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Weston and two other charges cleared out of the house hours after calling to report the death. "Nobody was there. ... They had left everything," landlord Mohammad Zarandi said. "The TV was still on." She had moved in just six weeks earlier with three women, telling Zarandi she was their caretaker. It's unclear where the surviving trio went after that. But this past year alone, Weston traveled with four disabled adults from Killeen, Texas, to West Palm Beach, Fla., to Philadelphia. Police believe they were staying one step ahead of the law, and perhaps of the many landlords, including Zarandi, who went to court seeking unpaid rent. In West Palm Beach, neighbors would see Weston, Thomas and Wright out with several disabled adults, some of whom sported noticeable bruises. They were told the adults had fought with each other. The group, including a bevy of children, stripped the house bare when they left a few weeks ago, that landlord said. They arrived at McIntosh's apartment in northeast Philadelphia on about Oct. 3. Neighbors there saw them unload a number of adults from the SUV in the middle of the night. Later that week, another oddity: the group was holding an impromptu flea market on the sidewalk. Several disabled adults were being harshly ordered around by Weston, they said. A block captain called landlord Turgut Gozleveli when they left behind a pile of debris. Gozleveli arrived and was introduced by his tenant, McIntosh, to Weston, along with Thomas and Wright. Two days later, all four would be under arrest after barking dogs led Gozleveli to find the four disabled adults packed into a stench-filled boiler room. They were so weak, they needed help from police walking up the basement stairs. Police soon found Social Security cards, power of attorney forms and other documents bearing the names of about 50 people. They have no idea at this point how broad the scheme may be or how much money may be involved. But they do think they have rounded up all of the children and teens who were at risk. "We are still trying to figure out the many components of what I would describe as the incredibly tangled web of horror," Nutter said.
[Associated
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