13 victims, ages 2 to 29, kept shackled by parents

California should build a house or buy a house big enough for all of these kids and their two dogs. Then staff it with caregivers. Then invite family to come visit whenever they want.

Instead of placing them in existing foster homes create one for them. It's uncommon to have to snatch 13 kids all at once. So do a custom job for this batch.

Does it require a GoFundMe aimed at $5 million? There are reports that the neighbors are selling lemonade for the cause. Old fashioned lemonade!

Sounds great, but why stop there?

Why not build them their own man made island

Away from the public eye and media

You could have a zoo on it with animals to entertain the younger sisters and brothers and every month they could have a globally broadcast benefit music festival similar to LiveAid, with all proceeds going to the children
 
Neighbors and others caught glimpses of the Turpin siblings. Now they're struggling to process what they missed

Los Angeles Times said:
Two years ago, the neighborhood watch of the Perris community where David and Louise Turpin lived with their 13 children held a Christmas decorating contest, offering $50 and $25 gift cards to the winners.

Some of the Turpin siblings joined in, placing a Nativity scene in their frontyard, with hay for the manger and a Nativity star in a window. Santa Claus sat in his sleigh near the garage.

When the winners were announced at a community gathering, the parents and five of their children were there.

Louise Turpin spent the evening chatting with a neighbor about her children, about the family's roots in West Virginia and Texas, and about their love of Las Vegas, said Salynn Simon, who lives across the street from the family's home...

...The alleged abuse started decades ago and grew worse in recent years.

But as their visit to the neighborhood watch meeting shows, the Turpin children were never completely hidden from the outside world...

And when a neighbor saw the children in their Murrieta home, before the family moved to Perris, marching at night in circles past two front windows, he did not have to make a special effort to see what was happening, he said. The blinds were open, and the lights were on...

Any red flags were lowered because his wife often made small talk with two of the Turpins' daughters on their way to the mailbox, he said...

As the story of the Turpins and their children has drawn international attention, numerous people with ties to the family have also come forward to offer details about their interactions with the Turpins over the years...


More interaction accounts in the article.

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-turpin-public-life-20180124-story.html
 
More details emerge about couple and 13 children allegedly held captive for years




https://www.cbsnews.com/news/califo...horrors-to-face-restraining-order-13-children

Dear lord, I hope they vet that uncle pretty seriously before even thinking of allowing him guardianship. "Fasting" seems to have been a pretty big matzah ball in these kids' lives.

They need to be with the most normal people possible now. Who exactly that might be, I have no *********** idea. But I'd be pretty leery of a family member with more potentially weird spiritual beliefs.

I'm all about practicing self-denial. It makes me feel swell when I abstain from little vices, treats, or things I like in the interest of keeping myself simple, strong, and always happy to delay gratification. But I've just never seen the point when it comes to basic food and water. (Dieting is a different thing.) Why do so many religious sects seem to think starving oneself is a spiritual benefit? God gave you a body, and you need to nourish it in order to keep it in good shape. Aren't you kind of taking a dump on god's gift if you don't feed it properly?
 
At least one of them attended regular school back when they lived in Texas...


Turpin daughter was bullied for being the 'cootie kid.' Now one classmate feels overwhelming guilt

Desert Sun said:
Taha Muntajibuddin remembers a third-grade classmate in Forth Worth, Texas whose appearance drew relentless mockery and bullying from her fellow students, who nicknamed her "cootie kid."

The girl, one of the oldest siblings in the large Turpin family, wore the same filthy purple dress everyday and had her hair tied back with a discarded foil wrapper from an old Hershey's bar, Mutajibuddin recalled. No one wanted to be near her because she smelled like mud and worse.

Last week, Mutajibuddin, who went to school with the girl years ago, wrote in a wrenching Facebook post that he got a "rude awakening" when he read the news accounts of the familial horror created by the girl's parents, David and Louise Turpin...

Muntajibuddin, a physician completing a residency in pediatric medicine in Houston, said he felt an "overwhelming sense of guilt and shame" about his former classmate, whom he remembers being tossed about "like a rag doll" by school bullies...

He said the girl was often made fun of constantly "because her clothes would sometimes look as though they had been dragged through mud, which she would also smell like on most days. I distinctly remember my entire third grade class scoffing at her one day because our teacher had asked her to discard a scrunchy she had used to tie her hair out of a discarded tin foil wrapper from an old Hershey's bar."

After that year, Muntajibuddin said, the girl moved away and "she was forgotten about after we moved on to the the next 'cootie kid.'"...


https://www.desertsun.com/story/new...classmate-feels-overwhelming-guilt/1061590001
 
So the mother was allowing a full display of filth and stench as her daughter went to school every day in the same dress. She didn't care when people saw and smelled the neglect.
 
This is what I was trying to say, but I was afraid someone would think I was knocking community college if I weren't careful with my wording. I'm not knocking community college at all - I'm simply saying that entry-level classes at community colleges are often demonstrably less difficult than at university (generally speaking, always exceptions, yada yada disclaimers, **** you skeptics, etc.). The reason for the difference is largely due to some high schools having more advanced curricula than others. At community college, at least the first semester or two are spent evening out that gap amongst the students.

Well put. I too was afraid of offending.

The community college system in this country is important for giving people who are willing to put in the work a path to a better life, but early success should in no way be considered some validation of prior education.

- - Waves community college 4.0 around like a flag - -
 
He may have had some public schooling as well. There are inconsistencies in the reports. We are told that they were home schooled. Now we learn that it wasn't always that.

What's happening is that we are learning that the picture painted in our minds by the articles isn't really the full story.
 
He may have had some public schooling as well. There are inconsistencies in the reports. We are told that they were home schooled. Now we learn that it wasn't always that.

What's happening is that we are learning that the picture painted in our minds by the articles isn't really the full story.

Not really; you might have missed it, but even the earliest "big picture" articles noted that the children went to regular schools at first and the Turpins began home-schooling them later on. And the recent articles make it clear that the "classmates" witnesses have memories of are the now-adult children, not any of the younger ones.
 
A sister wonders if booze and gambling wrecked the mother.

Now her sister Teresa Robinette worries her sibling’s seemingly perfect life all went wrong when she decided to “cut loose” in a mid-life crisis as she started drinking and gambling.

Then one day, just as she was turning 40 she called and told me that she and David were going to have a drink. When I spoke with her later that night she was drunk for the first time in her life. I was in shock.

The divorced mother says she’s worried the horrific abuse inflicted on their children could all be caused by the couple’s late experimentation, as they tried new things they had never experienced as teens...


https://www.express.co.uk/news/worl...ouise-David-drinking-gambling-mid-life-crisis
 
Not really; you might have missed it, but even the earliest "big picture" articles noted that the children went to regular schools at first and the Turpins began home-schooling them later on.
I never saw it but then there are hundreds of articles. All I ever read was that they were home schooled and then later boom an article about one attending college.

I'd like to see a link for what I missed.
 
The whole family sounds nutty, I'm sorry.
I think so too. The parent's parents might be included. Is mental illness a genetic thing that can be passed down through generations? If so, then maybe all of these children got a double-dose of it when the sperm met the egg.
 
Totally off topic, but how do people that are home schooled get a job with no official certification?

Do they just rock up to the school a couple of times a year and do official exams?
 
It's really a shame that their relatives aren't able to help.

Now this part is just going to be me getting up on my judgey-horse. So pardon me a moment. But I have to say, if something like this were discovered about members of my family, and I found myself unable to directly help by taking anyone in, I'd definitely also go mum on talk show appearances and the like. I'd talk to police, but I'd tell the media to **** right off. I guess it's just a personal thing, but there's something very intrinsically distasteful about going on TV and banging on about how shocked and appalled you are when the kids are all being split up and going to homes, traumatized and bewildered. I totally understand that most people aren't in a spacial, financial, or emotional position to take on something like this. But they're also not required to participate in the media circus.

I don't know why, it rubs me the wrong way. It's quite possible I'm just a dick, though.

When my little brother was arrested for allegedly planning a Columbine 2.0 my family expected a media circus and we had to have a talk about "do we go out and spout how innocent he is or do we just shut up and let our lawyers do their thing in court?"

We decided to say as little as possible because we didn't want our own need to tell the world it was all a miscarriage of justice get in the way of actually getting him out of special protective confinement at the Juvenile Hall up in Auburn (basically SuperMax for kids, 23 hours a day in a 5x8 room, he was in there for 54 days until a Judge threw out the case).

Probably a bit off topic but your digression there certainly brought all those bad memories back. No wonder my brother ********** off to live in Vietnam when he could.
 
More details emerge about couple and 13 children allegedly held captive for years

Louise Turpin's brother told "Inside Edition" that dressing the siblings alike was done partly to position the family as future reality TV stars...

<snipped>


https://www.cbsnews.com/news/califo...horrors-to-face-restraining-order-13-children

This underlines my tenuous theory the parents are a couple of narcissists; with a severe personality disorder that makes them refuse to accept their children are individuals in their own right, breach their personal boundaries and exercise extreme control, in order to make the children little more than simulacra of the parents themselves.

It also shows a poor grip on reality if their dream was to make their family 'tv reality stars'.
 
Last edited:
Totally off topic, but how do people that are home schooled get a job with no official certification?

Do they just rock up to the school a couple of times a year and do official exams?


A someone who was homeschooled, the short answer is "it depends".

There are programs in many states for testing homeschooled children, and some require that homeschoolers and their curricula be certified by the state. However, other states have no such requirement for testing or certification, and particularly with some of the more religious types, the homeschooled children are woefully unprepared for life in the real world.

And right now, our Cheeto-in-Chief-appointed secretary of education is trying to remove any and all testing and certification requirements for homeschooling and religious charter schools (which are nearly the same thing).

It really depends on why the parents are homeschooling. Some do so because they have special needs kids who don't do well in classroom environments. Some because they want to give their children a better education than what's available in their local public schools. Far more do so because they're religious nutcases who don't like the idea of children being taught evil liberal science and starting to question the validity of their religion. A small number of those do so because, along with keeping their children away from evil non-religious influences, it also keeps their children out of view of anyone mandated to report child abuse to the proper authorities.
 

Back
Top Bottom