California couple may have used food to
control starving children
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[January 20, 2018]
By Dan Whitcomb and Sharon Bernstein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The California
couple accused of beating, shackling and abusing their 13 children may
have used starvation as a weapon to control them, experts say, and the
malnourishment would likely cause lifelong physical and mental issues
for the siblings.
The parents, who were charged with multiple counts of torture, child
abuse and false imprisonment, gave little food to their children,
ranging in age from two to 29 years old, according to prosecutors, who
said the abuse may have gone on for years. The couple even taunted their
offspring by displaying desserts that they were not allowed to eat.
Although their motives were still unclear, the couple may have denied
the children food as a way to weaken them and assert power. The children
were also shackled and beaten for perceived minor infractions,
authorities said.
The 17-year-old girl who escaped from the family's house in Perris,
California this week to call the police and reveal the alleged abuse,
was so emaciated she appeared to be only 10, authorities said.
"You're tired, your ability to stand up for yourself is at its limits,"
said Dr. Roy Lubit, a New York-based child psychiatrist with expertise
in Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
David Turpin, a 57-year-old computer engineer, and his homemaker wife
Louise, 49, each pleaded not guilty during an initial court appearance
on Thursday. The father was also charged with sexually abusing one of
his daughters.
Lubit said that starving a child showed premeditation when compared with
someone who lashes out and strikes his or her victim in a spasm of rage.
"Hitting comes from angry outbursts, where with starving its a prolonged
period of wanting to domineer, be in control. It's a power trip," he
said.
Prosecutors said the Turpins would buy food for themselves, leaving
apple and pumpkin pies on the kitchen counter but forbidding their
children to eat it.
Experts say the siblings would likely be left with permanent physical
and emotional damage, such as anxiety and depression, as well as issues
around food.
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Riverside County District Attorney Mike Hestrin announces charges
against David Turpin and Louise Turpin in Riverside, California U.S.
January 18, 2018. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
“When the brain is starved of proteins and other building blocks,
brain development is going to be impacted,” Dr. Richard Pan, a
pediatrician who is a Democratic state senator from the Sacramento
area, said.
The brain can be smaller than normal, and if typical developmental
milestones are missed due to starvation, they cannot readily be made
up later, he said.
As the body struggles to protect the heart and brain, it essentially
consumes other organs and even bones, said Dr. Dean Blumberg,
associate professor of pediatrics at the University of California,
Davis Children's Hospital in Sacramento.
Growth is stunted and long-term anemia and other nutritional
deficiencies can lead to a drop in IQ as well, he said.
On Thursday, prosecutors said the siblings were severely
malnourished, specifically having suffered muscle wasting, and some
had suffered cognitive impairment and nerve damage as a result of
the prolonged abuse.
The younger children could begin growing again once their nutrition
improves but may never reach their full heights. Those who lost IQ
might recover some of their intellect but not all of it, Blumberg
said.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles and Sharon Bernstein in
Sacramento; Editing by Susan Thomas)
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