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https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...scovery-of-13-starved-abused-siblings-9867890


Police still baffled by discovery of 13 starved, abused siblings

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Louise Anna Turpin, 49, and David Allen Turpin, 57, have been arrested after authorities said their 13 children had been held captive in their home, with some shackled to beds AFP/Jose ROMERO
17 Jan 2018 04:30AM (Updated: 17 Jan 2018 09:33AM)
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PERRIS, California: Police said on Tuesday they were still seeking answers after finding 13 siblings starving in their parents' squalid Southern California home, some of them chained to beds under "horrific" conditions in an otherwise ordinary suburb.

The grim situation was discovered on Sunday after an emaciated 17-year-old girl escaped through a window of the home in a newer subdivision of Perris, about 113 km east of Los Angeles, and called 911, police said.

"I wish I could come to you today with information that would explain why this happened," said Captain Greg Fellows of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department. "But we do need to acknowledge the courage of the young girl who escaped from that residence to bring attention so they could get the help they so needed."

The parents, 57-year-old David Allen Turpin and Louise Anna Turpin, 49, were arrested at their darkened, foul-smelling house after the girl's 12 siblings were found there.

The shocking case quickly prompted questions of how the victims, who ranged in age from 2 to 29 years old, could have been kept in such grim conditions without raising suspicions of neighbors or authorities.

But some experts said it may have been easier for the parents to shield their children from scrutiny because they were home-schooled.


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"One of the things that was interesting was, he (Turpin) set up his own home school so the kids were accounted for and not really seen by anybody," said Sherryll Kraizer, a child-abuse prevention expert and the founder of the Coalition for Children.

The California Department of Education lists the Turpin address, where the family has lived since 2014, as the location of the Sandcastle Day School, with David Turpin as principal.

Six of the couple's children are minors, while the rest are over 18, according to neighbors, meaning they are adults under the law.

David and Louise Turpin were each charged with nine counts of torture and 10 counts of child endangerment. They were being held on US$9 million bail, with an initial court hearing scheduled for Thursday.

'I WOULD CALL THAT TORTURE'

Police who responded to the girl's 911 call saw that the children were malnourished, Fellows said, calling conditions "horrific." Even so, he said, the mother appeared perplexed about why the police were there.

"If you can imagine being 17 years old and appearing to be a 10-year-old, being chained to a bed, being malnourished, and injuries associated with that," Fellows said. "I would call that torture."

Authorities quickly began seeking court authorization to take custody of the children. The state Child Protective Services agency was assisting in an investigation.

Kimberly Milligan, 50, said she only saw the infant in the mother's arms and three other children since she moved in across the street two years ago, describing them as small and pale.

"Why don't we ever see the kids?" Milligan said she asked herself. "In hindsight, we would have never thought this. But there were red flags. You never don't hear or see nine kids."

Two years ago, while walking around the neighborhood admiring Christmas lights, Milligan said she had encountered three of the Turpin children and complimented them on the manger with a baby Jesus set up outside the house. She said the children froze, as if by doing so they could become invisible.

"Twenty-year-olds never act like that," she said. "They didn't want to have a social conversation."

Nicole Gooding, 35, who has lived in the neighborhood for three years, said the first time she saw the family was two months ago when the mother and children were cleaning up their yard, which was full of weeds and overflowing trash cans.

"I had never seen them at all until that day," she said.

The parents home-schooled the children strictly and required them to memorize long passages from the Bible, David Turpin’s parents, James and Betty Turpin of West Virginia, told ABC News.

In 2010, David Turpin left his job at Lockheed Martin Corp , a company spokeswoman said. He also worked as an engineer at Northrop Grumman Corp . Both are aeronautics and defense companies.

Unable to keep up with the family's expenses, Turpin filed for bankruptcy in 2011, an attorney who represented him, Ivan Trahan, told Reuters on Tuesday.

At the time, the lawyer said, the couple spoke highly of their children.

A Northrop spokesman declined to say whether Turpin was still employed there but said the company was "deeply troubled" by the nature of the allegations.

David and Louise Turpin appeared to have had marriage-renewal ceremonies at least three times, in 2011, 2013 and 2015, at an Elvis Presley-themed chapel in Las Vegas, according to the chapel's YouTube page.

A video showed 10 female children in matching purple plaid dresses walking down the aisle ahead of Louise toward David, who waited anxiously at the altar with two male children in suits.

An Elvis Chapel representative did not respond to a request for comment.

A joint Facebook page that appeared to have been created by the parents showed the couple at the same chapel dressed in wedding clothes, surrounded by the 13 children.

Source: Reuters
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Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...scovery-of-13-starved-abused-siblings-9867890
 

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https://patch.com/california/lakeel...s-shocked-13-tortured-starving-siblings-found

13 Victims Rescued In Perris Were Tortured For 'Prolonged Period'
Officials said three of the children in Riverside County were found chained to furniture when they arrived.
By Hoa Quách, Patch Staff | Jan 16, 2018 10:55 am ET | Updated Jan 16, 2018 7:42 pm ET
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RIVERSIDE COUNTY, CA -- The 13 Riverside County siblings who were rescued this weekend, some found bound and padlocked, are in stable condition after being abused for a "prolonged period of time," officials said at a Tuesday press conference. At least three of the children were found chained to furniture when deputies entered the Perris home on Sunday morning after one of their siblings, a 17-year-old who was so malnourished she looked as though she was just 10- years-old, officials said.

In total, there were 13 victims — all of whom are the biological children of 57-year old David Allen Turpin and 49-year old Louise Anna Turpin, who were arrested on charges of child endangerment and torture.

"If you can imagine being 17-years-old and appearing to be a 10-year old, being chained to a bed, being malnourished — I would call that torture," said Greg Fellows, captain for the Riverside County Sheriff's Department. "I wish I could come to you with information to explain why this all happened."

Sophia Grant, medical director of child abuse and neglect unit at Riverside University Health System, said the victims were "malnourished for over a prolonged period of time."

"They, of course, will have growth stunting and nutritional deficiencies," Grant said. "As to why parents do this. I don't know."

Sad, horrible and crazy were just three of the words Perris neighbors used after learning a nearby home was home to 13 malnourished children. The neighborhood in Riverside County about 70 miles east of Los Angeles turned upside down Monday afternoon when deputies announced they made a shocking discovery: siblings, one as young as 2-years-old and all of whom appeared to be starving, living in a filthy home.

The entire family was taken to a sheriff's station, where the victims — who ranged in age from 2 to 29 — were fed while the parents were booked on charges of torture and child endangerment. Their bail was set at $9 million each.

Mark Uffer, CEO of the Corona Regional Medical Center, said Tuesday all the siblings are together as they recover from the abuse.

The news quickly made national headlines and spread across social media as people shared the ghastly discovery. But no one was more surprised than the neighbors in the quiet development.

Kimberly Milligan told KCAL the children looked "so pale."

"It's so sad, so horrible," Jennifer Luna told KCAL. "I can't believe this. I can't believe this."

Ricardo Ross told The Press-Enterprise, "It's very shocking. Very devastating."

While Andria Valdez told the newspaper, "They only came out at night. They were really, really pale."

On social media, the Turpins painted a different picture than that described by sheriff's deputies on Monday. Photos that have surfaced on the Internet show a happy family with the children dressed in matching clothes. One photo shows the parents in wedding attire as their children are smiling beside them.

The image is what David Turpin's parents, James and Betty Turpin, believed to be true.

James and Betty Turpin told ABC News "they hadn't seen their son and daughter-in-law since visiting them in California some four to five years ago.

"However, they said they have kept in touch with them by phone since," ABC News reported. "They told ABC News they had not spoken to their grandchildren, saying David Turpin or his wife would often call when they were without the children, who are homeschooled."

News reports say the children were home-schooled at what David Turpin registered as Sandcastle Day School, which was founded in 2014.

David and Louise Turpin are expected to appear in court Thursday.

--Booking photos via Riverside County Sheriff's Department

Also See:

Riverside County Parents Accused Of Torturing Their 13 Children

More from Lake Elsinore-Wildomar Patch


http://www.dailyherald.com/news/201...girl-escaped-her-home-to-save-her-12-siblings

How a malnourished girl escaped her home to save her 12 siblings
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    • Video: Children found malnourished

    • AR-180119158.jpg&updated=201801170644&MaxW=800&maxH=800&noborder

      Photos provided by the Riverside County Sheriff's Department show Louise Anna Turpin, left, and David Allen Turpin. Authorities say an emaciated teenager led deputies to a Perris, California, home where her 12 brothers and sisters were locked up in filthy conditions, with some of them malnourished and chained to beds. Riverside County sheriff's deputies arrested the parents David Allen Turpin and Louise Anna Turpin on Sunday. The parents could face charges including torture and child endangerment.
      Associated Press


    • Video: Children found malnourished

    • AR-180119158.jpg&updated=201801170644&MaxW=800&maxH=800&noborder

      Photos provided by the Riverside County Sheriff's Department show Louise Anna Turpin, left, and David Allen Turpin. Authorities say an emaciated teenager led deputies to a Perris, California, home where her 12 brothers and sisters were locked up in filthy conditions, with some of them malnourished and chained to beds. Riverside County sheriff's deputies arrested the parents David Allen Turpin and Louise Anna Turpin on Sunday. The parents could face charges including torture and child endangerment.
      Associated Press
    Samantha Schmidt and Lindsey Bever
    The Washington Post
    WP Bloomberg
    cceimg




    There were no toys and no bicycles on the front lawn -- only weeds that sometimes grew six feet tall.

    Neighbors rarely saw the 13 siblings who lived inside the home in Southern California, because they never went outside to play. Instead, authorities said, they were held captive in a dirty and foul-smelling house, some of them shackled to the furniture with chains and padlocks.



    video Children found malnourished


    Before dawn Sunday, a 17-year-old girl escaped from the Perris home, slipping through a window and dialing 911 on a deactivated cellphone, Capt. Greg Fellows with the Riverside County Sheriff's Department said Tuesday at a news conference. Per federal law, cellphones -- even those that are no longer functional -- must be able to call emergency services.

    Deputies met the girl nearby and conducted a welfare check at the home, where they found a dozen others, age 2 to 29, in what authorities called "horrific" conditions.

    Fellows said he could not provide details about the scene, but told reporters, "if you can imagine being 17 years old and appearing to be a 10-year-old, being chained to a bed, being malnourished and the injuries associated with that -- I would call that torture." He said there was no evidence to indicate sexual abuse but noted that police are still investigating.

    "We do need to acknowledge the courage of the young girl who escaped from that residence to bring attention so they could get the help that they so needed," he added.

    The biological parents, David Allen Turpin, 57, and Louise Anna Turpin, 49, have been arrested on charges of torture and child endangerment, according to authorities.

    The Riverside County Sheriff's Department said in a news release Monday that the 13 siblings all appeared to be children, so deputies were "shocked" to discover that seven of them were actually adults.

    They appeared malnourished and dirty and told authorities they were starving.

    Authorities gave them food and drink, then the six minors were taken to Riverside University Hospital System Medical Center for treatment, according to the sheriff's department. The seven older siblings were taken to a different hospital.

    Kimberly Trone, spokeswoman for the Riverside County Regional Medical Center in Moreno Valley, said Tuesday morning that the minors were admitted into the pediatrics unit for treatment Sunday but could not comment on their conditions. However, she noted that the patients, who range in age from 2 to 17, were taken to the sheriff's department before being transported to the hospital.

    Corona Regional Medical Center spokeswoman Linda Pearson confirmed Tuesday that the seven adult siblings were receiving treatment at the hospital, but she did not elaborate.

    Authorities said the parents were "unable to immediately provide a logical reason" why their children were shackled and chained and that the mother seemed perplexed by the investigation. Following an interview with police, they were arrested. Bail is set at $9 million each.

    A public information officer for the Riverside County District Attorney's Office said no criminal case has yet been filed, so no court documents are available at this time. The couple is expected to be arraigned Thursday, so prosecutors have until then make a decision, he said.

    David Turpin's parents, James and Betty Turpin of West Virginia, told ABC News they were "surprised and shocked" by the allegations. They said their son and daughter-in-law, whom they have not seen in several years, are religious and kept having children because "God called on them."

    The grandparents said that the children are home-schooled, made to memorize long scriptures in the Bible. Some of the children, the grandparents told ABC News, have tried to memorize the entire book.

    David Turpin is listed in a state Department of Education directory as the principal of Sandcastle Day School, a private K-12 school that he ran from the couple's home. The school opened in 2011, according to the directory. In the 2016-2017 year, the school enrolled a total of six students -- one in each of the fifth, sixth, eighth, ninth, 10th and 12th grades.

    EP-180119158.jpg&updated=201801170644&MaxW=800&maxH=800&noborder

    Riverside County Sheriff's Capt. Greg Fellows speaks with reporters Tuesday during a news conference in Perris, California. - Associated Press
    Fellows, with the Riverside County Sheriff's Department, said Tuesday that authorities have no information about any involvement with any religious organization. He added that authorities had had no prior contact with the residents.

    Fellows said the Turpins have lived in the city since 2014.

    But according to public records, the couple own the home and have lived there since 2010. They previously lived in Texas for many years and had twice declared bankruptcy.

    The Turpins most recently filed for bankruptcy in California in 2011. According to court documents, David Turpin made about $140,000 per year as an engineer at Northrop Grumman. The couple listed about $150,000 in assets, including $87,000 in 401(k) plans from Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin. Louise Turpin's occupation was listed as a "homemaker." The couple owed debt between $100,000 and $500,000, according to bankruptcy documents.

    One of their bankruptcy lawyers, Nancy Trahan, said in a phone interview with The Washington Post on Monday evening that she met with the couple about four or five times in 2011 but hasn't seen them since then. She described the couple as "just very normal."

    "They seemed like very nice people," Trahan said. "They spoke often and fondly of their children."

    She did not recall hearing about a school run from their home.

    "I just hope those kids are OK," Trahan said. "I wouldn't have seen it coming."

    Photos on a Facebook page that appeared to be created by the parents showed the couple at Disneyland with the children, wearing matching shirts. Several photos appeared to be taken at a wedding ceremony. The parents posed in bride and groom attire, surrounded by 10 female children smiling for the camera in matching purple plaid dresses and white shoes. Three male children stood behind them wearing suits.

    EP-180119158.jpg&updated=201801170644&MaxW=800&maxH=800&noborder

    Members of the media work outside a home Tuesday where police arrested a couple on Sunday accused of holding their 13 children captive, in Perris, California. - Associated Press
    The couple's middle-class neighborhood is a new tract housing development of ranch-style homes located about 70 miles east of Los Angeles. The homes were all built close together, with only about five feet between the houses.

    Andria Valdez, a neighbor, told the Press-Enterprise that she had teased in the past that the Turpins reminded her of the Cullen family from the fictional series "Twilight."

    "They only came out at night," she told the newspaper. "They were really, really pale."

    Shortly after Kimberly Milligan, 50, moved to the neighborhood in June 2015, a contractor for the development told her the Turpins had about a dozen children, she said in an interview with The Post.

    But in the years that followed, Milligan rarely heard the children and only occasionally saw three or four of the children briefly leave or enter the home. Milligan found this particularly odd, because their homes are only about 50 feet away from each other.

    "I thought they were very young -- 11, 12, 13 at the most -- because of the way they carried themselves," Milligan said. "When they walked they would skip." They all looked very thin, their skin as white as paper, Milligan's son, Robert Perkins said.

    And their yard would "always look in disarray," Milligan said. Code enforcement officials "cracked down" on the overgrown weeds in the front yard, several neighbors told media outlets.

    Milligan recounted speaking to the children once, around Christmas 2015. Three of the children were setting up a Nativity display while she was out for a walk. When she complimented the children on the decorations, "they actually froze," she said. Milligan apologized, telling the children there was no need to be afraid.

    "They still did not say a word," Milligan said. "They were like children whose only defense was to be invisible."

    Milligan said she started seeing less and less of the family in the last year or so. She said she feels a bit guilty for not saying something about the family's oddities earlier.

    "You knew something was off. It didn't make a lot of sense," Milligan said. "But this is something else entirely."

    Law enforcement officers could be seen at the family's home from about 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, Perkins said. He managed to briefly glance inside the open door of the home and noticed a messy array of boxes and chairs all over the place, he said.

    One neighbor, Josh Tiedeman, told The Associated Press the children were "super-skinny -- not like athletic skinny, like malnourished skinny."

    "They'd all have to mow the lawns together, and then they'd all go in," Tiedeman said.

    Mark Uffer, chief executive of Corona Regional Medical Center, said during the news conference that the adult siblings have been "friendly" and "cooperative."

    Although medical experts acknowledged that the children will require long-term psychological support, Uffer said, "I believe that they're hopeful life will get better for them."



http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-perris-house-children-20180117-story.html



L.A. Now California: This just in
LOCAL L.A. Now
In Perris, a house of horrors hidden in plain sight
Neighbors and reporters stand outside the the Perris house of David and Louise Turpin on Monday, Jan. 15. (Marcus Yam / Los Angeles Times)
Paloma Esquivel, Hailey Branson-Potts and Anna M. PhillipsContact Reporters


It was usually after midnight when Mike Clifford spotted the children from the house across the street.

Some nights, he’d see about six children — none of whom looked older than 15 — getting into a passenger van with their father and wonder where they could possibly be going at such an hour. Other nights, he’d see them through a second-story window in the Murrieta house, walking in circles for long periods of time.

Clifford, an aerospace machinist who works late shifts, tried to make sense of what he saw. Maybe the children had special needs. Maybe the repetitive circling was therapeutic. Maybe it was just their routine.

“It was kind of strange,” he said. But “there was never anything to say, ‘Oh, my God. I should call somebody.’”

It was a pattern of thinking followed by neighbors, 20 miles to the north in Perris, who a few years later caught similarly strange glimpses of the small, pale children of David and Louise Turpin.

After seeing them working under floodlights late at night to put sod in the family’s yard a few months ago, neighbors said it was odd but not so unsettling that they needed to call police.

The reality was far worse than anything they imagined.

The Turpins’ 13 children, authorities said, were captives in the couple’s tract house on Muir Woods Road and appeared to have undergone years of abuse and starvation. Some were shackled to their beds.

Authorities learned of the horrors inside the house after a 17-year-old girl called 911 early Sunday, saying she had escaped through a window from her parents’ house, where she and her siblings had been trapped. She’d used a deactivated cellphone to make the call, Riverside County Sheriff’s Capt. Greg Fellows said at a news conference Tuesday. She had photos to back up her claims.

Sheriff’s deputies were shocked by the girl’s small size and emaciated appearance, thinking she was only 10.

When deputies arrived at the house, it was “extremely dirty,” Fellows said. There was a strong, foul stench. Three young people were in chains. And yet, Fellows said, the children’s mother seemed surprised to see authorities.

“It seemed that the mother was perplexed as to why we were at the residence,” he said.

750x422

Riverside County Sheriff's Capt. Greg Fellows, shown at a news conference Tuesday, discusses the case of David and Louise Turpin, who are suspected of holding their 13 children hostage and starving them. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
No prior law enforcement contact
Sheriff’s deputies had no prior contact with the Turpins or calls for service at their house, Fellows said. Likewise, the Police Department in Murrieta, where the family lived from 2010 to 2014 after moving to California from Texas, had no interactions with them, said a spokesman for the agency.

Perris Mayor Michael Vargas said his heart went out to the children.

“I can truly say that I am devastated at this act of cruelty. … I can’t even begin to imagine the pain and suffering that they have endured.”

David Turpin, 57, and Louise Turpin, 49, were arrested this week on suspicion of torture and child endangerment. Each is being held in lieu of $9-million bail.

The youngest of their children is 2. Deputies at first assumed from the children’s frail and malnourished appearance that all of them were minors but later determined that seven of them were adults ages 18 to 29, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

County adult and child protective service workers and medical professionals are assessing the siblings, Fellows said. The parents, he said, showed “no indication of mental illness at this time” that could explain what they did to their children.

Susan von Zabern, director of the Riverside County Department of Public Social Services, said county children’s service officials are seeking court authorization to care for the siblings, “including the adult children to the extent that that’s necessary.”

Von Zabern said the 911 call received Sunday, which was cross-reported to social workers, was “the first opportunity we had to intervene.”

Although it is too early to know how long the siblings have been malnourished or subjected to abuse, she said, “their condition indicates it has been a prolonged period of time.”

Social workers, as is custom, will try to identify relatives who could care for the children, Von Zabern said. They would “be subject to all kinds of background investigations to make sure they’re suitable and stable.”

David Allen Turpin, 57, and Louise Anna Turpin, 49, have been arrested on suspicion of torture and child endangerment. (Riverside County Sheriff's Department)
‘Hopeful that life will get better’
Mark Uffer, chief executive of the Corona Regional Medical Center, said seven of the adult Turpin children — five females and two males — are patients at his hospital and are staying in a secured area where they are being treated together.

“It’s hard to think of them as adults when you first see them because they’re small and their malnutrition,” Uffer said.

“They’re very friendly. They’re very cooperative, and I believe very hopeful that life will get better for them after this event.”

The Sandcastle Day School
Like many California families who choose to home-school their children, the Turpins registered their home with the state as a private school. They called it Sandcastle Day School.

During the last school year, the school was listed in state records as a private, nonreligious, co-ed institution that first appeared on the state registry in 2010, when the family lived in Murrieta. There were six students enrolled: one each in the fifth, sixth, eighth, ninth, 10th and 12th grades.

David Turpin, who was listed as the principal, submitted paperwork each year, but the information sought by the California Department of Education — like the address, type of school and enrollment numbers — likely offered authorities scant insight into the children’s lives.

The annual paperwork is all that California law requires.

Neither the Department of Education nor the local school districts had any legal responsibility to knock on the Turpins’ door, review their curriculum or assess their children’s academic performance. While state law requires private school employees to submit to fingerprinting and background checks, there is no such demand placed on parents teaching their own children.

“We really knew nothing about them,” said Grant Bennett, superintendent of the Perris Union High School District. “If they were in home school from the beginning, they wouldn’t have even been on our radar.”

‘It hit me like a ton of bricks’
Authorities said they have reviewed a Facebook page belonging to David and Louise Turpin. A joint account that appears to belong to the couple is filled with recent images of the large family, wearing matching outfits and smiling at Disneyland.

Photos posted in May 2016 depict an apparent marriage vow renewal ceremony between David and Louise, with an Elvis impersonator in a gold suit jacket. Their 13 children surround them — the girls in pink-and-purple plaid dresses, the boys in black suits.

In all of the photographs, the children are thin and short in stature. It is difficult to tell which ones are adults.

Eric Aguirre, the family’s former landlord in Murrieta, was shocked when he first saw news reports about the family.

“I was scrolling through Facebook going, ‘Why do I know these people?’ Why do I know these people?’” he said. “Then it hit me like a ton of bricks.”

Aguirre said the family rented their former five-bedroom house “sight unseen” after moving from Texas.

He interacted with the family only once, when he came over to perform routine maintenance. The children slept in bunk beds, he said, but nothing about their behavior or the condition of the house seemed out of the ordinary, he said.

The children, he said, “were quiet, shy, well-behaved.”
 
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