Home Where California Couple Allegedly Tortured Children Has No Fire Inspection Records, Officials Say

PERRIS, Calif. (CBSNewYork/AP) — City officials in California said Wednesday they could find no records that the fire department conducted required annual inspections at a home that doubled as a private school where authorities say 13 malnourished siblings were kept captive in filthy conditions by their parents.

There's no state law that requires schools must be inspected by a state agency, but they're supposed to be inspected by a fire marshal. Officials say there's no record of even a single visit to the home.

David Allen Turpin and his wife, Louise Anna Turpin, were arrested Sunday after authorities found the malnourished children in their home in the Los Angeles suburb. The couple was jailed on $9 million bail each. Charges that may include torture and child endangerment could come Wednesday and a court appearance is scheduled for Thursday, authorities said.

Deputies said some siblings were shackled to furniture in the foul-smelling home in suburban Riverside County. They were so malnourished that the older ones still looked like children.

One woman who was neighbors with the Turpins when they previously lived in rural Texas thought the couple's home was akin to a religious compound.

"They were weird and home schooled the kids and kept them away from everyone and wouldn't say names," she said. That home was sold in foreclosure, and the new owners shared photos that showed the walls and floors covered in waste with windows broken and boarded up.

The arrests came after a 17-year-old daughter who looked closer to 10 jumped out a window and called 911. Her parents had made the home a private school, a prison, and a veritable torture chamber for the siblings who ranged in age from 2 to 29, authorities said Tuesday.

Until the girl fled with photographic evidence, it appears no one — neither neighbors nor public officials — knew anything about what was happening inside.

The home doubled as the Sandcastle Day School, where David Turpin was listed as principal and its enrollment of six included only the couple's younger children. But no state agency regulates or oversees private schools in California. They are, however, subject to an annual inspection by the state or local fire marshal.

"They weren't allowed to watch TV. They weren't allowed to have friends over — the normal things that kids do," the children's aunt, Teresa Robinette, told NBC's "Today" show.

Robinette said she voiced concerns to her sister about the children's health.

"I always made comments to Louise when I did talk to her, about, gosh, they are so skinny," Robinette said. "She would laugh it off and say David's so tall and lanky, they are going to be like him."

Few details have been released about how the parents kept them captive despite what appeared to be opportunities for them to leave.

Another aunt, Elizabeth Jane Flores, told ABC News' "Good Morning America" that she tried for years to get in touch with her sister, Louise Turpin, but Turpin shut her out.

"I want to reach out to the kids. I want them to know that for years we begged to Skype. We begged to see them, the whole family," she said.

Riverside County Sheriff's Capt. Greg Fellows said there was no indication any of the children were sexually abused, although that was still being investigated.

The couple, married 32 years, sometimes dressed their children alike in pink dresses or Dr. Seuss T-shirts, kept them away from outsiders and cut the boys' hair in a Prince Valiant-style resembling that of their graying father. Photos show nearly all the girls with shoulder-length brown hair parted in the middle.

"If we had known sooner, we would have tried to help them," neighbor Bryand Velaz said. "Knowing there were defenseless kids that were being held against their own will, that makes us really hurt."

(© Copyright 2017 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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