US police comb through filthy California home where starving siblings found

18 January, 2018 | World News
The home of David Allen and Louise Anna Turpin in Perris, California, U.S., January 15, 2018. (Photo: Reuters)

Investigators have in the United States have conducted an exhaustive search of the foul-smelling, filthy tract home east of Los Angeles where a California couple are accused of keeping captive and nearly starving 13 minor and adult children, police said.

David Turpin, 57, and Louise Turpin, 49, are set to go before a judge in Riverside County on Thursday (local time) on charges of torture and child endangerment in the case, which came to light over the weekend after a 17-year-old girl escaped through a window and alerted police.

“We have investigators on scene, combing through everything they can find for additional evidence,” Riverside Sheriff’s Deputy Mike Vasquez said by telephone. “They’re trying to gather more information that may assist them in providing a full description of what was going on there.

“The whole house is a crime scene,” he added.

Officers raided the house in the small city of Perris, about 113 km east of Los Angeles, on Sunday after the 17-year-old, whose name was not released, called the 911 emergency number on a cellphone. She was so small and emaciated, officers at first thought she was about 10 years old.

On Wednesday afternoon, several investigators, some wearing black gloves, went in and out of the house, frequently carrying boxes and bags of material they placed in waiting vehicles.

Inside the garage, floor-to-ceiling shelves that appeared to be stacked with DVDs could be seen.

A combination photo of David Allen Turpin (L) and Louise Ann Turpin as they appear in booking photos provided by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department in Riverside County, California, U.S., January 15, 2018. (Photo: Riverside County Sheriff’s Department/Handout via Reuters)

From the outside, the tan house did not look particularly different from the one-and two-story houses in the community. But neighbors said the thick sod of the front lawn had been put down by the children last fall, working at night under TV-style lights as their mother looked on.

The couple is accused of keeping 13 offspring, ages 2 to 29, in filthy and fetid conditions, chaining some to their beds and giving them so little food the adult children were initially mistaken for minors, police said. They are believed to be the couple’s biological children, Vasquez said.

On Wednesday, police and prosecutors prepared for the arraignment of each parent on nine counts of torture and 10 counts of child endangerment.

Neighbors and family members have offered little insight into the couple’s motivations or actions. Experts have said it may have been easier for the parents to shield their children from scrutiny because they were home-schooled.

Reached by telephone Wednesday at the West Virginia home of David Turpin’s parents, his mother, Betty Turpin, said she was busy preparing paperwork and entering information into a computer to help her son. She said the family had engaged an attorney, who advised them not to speak about the case.

But Louise Turpin’s sister, Elizabeth Jane Flores, told ABC News on Wednesday that in hindsight, there were concerning signs, including a refusal to allow family visits or talks with the children on Skype.

 

Reuters