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According to state attorney Kevin Beecham, who worked on the case that led to his parents’ imprisonment, this was why the escape plan was released:
– David and Louise agreed that they should only hook all children as soon as they go to their new home in Oklahoma. They should move in the next few days, Beecham told People.
According to Beecham, at least five of the children knew about the plan, and it shouldn’t have been their first attempt.
Severely underweight
As Dagbladet previously mentioned, the police officers who met the 17-year-old were convinced that she was only 10 years old. Initially, the police also believed that all of the brothers were under the age of 18, and were surprised when they had to determine that the eldest was 29 years old.
The children were between the ages of 2 and 29 when they were rescued. They were all very underweight and had been unable to wash for months. They also recounted how they had been beaten, hungry, and placed in cages.
The 29-year-old woman should have weighed only 37 pounds.
The 17-year-old is said to have brought photographic evidence to convince the police, and now Beecham also says the children should have tried to document the abuse.
– My researcher went through hundreds of hours of videos and images. They took photos of their brothers’ links.
An adult brother’s attorney tells The Desert Sun in a statement today that they are doing well and are largely independent.
– COVID-19 makes it challenging, but they go to school and live normal lives. They grew up without being outside. Now they find it strange, but it’s something they feel good about, says attorney Jack Osborn.
There is little information on younger siblings, all of whom are minors.
– The rats entered the house, and then the snakes entered to eat the rats, he tells People.
Until 2010, the large family lived in Rio Vista, Texas. Later, his house was taken by the bank and put up for forced sale.
A year later, it was bought by Nellie Baldwin, who in 2018 told me that the house was in a terrible state when she bought it. The house was “disgusting” and “seemed uninhabitable”.
– They had oiled stools on the walls. The room and all the rooms had a terrible smell, Baldwin told CNN.
The house was in such bad shape that the bank asked him to sign a clause before he was allowed to visit it. The clause stated that the bank was not responsible if Baldwin or someone in his family became ill as a result of being in the house.
condemned
While Louise and David Turpin did not plead guilty after the arrest, the tone was just over a year later.
They pleaded guilty in California’s River County court. The two faced a horrible list of charges including starving, mistreating and torturing twelve of their 13 children over a period of many years.
In April 2019, they were sentenced to life in prison for starving, mistreating and torturing children.
Louise Turpin cried in court and apologized to the children when the verdict fell, while her husband found it difficult to make a brief statement.
Emotional and physical abuse
The list of what the married couple exposed to their children is long. They should have punished the children by beating and strangling them, tying them to the beds for weeks or months and denying them food. The children also accused the parents of having bought toys without letting the children play with them, and of having baked cakes without the children tasting them. They should have been allowed to shower very rarely.
The parents also made sure that the children had limited contact with the outside world, and several of the children should not have known what the police were when they were removed from their home. They also did not attend public school.
– These are serious emotional and physical abuse. This is terrible behavior, Attorney General Mike Hestrin said in 2018.
Now Attorney General Beecham also shares new details about psychological abuse.
The children of the Turpin couple were not allowed to socialize with each other. They were taken to try to get food, they were chained to their beds. They were not allowed to exercise.
“They should sit or lie down in their room,” says Beecham.
Investigators should also have found a pile of clothing, still wearing the patch, that Louse Turpin had bought. At the same time, her teens had very little clothing.
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