West Virginia couple sentenced to maximum of decades in prison for
abusing adopted children
[March 20, 2025]
By JOHN RABY
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A West Virginia couple received the maximum
sentences of decades in prison Wednesday for abusing their adoptive
children, which included heavy labor, locking them in bedrooms, forcing
some to sleep on concrete floors and making them stand for hours with
their hands on their heads.
Jeanne Kay Whitefeather received up to 215 years in prison and her
husband, Donald Lantz, got a term of up to 160 years. A Kanawha County
jury on Jan. 29 found the pair guilty on multiple counts of forced
labor, human trafficking, and child abuse and neglect. Whitefeather also
was convicted of civil rights violations based on race.
Whitefeather will be eligible for parole after serving 40 years and
Lantz after 30.
“You brought these children to West Virginia, a place that I know as
‘Almost Heaven,’ and you put them in hell. This court will now put you
in yours,” Circuit Judge Maryclaire Akers told the defendants. “And may
God have mercy on your souls. Because this court will not.”
One by one, letters written by four of the children were read in court
by the prosecutor office's victim advocate. Some of the children stood
by the advocate's side as she read. The letters said the children
endured unspeakable trauma, have difficulty trusting anyone, suffer
nightmares and that they question and fear affection.
The oldest girl, now 18, addressed the court directly, telling
Whitefeather, “I’ll never understand how you can sleep at night. I want
you to know that you are a monster.”
Akers previously ordered news outlets not to publish the children’s
names or use their images.
The couple, who are white, adopted the five Black siblings while living
in Minnesota, moved to a farm in Washington state in 2018, then brought
the family to West Virginia in May 2023, when the children ranged in age
from 5 to 16.

Five months after their arrival in Sissonville, the couple was arrested
after neighbors saw Lantz lock the oldest girl and her teenage brother
in a shed and leave the property. A deputy used a crowbar to get them
out.
Inside the main residence, a 9-year-old girl was found crying in a loft
alone with no protection from falling, according to a criminal
complaint. The children were found in dirty clothes and smelling of body
odor, deputies said, and the oldest boy was found barefoot with what
appeared to be sores on his feet.
A fourth child was with Lantz when he eventually returned, and deputies
were later led to a 5-year-old girl. All five were turned over to Child
Protective Services after the couple’s arrest.
Last month, the oldest daughter sued the couple, alleging severe
physical and emotional abuse and neglect that has scarred her
permanently.
After Whitefeather and Lantz made brief statements in court, Akers said
they refused to take responsibility for their actions.
The judge pointed to a presentencing report in which the couple blamed
their real estate agent “for not finding a place isolated enough,” Akers
said. “But I guess you should have explained to your realtor that you
needed an isolated place away from people so that you could continue to
abuse your children.”
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Donald Lantz, left, speaks with his attorney John Balenovich as his
wife Jeanne Whitefeather, right, leaves the courtroom in Kanawha
County Circuit Court, Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025, in Charleston, W.Va.
(Christopher Millette/Charleston Gazette-Mail via AP, File)

Children were forced to use hands for digging
During trial, neighbors testified they never saw the children play
and witnessed Lantz make them stand in line or perform difficult
chores around the yard, including lifting heavy items. After Lantz
noticed the curious neighbors, the children mostly stayed indoors.
The eldest daughter testified the outdoor work occurred mostly in
Washington and that some of them were forced to use their hands for
digging. She also said the children were cursed at “all the time”
and that Whitefeather used racist language.
The daughter said Whitefeather gave preferential treatment to the
youngest child, who wasn't involved in any of the charges, and that
Whitefeather had told the other children that she wished for a life
without them.
The daughter also said the children were fed a steady diet of peanut
butter sandwiches at scheduled times, some left over from a previous
meal. Some kids were forced to stand in their rooms for hours and
keep their hands on their heads. The oldest girl and boy shared a
room, were forced to sleep on the floor and used the same bucket for
the bathroom while the other held up a sheet for privacy from the
home's security cameras, according to testimony.
The couple and their attorneys pushed back on the accusations, with
Lantz testifying that the chores were assigned to teach the children
responsibility.
Defense says couple was overwhelmed
The defense argued the couple was simply overwhelmed with trying to
get help for the children’s mental health issues, abuse and trauma
from their biological home. Lantz’s attorney, John Balenovich, said
the state’s child welfare agency, which the family requested help
from several times, “dropped the ball the most in this case.”
A forensic psychologist for the prosecution testified that the
couple’s treatment of the children had worsened their conditions.
Assistant Prosecutor Madison Tuck said the couple never sought help
for the oldest boy despite a behavioral health clinic being just
minutes from their home. The boy, whose physical altercation with
Whitefeather in 2022 was cited by attorneys as the start of the
family’s internal struggles, currently is receiving full-time care
in a psychiatric facility.
Whitefeather’s attorney, Mark Plants, said during closing arguments
that the couple was only guilty of making poor parenting decisions.
“These are farm people that do farm chores,” Plants said. “It wasn’t
about race. It wasn’t about forced labor.”
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