The lawyer for the adult children rescued from the California 'House of Horrors' opens up about how they're doing a year later, and says they even miss their parents sometimes
The lawyer for the adult Turpin siblings is speaking publicly, a year after their parents, David and Louise Turpin, were arrested on charges of abusing and keeping their kids imprisoned at their California home.
Attorney Jack Osborn says the adult siblings are now living together and are learning what it means to be free.
They often visit their younger siblings, who are in foster care, and aren't looking forward to the possibility of having to testify against their parents at trial, he said.
A year after David and Louise Turpin were arrested on charges of abusing their 13 children and keeping them imprisoned in their Southern California home, a lawyer for the adult children is speaking publicly.
Jack Osborn appeared on the "Today" show on Wednesday to update the public on how the adult siblings are doing.
Osborn said the older Turpin children are now living together, while their younger siblings, who are still minors, are in the foster care system.
The children ranged in age from 2 to 29 when they were rescued last year. The adult siblings were so malnourished that their bodies were smaller than usual and authorities thought they were minors at first.
A year after one of the older children escaped the house and alerted authorities to the conditions they were living in under their parents' reign, the adult siblings are still getting used to their newfound life of freedom and continue to relearn basic life skills, Osborn says.
"For really the first time they're able to make their own decisions, and decide where they're going to eat. They decide where they're going to go, what they're going to study," Osborn said.
“One of the things they’re grateful for is they’ve got each other.” Attorney for children from California “House of Horrors” talks to @miguelnbc about how the kids are doing one year after their escape pic.twitter.com/YsY66MMO1I
He added that the older children "may spend a long time processing" the years they were under the control of their parents, and reconciling it with their "new normal."
But Osborn said surprisingly they are "not bitter." "They really take every day as it is, as a gift," he added.
Osborn said that the older siblings frequently visit their younger siblings, who they are "extremely protective of."
One thing that is causing them anxiety is the prospect that they may have to testify against their parents when they go to trial, he said.
David and Louise Turpin have pleaded not guilty to all of the nearly 50 charges against them, which include false imprisonment and child abuse. If convicted, they face the possibility of life in prison.
Osborn said his clients still feel for their parents.
"They do worry about their parents and I think, at times, they do miss their parents," he said.
Команда подмосковного главка Росгвардии завоевала серебро в соревнованиях по гиревому спорту Спартакиады «Динамо»
Подписывайтесь на наши Telegram каналы!
Заместитель управляющего Отделением Фонда пенсионного и социального страхования Российской Федерации по г. Москве и Московской области Алексей Путин: «Клиентоцентричность - наш приоритет»
World's biggest modding site announces new paid mods policies, with caveats—'as long as it isn't to the detriment of the free modding ecosystem'
Stressing out waiting for Dragon Age: The Veilguard to download? Here's some Dragon Age ASMR to help mellow your mood
Return of the Phantom, which is basically The Phantom of the Opera but with time travel, is free on GOG
A college student put on a free, stage adaptation of Silent Hill 2 'to make a truly frightening theatrical experience' all without an appearance by Pyramid Head