Salt Lake City, Utah (CNN) -- Brian David Mitchell told police Elizabeth Smart was "converted by the priority of God" and willingly stayed with him after she vanished from her bedroom in June 2002.
"The Lord God delivered her," he told police.
Jurors at Mitchell's federal watched police grill him on a two-hour video played Monday at Mitchell's federal kidnapping trial. On the video, Mitchell offered religious responses to questions posed by an FBI agent and a police detective from Salt Lake City, Utah.
Mitchell, his wife, Wanda Barzee, and Smart were taken into custody on March 12, 2003, as they left a Wal-Mart store in suburban Sandy, Utah. They were hitchhiking back from a winter trip to California and headed to a remote mountain campsite when passersby recognized Mitchell and called police.
Mitchell, 57, is charged with kidnapping and transporting a minor across state lines for sex. He could face life in prison if convicted. His lawyers are raising an insanity defense.
Smart, now 23, was composed and certain as she recounted her ordeal during three days of riveting testimony last week.
She said Mitchell snatched her from her bed at knifepoint and led her to a makeshift mountain camp, where he chained and degraded her as he repeatedly raped her, she said.
As the trial entered its second week, testimony focused on the final days of Smart's ordeal.
At times, Mitchell's voice was nearly inaudible on the tape of his police interrogation.
"Not to be too obvious about it, but we've been looking for Elizabeth Smart for some nine months, and she's with you," an unidentified investigator says as the taped interview begins. "And we'd like to know how that came about."
Mitchell, who responds to the name Immanuel, tells police God had led Smart to him: "She was converted by the spirit of God. If you read the book you will understand."
Asked whether his name in the secular world is Brian David Mitchell, Mitchell responds that the question is of no relevance: "I've forsaken the world. It is immaterial to ask me such a question."
He told investigators that the Lord told him Smart was 18. She was 14 when, she testified, Mitchell abducted her at knifepoint from the bed she shared with her sister and led her to a campsite high in the mountains.
Asked if he had sexual intercourse with Smart, Mitchell becomes evasive, saying the question is "too personal." Asked if he took her from her home, he responded, "The Lord God delivered her."
Investigators repeatedly tried to steer him back to the subject of Smart, and he repeatedly deflected their questions with religious speeches.
"So far I have no idea what you're talking about," said one investigator in a autorotation. "For the past nine months, this family has gone through hell."
He tells Mitchell hundreds of law enforcement officers spent hours looking for Smart and the family had thought she was dead.
"They expected to find a corpse," he said.
Mitchell continues with his religious talk, but never directly responds to investigators' questions.
The investigator takes a direct tack: "We've been talking to this girl and she's been saying some really terrible things about you, and I'm going to ask you some direct questions."
Investigator: "Did you take that girl from her house? Yes, or no?"
Mitchell: "I'm not going to answer that question."
Investigator: "We want to be able to go to Elizabeth's family. ... We want to be able to have an explanation for them. You have to feel sorry for them."
Mitchell: "I have great compassion and love for them, because they are the parents of my ... " -- voice trails off.
Investigator: "Oh, [expletive] You took her out of her house!"
The investigator accuses Mitchell of laying the groundwork for an insanity defense, and accuses him of being on a "pretty big power trip."
"I'm just obedient to what God told me to do," Mitchell responds.
"You understand these charges could potentially keep you behind bars for the rest of your life?" the investigator asks.
Mitchell responds, "It mattereth not ... prison or death, it mattereth not."
Mitchell accuses police of trying to get him to say something false, and an investigator notes, "This is getting a little too intense for you, isn't it? ... You keep retreating into your spiel and your diatribe."
"The core of the problem is you, and you are not a prophet and you are not a servant of Jesus Christ. You are Brian David Mitchell," the frustrated investigator states, "and you have done something awful."
The investigator raises his voice:
"If heaven's filled with people like you, I'd be more comfortable in hell! ... You are Brian David Mitchell, and you are a child molester. A criminal. You are a hypocrite and a fraud."
Mitchell repeatedly denies he raped Smart.
"I have only done what the Lord God almighty commanded me to do," he says. "You're asking me to speak about things which are sacred and holy and which I cannot talk about."
"I thought she was 18. And she willingly chose to be sealed," Mitchell says.
Mitchell begins to sing in the interrogation room, as he has at every court hearing since December 2004. An investigator joins him for a while.
As they begin to speak with him again, Mitchell screams, "Get thee behind me Satan!" several times.
"You are not a servant of the Lord. You have harmed a child," says an investigator once Mitchell quiets. "You need to evaluate your life."
"You don't have any power here. You don't speak for Jesus Christ," Mitchell is told. "Your name is Brian Mitchell, and you're attracted to young girls, and you're just a loser. ... You're not going down as a servant of God. You're going down as a child rapist. You're going down as the lowest of the low."
As Mitchell sits silently with his eyes closed, the investigator says: "I hate to tell you this, Brian, but the Rapture has not happened. You are still in this room. You cannot escape."
The investigators taunt him about Smart:
"She gave you up."
"She thinks that you are a child rapist."
"She finds you rather smelly, and disgusting."
Later, FBI agent George Dougherty interviewed Mitchell for several days, finally winning a major concession. "Did you then consummate your marriage to make it a true union?" he said he asked. "And he said 'Yes.'"
Earlier in the day, witnesses described seeing an odd trio -- later identified as Mitchell, Barzee and Smart -- walking the streets of Lakeside, California, in their flowing religious robes between late October 2002 and early March 2003.
Retired police officer Jill Olgivie recalled seeing them walking "like ducks in a row" and noticed the young girl seemed "out of place."
She told the jury that the man glared at her in a way "so intimidating, so encompassing it stopped me." She was shown a photograph of Mitchell in court, and identified him as the glaring man.
"And I looked at the girl," she said, "I looked at her eyes. Her eyes were blank. Just dead."
Mitchell bought three Greyhound bus tickets from Salt Lake City, Utah, to San Diego, California, for $177, according to testimony and stipulations between prosecutors and defense attorneys. The bus left Salt Lake City on October 7.
Smart testified last week that she accompanied Mitchell and Barzee to California after a police officer questioned them at the public library in Salt Lake City. The police officer, Jon Richey, testified last week that a caller who claimed the young woman wearing the veil had Elizabeth Smart's eyes, brought him to the library.
She wore a veil, and Mitchell refused to let the officer lift it, saying their religion prohibited anyone but the young woman's husband to see her face.
Afterwards, Smart testified, an additional veil shielded her eyes because, as Mitchell told her: "The world wasn't ready for that light in my eyes."
Adelia Harrington, a former employee, testified that she also noticed the three at the Lakeside branch of the San Diego public library on several occasions.
"Boy, this teenager has really done something to make her parents angry with her, and they're just staying right on top of her," she recalled thinking. She described them as "just not a happy group."
Mitchell took his two wives away from the San Diego area after he spent a week in jail for tossing a brick through a church window. Smart testified that she and Barzee grew weak from hunger as they awaited his return at their makeshift mountainside camp.
Prosecutors played a video of Mitchell's February 18, 2003, appearance in a San Diego courtroom.
On the video, the judge asks Mitchell where he is going to stay the night, and he replies he, his wife, and his daughter are staying with friends, and that he is a minister of the Lord. He pleads guilty to vandalizing church property and is sentenced to seven actual days in jail.
"That was the worst night and the worst week of my whole life," he tells the judge. "For the first time in 22 years, I got drunk that night. ... This week in jail has been like Jonah getting swallowed by the whale," he says, promising to turn his life around.
He had given authorities a false name, prosecutors said.
Smart testified that she convinced Mitchell to hitchhike back to Utah, saying God had suggested it in a revelation similar to those Mitchell claimed to receive.
Trevelin Colianni, a disabled Navy veteran, testified that he saw the hitchhikers at a Burger King in Las Vegas, Nevada.
The teenager "had kind of a grayish wig on and a scarf around it, sunglasses, and a look that I'll never forget. She was very frightened, very nervous," he told the jury.
The man had a hold on the young woman's wrist and led her around, he said. "She never looked like she moved on her own."
He said he told his wife, "something's not right" and called police. Colianni was asked what compelled him to call the police.
"The look in that little girl's face."
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