Starving California children taunted with
pie, beaten by parents: prosecutor
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[January 19, 2018]
By Tori Richards
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (Reuters) - The 13
children imprisoned for years by their parents in their squalid
California home were beaten, shackled, starved and even taunted with
food that they were forbidden to eat, a prosecutor said on Thursday.
The victims, ages 2 to 29, were severely malnourished, suffering from
muscle wasting and stunted growth. Several had cognitive impairment and
nerve damage from extreme and prolonged physical abuse, the prosecutor
said.
Each parent faces 94 years to life in prison if convicted on more than
two dozen charges including torture, child abuse and false imprisonment
in a case that has shocked the nation and prompted calls for greater
supervision of home schooling.
The father, David Turpin, 57, is also accused of sexually abusing one of
his young daughters. He and his wife, Louise, 49, sat without speaking,
dressed in dark clothes during their initial court appearance on
Thursday. The husband hunched over the defense table with his hands in
his lap.
Defense attorneys entered not guilty pleas to all the charges.
At a news conference before the proceeding, Riverside County District
Attorney Mike Hestrin described what he said was a case of "human
depravity." The children were denied food, basic hygiene and medical
care and were punished for perceived infractions such as washing their
hands above the wrist.
He said the victims were chained for weeks or even months at a time, not
released even to use the bathroom. They were allowed to shower only once
a year.
"The parents would apparently buy food for themselves and not allow the
children to eat it," he said. "They would buy food, including pies,
apple pies, pumpkin pies, leave it on the counter, let the children look
at it but not eat the food."
As a result of malnourishment, the 12-year-old child was the weight of
an average 7-year-old while the oldest, a 29-year-old woman, weighed
just 82 pounds, he said.
The couple was arrested on Sunday in their home in Perris, California,
about 70 miles (113 km) east of Los Angeles, after an emaciated teenage
daughter climbed out a window and called police. A sibling who escaped
with her got scared and turned back, Hestrin said.
"The 17-year-old victim that escaped had been working on a plan with the
siblings to escape this abuse for more than two years," he added.
The father registered the house, where the family lived since 2014, as
the private Sandcastle Day School and listed himself as the principal.
The children were the only students. Most states, including California,
do not monitor or inspect such schools.
Hestrin suggested the children's schooling was deficient, as many lacked
basic knowledge about such things as police officers and medication.
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David Turpin (R) and Louise Turpin (L) appear in court for their
arraignment in Riverside, California, U.S. January 18, 2018.
REUTERS/Frederic J. Brown/Pool
CHILDREN CHAINED TO BEDS
The victims told investigators the parents began tying them up years
ago as a punishment, first with ropes, Hestrin said. After one
escaped, "the defendants eventually began using chains and padlocks
to chain up the victims to their beds," he said.
Harsh physical punishment including beatings and strangulation was
meted out for transgressions such as washing their hands above the
wrists, which the parents considered playing with water, according
to the prosecutor.
The children had not been to a doctor in at least four years and
none has ever visited a dentist, Hestrin said.
"They were not allowed to have toys although there were many toys
found in the house that were in their original package and had never
been opened," he said.
The abuse and neglect began when the family lived in the Fort Worth,
Texas, area, with the parents at one point residing apart from most
of their children and dropping off food from time to time, Hestrin
said.
The family relocated to Murrieta, California, in 2010, and then
moved again to nearby Perris in 2014, with the abuse and neglect
intensifying after they arrived on the West Coast, Hestrin said.
Texas Department of Family and Protective Services spokesman Patrick
Crimmins said no report was made there of any misconduct involving
the Turpins.
During Thursday's brief court hearing, Judge Michael Donner ordered
each defendant to remain held on $12 million bail and set the next
court date for Feb. 23.
"A case like that sticks with you and haunts you," Hestrin told
reporters. "Sometimes in this business you are faced with human
depravity, and that’s what we have here."
(Addititional reporting by Dan Whitcomb and Alex Dobuzinskis in Los
Angeles, and Gina Cherelus in New York; Writing by Dan Whitcomb and
Steve Gorman; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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