Loved ones of Monica De Leon Barba are breathing a sigh of relief.

The American who lived in Mexico and was kidnapped there while walking with her dog last November was released Friday from her captors, according to the FBI. De Leon Barba was reunited with her family and friends in San Mateo, California, FBI special agent in charge Robert K. Tripp said.

“The FBI is pleased to announce that Monica De Leon Barba is safe and en route to the US where he will be reunited with her family and dog after spending eight months in captivity,” the FBI in San Francisco said in a Twitter post on Saturday.

“I think we can all breathe a little bit easier,” Anissa Livas, a close friend of De Leon Barba, told KGO-TV Saturday.

De Leon Barba’s abduction was among the more highly-publicized kidnappings of U.S. citizens in Mexico, including four Americans from Brownsville, Texas in a violent kidnapping in March by a cartel in the Mexican border town of Matamoros, Tamaulipas. Two Americans kidnapped were killed, while two others survived and returned home. The cartel later apologized.

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De Leon Barba was kidnapped in Tepatitlán, Jalisco, Mexico on November 22, 2022, as she was walking home from work with her dog. Surveillance video captured the abduction where De Leon Barba was confronted by at least five suspects and forced into a gray Volkswagen Jetta. The suspects then drove away in three different vehicles.