday, Lorenz said, admitting that she made it up and fled because she felt intense pressure from her family and friends.
The search for Salas and the investigation into her disappearance took an abrupt turn earlier Thursday when police discovered that Salas had misled her parents by telling them she was attending the University of California, Los Angeles.
The school reported that the fourth-year student and sociology major was last enrolled at UCLA in fall 2008.
Her mother and father had been planning a graduation ceremony for their daughter. Both parents, on learning that their daughter was OK, hugged relatives and friends and looked forward to seeing her.
"Everything has ended up beautifully," the woman's father Henry Salas, said in Spanish. "It's incredible the help that we had -- roommates, friends, friends from the university, friends from church."
Her mother, Joanna Salas, smiled broadly as the crowd took turns offering her hugs. "I've come back to life," she said.
Salas' disappearance prompted a sweeping but futile search by police officers and volunteers who were aided by rangers, bloodhounds and a helicopter. Detectives checked her cell phone and computer records for clues.
Friends and family members passed out flyers with her photograph and her friends mobilized on Facebook to exchange information and organize searches.
"It's a tragic story," Lorenz said.
"She (Salas) was idolized by her family, neighbors, friends, church, as being a successful student at UCLA."
"There is so much stress on young people today, expectations are extremely high. She didn't know how to handle it and she fled.," Lorenz said.
Associated Press Writer Robert Jablon in Los Angeles contributed to this report.