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→‎Background: you mean 10+3=13? thanks for working that out for me!
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The couple are adherents of the [[Quiverfull|Quiverfull movement]]<ref name="intouchweekly.com">{{cite magazine|url=http://www.intouchweekly.com/posts/turpin-family-duggars-quiverfull-151742|title=Quiverfull: More Children For God's Army|accessdate=January 19, 2018|magazine= [[In Touch Weekly]] |author=Carly Sitzer}}</ref>
The couple are adherents of the [[Quiverfull|Quiverfull movement]]<ref name="intouchweekly.com">{{cite magazine|url=http://www.intouchweekly.com/posts/turpin-family-duggars-quiverfull-151742|title=Quiverfull: More Children For God's Army|accessdate=January 19, 2018|magazine= [[In Touch Weekly]] |author=Carly Sitzer}}</ref>
and [[Pentecostalism]].<ref name="KABC Grandparents"/>
and [[Pentecostalism]].<ref name="KABC Grandparents"/>
According to David's parents, the couple kept having children because "God called on them" to do so.<ref name="KABC Grandparents"/><ref name="WaPo how"/>. From July 1988 to March 2015, they had 13 children total; 10 daughters and three sons.
According to David's parents, the couple kept having children because "God called on them" to do so.<ref name="KABC Grandparents"/><ref name="WaPo how"/>. From 1988 to 2015 they had ten daughters and three sons.


According to Louise's sister, Elizabeth Flores, she, Louise, and their cousin, Patricia Andreassen, were [[Child sexual abuse|sexually abused]] as children by their maternal grandfather. Another sister of Louise's, Teresa Robinette, claimed that their mother, Phyllis Robinette, née Taylor (1950–2016)<ref>{{cite web |title=Phyllis Robinette of Princeton, West Virginia Obituary |url=https://www.cravens-shires.com/obituary/3606439 |accessdate=May 17, 2019}}</ref>
According to Louise's sister, Elizabeth Flores, she, Louise, and their cousin, Patricia Andreassen, were [[Child sexual abuse|sexually abused]] as children by their maternal grandfather. Another sister of Louise's, Teresa Robinette, claimed that their mother, Phyllis Robinette, née Taylor (1950–2016)<ref>{{cite web |title=Phyllis Robinette of Princeton, West Virginia Obituary |url=https://www.cravens-shires.com/obituary/3606439 |accessdate=May 17, 2019}}</ref>

Revision as of 21:20, 14 June 2020

David Allen Turpin
Louise Anna Turpin
David Allen Turpin and Louise Ann Turpin, who plead guilty to torturing their children and other crimes

On January 14, 2018, police entered the home of David and Louise Turpin in Perris, California, where they found imprisoned the Turpin's thirteen children, ages 2 to 29 years, some chained to beds in a dark room. For years the Turpins had beaten and strangled their children, allowing them to eat just once per day and shower just once per year.[1] The older children appeared to be much younger because of malnourishment; the 29-year-old child weighed just 82 pounds (37 kg).[2] Some appeared to lack basic knowledge of the world, for example being unfamiliar with what medicine and police were.[3]

The case is considered "extraordinary for numerous reasons", including that abuse was inflicted on multiple children by both parents, and the calculated and systematic nature of the abuse and torture.[4]

In February 2019 both parents plead guilty on 14 felony counts, including cruelty to an adult dependent, child cruelty, torture and false imprisonment.[5] In April they were sentenced to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after 25 years.[6]

Background

David Allen Turpin (born October 17, 1961) and Louise Anna Turpin (born May 24, 1968)[1] met when David was 17 and Louise was 10, and eloped in 1985 in Pearisburg, Virginia,[2] which angered Louise's father, who was a pastor.[7][8]

According to David's parents he is a computer engineer who graduated from Virginia Tech and had worked for Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman.[9][10] In 1979, he graduated from Princeton High School in West Virginia, which Louise also attended until 1985.[11][12] The couple are adherents of the Quiverfull movement[13] and Pentecostalism.[10] According to David's parents, the couple kept having children because "God called on them" to do so.[10][12]. From 1988 to 2015 they had ten daughters and three sons.

According to Louise's sister, Elizabeth Flores, she, Louise, and their cousin, Patricia Andreassen, were sexually abused as children by their maternal grandfather. Another sister of Louise's, Teresa Robinette, claimed that their mother, Phyllis Robinette, née Taylor (1950–2016)[14] allowed their grandfather, John Taylor (1924–2018) ⁠— ⁠who was a recipient of two Purple Hearts, the Silver Star, five Bronze Stars, and a Good Conduct Medal [15][16] to sexually abuse them as children, in exchange for cash.[17][18]

Flores later claimed in her book, Sisters of Secrets, that Louise became obsessed with witchcraft, Satanic rituals, and Ouija boards, and had even tried to persuade her to join a snake handling festival.[19] Theresa claimed that as a couple, Louise and David explored different religions and engaged in swinging.[20][21]

The Turpins rented a postal box in Burleson, Texas, from 1986 to 2003. They lived in Fort Worth until 1999 then moved to Rio Vista, and left the area in 2010.[22][23] After the couple moved out of the house, neighbors visited the property and reportedly found feces throughout the residence, beds with ropes tied to them, several dead cats and dogs in a trailer and large piles of garbage around the property. The neighbors did not disclose their findings to any authorities.[24]

In the Turpins' California house, the yard was unkempt with overgrown weeds, prompting a code violation.[12] Neighbors reported that on the occasion they would see the children, they would freeze and stay silent when spoken to, "like children whose only defense was to be invisible." The children would skip rather than walk, and appeared malnourished and pale.[12] David Turpin and Louise Turpin were planning to move the family to Oklahoma at the time of their arrest.[25]

Escape and rescue

The Turpin children had been planning an escape for more than two years. On January 14, 2018, two of them left the house through a window. 13-year-old Jolinda returned home out of fear, but 17-year-old Jordan got away.[26] She was in possession of a cell phone, and, although it was deactivated, she was able to call 9-1-1.[27] When police met her, she showed officers photos of conditions in the house.[27]

Deputies of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department converged on the house, where they found the other 12 siblings, 22-year-old Jonathan was shackled to a bed with chains. The deputies suspected that 14-year-old Joanna and 12-year-old Julissa had also been shackled just prior to their entry into the house.[28] The deputies described the siblings as having a malnourished, dirty appearance and looking to be younger than their ages. They had initially assumed that all 13 in the group were minors, but they later determined that their ages ranged from 2 to 29, with seven being legal adults (ages 18+) as of the day they were found.[29]

The sheriff's department said that Louise was "perplexed" when deputies entered the residence.[30] They also said, "The parents were unable to immediately provide a logical reason why their children were restrained in [the manner that they were]."[31] The six minors, ranging from ages 2 to 17, were transported to Riverside County Regional Medical Center, where they were admitted to the pediatrics unit for treatment.[12] Corona Regional Medical Center said that the facility was treating the seven adult siblings, ranging from ages 18 to 29, describing them as small and clearly malnourished, but stable, relieved and very friendly.[32] The seven adult children remained at the medical center until March 2018, while the six younger siblings were in the care of two foster homes.[33]

Arrest and legal proceedings

David and Louise Turpin were arrested during the raid on suspicion of child endangerment and torture and held at a Riverside County jail on $9–⁠$12 million bail each.[34][35][36] Police searched the Turpins' property on January 17, taking away black plastic bags of evidence.[37] Hundreds of journals written by the children about their experiences over the previous years were recovered from the home.[38]

The Turpins were charged with 12 counts of torture, 12 counts of false imprisonment, seven counts of abuse of a dependent adult, and six counts of child abuse. David received an additional charge of a lewd act on a child under 14 years old. Upon announcing the charges against the Turpins, Riverside County District Attorney Mike Hestrin said, "The abuse and severe neglect intensified over time and intensified as they moved to California."[3] The couple pleaded not guilty to the charges.[39][40]

In a brief hearing on January 24, the judge accepted the prosecutors' request for a restraining order forbidding contact between the Turpin parents and their children for a period of three years. The parents are prohibited from coming within 100 yards (91 m) of any of their children or establishing electronic contact with them. Both defendants agreed to these restrictions.[39] On February 23, Hestrin filed an additional three charges of child abuse against the couple, and one felony assault charge against Louise individually.[41] A felony settlement conference was scheduled for March 23, with a preliminary hearing following on May 14.[41] On May 4, David was charged with eight counts of perjury in relation to affidavits he filed with the California Department of Education between the years 2010–2017, stating that "the children in the home were receiving a full-time education in a private day school".[42] A preliminary hearing date for the couple was scheduled for June 20, 2018.[42]

On June 21, Riverside County Superior Court Judge Bernard Schwartz ruled that the Turpins would face trial for child abuse, false imprisonment, and torture of their children. The couple faced 50 charges, including several counts of torture, false imprisonment and child abuse. Despite the efforts of defense attorneys to dismiss most of the charges, the judge only dropped a child endangerment charge involving the Turpins' 2-year-old daughter Janna due to a lack of evidence that the toddler had been abused.[43][44]

The Turpins were then ordered to be arraigned in court August 3, 2018, but this was postponed to August 31 due to the Turpins' defense attorneys considering a new motion in the case. On August 31, they were arraigned once more and were ordered to appear in court on October 5 for a trial readiness conference, with the possibility of the Turpins' trial beginning up to 60 days after this. At this hearing, the judge declined the defense's request for Louise to seek mental health treatment outside of custody for histrionic personality disorder, which she had been diagnosed with since her arrest. Had the judge granted this request, Louise could have been treated for up to two years and had all charges against her dropped.[45][46]

The couple's next court appearance, another trial readiness conference, took place on November 30.[46] At this hearing, the judge announced that motions in the case will be heard the week of August 12, 2019, and that the Turpins' trial would officially begin on September 3, 2019.[47] One of the motions in the case is expected to be a request from the Turpins' defense lawyers for the trial to take place outside of Riverside County (change of venue) due to the publicity the case has received.[48]

The Turpins appeared in court again on February 22, 2019, for another trial readiness conference.[49] David and Louise both changed their pleas to guilty to one count of torture, three counts of willful child cruelty, four counts of false imprisonment, and six counts of cruelty to an adult dependent. The plea ensured that they each admitted guilt to at least one crime per child. They were sentenced on April 19 according to mandatory sentencing guidelines.[50] Both were sentenced to life imprisonment, with the possibility of parole after serving a minimum mandatory sentence of 25 years. Experts believed they would never receive parole due to the severity of the crime, making it effectively a life sentence.[6] On April 26, David was moved to Mule Creek State Prison.

As of 2020, David Turpin is incarcerated at California State Prison, Corcoran[51] and Louise Turpin is incarcerated at Central California Women's Facility.[52]

Aftermath

After the arrest, visitors left notes, balloons and flowers at the house for the Turpin children. In November, the house was foreclosed on by the lender.[53] Thieves and vandals later struck the house, knowing it was unoccupied.[54][55] The property was put up for sale through an auction site in late December 2018; it sold for a high bid of $310,000 in early February 2019, around $40,000 below its appraised value.[53][56]

In February 2019, David said he hopes the children forgive him.[57]

During the sentencing of the Turpins in April 2019, two of the children (now adults) bore witness and described their new lives. The two children were accompanied by a facility dog, named Raider, from the Corona Police Department.[58] After the Turpin case concluded, the press took an interest in how the children are doing and what they are doing with their lives.[59] [60] In April 2020, it was revealed by Riverside County Deputy District Attorney Kevin Beecham in an interview with People that "Some of them are living independently, living in their own apartment, and have jobs and are going to school. Some volunteer in the community. They go to church." He revealed one of them also graduated college, which is no small feat, and that six of the youngest kids have been adopted and it appears they “are able to rebound a little better,” because they did nOt have “as many years of abuse and neglect” at the Turpin house located on the streets of suburban Perris, California. Group homes have also taken in some of the other children in the wake of their escape in January 2018.[61] Osborn also said some are interested in teaching or engineering and one of the siblings graduated college and is pursing a career as a medical field technician.[62]

Reaction of friends and extended family

On January 17, 2018, Louise's sister said that she begged for decades to see her nieces and nephews, even through Skype, but the couple would not let her. Another sister of Louise said she was concerned about the children's weight. Louise's aunt said, "With the pictures they put on Facebook, you thought they were one big happy family."[63] David's parents said they were "surprised and shocked" at the allegations against their son and daughter-in-law.[10] The couple's previous bankruptcy lawyer said that she met with the couple about four or five times in 2011 and described them as "just very normal."[12]

Kent Ripley, a Las Vegas, Nevada-based Elvis impersonator who renewed the Turpin parents' wedding vows on three separate occasions, claimed to be "stunned" by the news of the children's imprisonment, stating that he felt he knew the family fairly well and that "the only way I could tell the difference in [the children's] age was from their height because the older girls...looked young and the boys looked all the same."[64] He stated that the children looked clean and well-nourished on those occasions. Videos of Ripley performing the Turpins' vow renewal ceremony were publicly available on Ripley's professional YouTube account at the time of the Turpins' arrest and were among the first images of the family disseminated by the media, usually with the children's faces censored.

Robinette's sister, Elizabeth J. Flores (née Robinette), authored Sisters of Secrets: The Story Of Sisters Leading Up To The Turpin Case Arrest.[65]

In popular culture

External videos
video icon "Louise Turpin’s Sister Teresa Robinette" – Megyn Kelly Today, YouTube video (7:56 min.)
video icon "Louise Turpin’s Sister and Cousin Open Up About Childhood Abuse, doctoroz.com video (3:49  min.)
video icon "Former neighbors of Louise and David Turpin" – Dr. Phil, YouTube video (2:39 min.)

Television coverage of the case extended beyond the traditional TV news reports, as talk shows and even crime-show programming focused on the Turpins:

  • Louise's sister Elizabeth and cousin Patricia exposed the childhood abuse that impacted all of them on The Dr. Oz Show television series, aired January 30, 2018.[66]

Elizabeth also wrote a book about the case titled Sisters of Secrets: The Story of Sisters Leading Up to the Turpin Case Arrest.[67]

  • American child safety activist Elizabeth Smart shared a message to the children saying: "I would want them to know that they survived, they did it, and that life is not as dark and terrible as it has been, That there is happiness in the future, and that they can go on to have wonderful lives."[68]
  • Natascha Kampusch, an Austrian woman who was kidnapped and locked in a cellar for eight years, has said that the 13 Turpin children must be allowed to see the parents who kept them captive, and that the children, who have not been named, will need to find a way to either forgive David and Louise Turpin or leave them behind because "it will help them begin a process where they can cope with the whole situation and get more stable."[69]
  • The Dr. Phil episode "Inside the California House of Horrors" aired January 2018; in it, family, neighbors, and friends speak with Dr. Phil concerning the secrets that were occurring within the home. Kidnap survivor Michelle Knight shared a message for the children.[70][71]
  • The story was also told on the Season 6, Episode 8 episode of Evil Lives Here, "My Twisted Sister" on Sept 1, 2019, by Louise's sister Elizabeth Flores.[citation needed]
  • In the FOX procedural drama 9-1-1, the third season episode "Monsters" features a case inspired by the Turpin case. In the episode, Police Sergeant Athena Grant (Angela Bassett) discovers children in a basement shackled in the same way the Turpin children were shackled. One of the older siblings also escaped the house to seek help. The parents on the show were arrested when they returned home and the children were given medical treatment. [citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Moots, Sumiko; Arkin, Daniel; Siemaszko, Corky (January 21, 2018). "California torture house: 13 siblings allowed to eat once a day, shower once a year". NBC News. Perris. Retrieved January 18, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Balsamo, Michael (January 19, 2018). "What to Know About David and Louise Turpin, the Parents Accused of Torturing 12 Siblings". TIME. California. Retrieved January 20, 2018.
  3. ^ a b White, Jeremy B. (January 18, 2018). "Turpin family latest: Parents charged with torture and false imprisonment following discovery of 13 siblings". The Independent. Riverside. Retrieved January 18, 2018.
  4. ^ Bake, Vicky (January 20, 2018). "How can parents torture their children?". BBC News. Retrieved January 21, 2018. The Turpins' case is extraordinary for numerous reasons - particularly as the allegations are against two parents who had multiple children together. Prof Browne, director of the Centre for Forensic and Family Psychology at the University of Nottingham, says it is more common to see cases where there is one child and the parent or parents cannot cope, so the situation spirals out of control. Dr Bernard Gallagher, a child protection expert at the University of Huddersfield, says: "I see a lot of cases of neglect, where children are not washed or fed properly, but you don't often get cases of children being tortured, where the abuse seems calculated."
  5. ^ "Turpin captivity case: California parents admit torture". BBC News. February 22, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2019.
  6. ^ a b Anemona Hartocollis (April 19, 2019). "Couple Who Tortured 12 Children in Their California Home Are Sentenced to Life". The New York Times. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  7. ^ Candace Sutton (January 22, 2018). "How David Turpin kidnapped Louise at 16 to marry him". news.com.au. Retrieved January 25, 2018.
  8. ^ "Bookworm: 'The Family Next Door' a muddy, overwhelming read | Lifestyles". globegazette.com. Retrieved April 5, 2020.
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  10. ^ a b c d Powell, Amy (January 16, 2018). "Grandparents say 'God called' on Perris couple to have so many children". KABC. Perris. Retrieved January 18, 2018.
  11. ^ Jordan, Greg (January 20, 2018). Bluefield Daily Telegraph https://www.bdtonline.com/news/mother-of-california-house-of-horrors-from-princeton/article_29eddf70-fd98-11e7-8230-df5db714c7c6.html. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
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  22. ^ https://nypost.com/2019/07/13/airfares-fancy-clothes-and-lavish-meals-how-the-turpins-kept-their-evil-secret/
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  52. ^ https://inmatelocator.cdcr.ca.gov/Details.aspx?ID=WG2970
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