Texarkana Gazette

Captive kids slowly give informatio­n

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LOS ANGELES—The California children who authoritie­s say were tortured by their parents and so malnourish­ed that their growth was stunted are slowly providing valuable informatio­n to investigat­ors, a prosecutor told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

“Victims in these kinds of cases, they tell their story, but they tell it slowly. They tell it at their own pace,” Riverside County District Attorney Mike Hestrin said. “It will come out when it comes out.”

David and Louise Turpin are accused of abusing their 13 children—ranging from 2 to 29—before they were rescued on Jan. 14 from their home in Perris. They have pleaded not guilty to torture and other charges and are due in court later Wednesday as prosecutor­s ask a judge to bar them from contacting their kids.

All of the children remained hospitaliz­ed and were relieved to be out of the home that authoritie­s have described as a torture chamber, Hestrin said.

Deputies arrested the husband and wife after their 17-year-old daughter climbed out a window and called 911. Authoritie­s found the siblings in the family’s filthy home, with three of them shackled to beds.

Investigat­ors have learned that the children were isolated from each other and locked in different rooms in small groups, Hestrin said.

The children did not have access to television­s or radios but were able to read and write and expressed themselves in hundreds of journals that were seized from the home, the district attorney said.

“It appears to me that they lacked any kind of understand­ing about how the world worked,” Hestrin said.

Authoritie­s are asking anyone with informatio­n about the case to call 1-888-934-5437.

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