UNBIASED - TRUE CRIME: The Turpin Family
Episode Date: August 30, 2022(0:25) Intro(1:30) The 911 Call and the Morning of January 14, 2018(9:35) History of the Turpin Family(14:08) David and Louise's Sentencing (19:38) Round Two in Foster Care (20:41) The Turpin Childr...en SueLinks to sources can be found on www.jordanismylawyer.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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You are listening to the Jordan is My Law podcast. This is your host Jordan and I give
you the legal analysis you've been waiting for. Here's the deal. I don't care about your
political views, but I do ask that you listen to the facts, have an open mind and think
for yourselves. Deal? Oh, and one last thing. I'm not actually a lawyer.
Happy Tuesday. Welcome back to the Jordan is my lawyer podcast. If you guys listened to yesterday's episode, I hope you're feeling that intelligence really just hit on another level today. I put so
much thought into that episode. I gave you guys so much information that I really hope you enjoyed it and are feeling so much smarter.
So yesterday was all about politics and the news and current events.
And today we're switching gears and talking about a story that is bound to leave your
jaw on the floor.
And even when you think the story is over, it's not.
You may have heard this story a few years ago
because it made national headlines at the time, but I can say with almost 100% certainty that
even if you have heard this story, you will learn at least one thing in this episode
that you didn't know before. So without further ado, let's get into it.
On January 14th, 2018, at 5.49am in Paris, California, a security camera catches a blurry figure exiting a window of a house across the street. The figure was 17
year old Jordan Turpin. From the footage, Jordan just looks like a normal teenager sneaking out of
her parents' house in the early morning hours. And in fact, she was sneaking out of her parents'
house, but she was far from normal. The footage shows Jordan crawl out of the window, take a few steps
across the grassy front yard, head towards the sidewalk, make a left turn, hesitate,
switch directions, and start running. A few seconds later, 911 receives a call.
911 emergency, what are you reporting?
Um, hello? This is 911, do you have an emergency? one receives a call. away from home because I live in a family of 15, okay? Can you hear me? And we have a losing
parent. Did you hear that? The voice you heard on the other line of that call was 17-year-old
Jordan Turpin. While Jordan waits for the sheriff to show up, the dispatcher keeps her on the phone because if the line cuts short, there's no way to reach her again.
See, Jordan called from a deactivated cell phone, and the only way to use that cell phone was by making an outgoing call to 911.
But the phone couldn't receive incoming calls. So in the 15 minutes it takes for the sheriff to arrive,
Jordan tells the dispatcher that she's 17 years old,
she has 12 siblings,
hasn't bathed in almost a year,
and has never been out of the house.
She didn't know what a sidewalk was,
she didn't know how to read street signs, and she had never had a conversation with a stranger before.
When the dispatcher asked Jordan for her address, she read random numbers off of a piece of paper that she had taken with her, thinking those numbers were her home address.
9-2-5-7-0-52570574. No street name. The dispatcher thankfully was
able to grab her location from the GPS coordinates of the call. At 6 11 a.m., about 15 minutes later,
the deputy arrives and finds Jordan waiting at a stop sign. He starts asking Jordan the normal
questions you would ask a runaway, like, do your parents know you left the house? But here's the
thing. Because Jordan had never been out of the house really, or communicated with a stranger,
she lacked basic vocabulary skills and was extremely nervous talking to the deputy. So if I'm being honest,
when I watched the footage myself, her behavior came off as if she were mentally unstable.
The things that she was saying sounded so bizarre to that average person that you couldn't help but
think maybe she was having a manic episode. And the deputy
apparently thought the same thing because he asked her if she takes any medication.
But Jordan's response to that question was one the deputy probably wasn't expecting.
Jordan said, what's medication? So the deputy asks her another way. He says, do you take pills? To which Jordan responds,
I don't think I've ever took in a pill before. She said took in, not taken. That gives you a
little insight as to what her vocabulary was like. After Jordan explains that she has abusive parents
and two of her sisters are currently at home chained to a bed, the deputy
asked Jordan if she has any pictures. Thankfully, she did. She showed the deputy a picture of her
sisters chained to the bed and explained that her sisters were put in chains for stealing their
mother's food. Nearly an hour later, once backup arrives, the deputies head to Jordan's home.
It's 7.20am when the deputies knock on the Turpins' front door. A minute passes and no one answers.
After two minutes of knocking, Jordan's parents crack open the door and Jordan's mother steps
outside. Jordan's father stays behind the cracked door. The deputies
tell the Turpins that they received a call and they were there to conduct a welfare check.
The Turpins are visibly breathing heavily and are clearly nervous. The father, David, asks if the
deputies have a search warrant. The deputy tells him a search warrant isn't necessary in this case, and the deputies let themselves in the house despite the Turpins' concerns.
And once they're inside, they see what some might call the unimaginable. The floor is covered with
various piles of moving boxes, toys, food, and garbage. The house has four bedrooms total, one room for the parents
and the youngest baby, and three rooms for 12 children. When the police open one of the bedroom
doors, they see two emaciated young girls, one sitting on a mattress on the floor, the other sitting on a bed. They're dirty and have bruises
on their arms, but the girls are no longer in chains. The police then open a second bedroom
door and see two sets of bunk beds. Six kids are housed in this room. Then the police find a third
bedroom door towards the front of the house and find two more sets of bunk
beds and three more kids inside. One of the boys is shackled to his top bunk by his wrists and
ankles. He's been chained there for weeks. At this point, the parents are handcuffed,
walked out of the house, and placed in two separate police cars.
As the deputies are walking them to their cars,
one of the deputies asks the mother
where the keys to the chains are.
And this is what she says.
Now, let me ask you.
Yes.
Quickly.
Are there keys to the little locks?
Yes.
Okay, where are they? My son and daughter can get them. Quickly. Are there keys to the little locks? Yes. Okay, where are they?
My son and daughter can get them.
Okay.
So the ones that are in the house, they know where they are?
Yes.
Okay.
Is that what this is about?
Well, that's part of it.
Yeah, definitely.
This woman really says, is that what this is about?
Is she serious?
This woman really thinks she didn't do much wrong at this
point. So the deputies go back in the house and the kids tell them that the key can be found in
the dresser of their parents' bedroom. When the bedroom door is opened, there's more piles of
trash. So many piles that it's hard to even get to the dresser.
But the deputy eventually finds the key and the little boy is set free. The children hadn't been
bathed in almost a year. They had never been to the dentist, not even one time. The oldest daughter, age 29 at the time of the rescue, weighed just 82 pounds.
All children were immediately taken to the hospital. David and Louise Turpin grew up in a
small town in West Virginia. David attended college at Virginia Tech and began working for Lockheed Martin.
Louise was six years younger than David and married David when she was just 16.
In their early years together, life was relatively normal.
They were members of the Pentecostal church and saved themselves for marriage, but once married,
according to them, God called on them to have as many children as they could.
At 26 and 20 years old, they had their first child, Jennifer. At this time, they lived in Fort Worth, Texas, and Jennifer was able to attend grade school when she became of age.
But she says as early as two years old, she has memories of her father getting violent with her mother and punching holes in the walls.
When Jennifer began elementary school, she said she had a hard time making friends because she was so dirty and smelled so bad.
After third grade, Jennifer was taken out of school and none of the Turpin children would ever attend school again.
In 1999, the Turpins moved to Rio Vista, Texas, a rural town with a population of just 650 people at the time.
Then, in 2006, the Turpins moved 10 of their children to an isolated trailer on their property.
David and Luis took the youngest two and left the rest to fend for themselves.
The kids would sometimes be brought groceries, but not enough to feed everyone.
So Jordan says she would eat ketchup, mustard, ice, and even leaves. In 2010, the Turpins left their rural
property and moved to Paris, California. This is where the Turpins' story would finally change
course, but not for another eight years. While in California, Louise picks up this weird habit
of buying children's clothes and toys, but never letting her own
children wear these clothes or play with these toys. Brand new children's clothes would hang in
the closets with price tags still on them, but the children were never allowed to touch them.
The kids would often have to be awake at night and sleep during the day. The blinds and curtains of the home remained closed at all times,
and the kids were told to not look outside and sometimes to not even stand up. At this point,
there were a lot of red flags that simply went unnoticed by people around them. Jordan says that
she knows that her neighbors had to have had an idea that something was wrong,
but no one ever said anything. And in addition to that, the California Department of Education never looked into the Sandcastle Day School, which is where David and Louise Turpin said
their children went to school, but didn't actually go to school. In paperwork filed by the Turpins,
Sandcastle Day was a private school, and David was the principal.
When David and Luis were out of the house, the kids would sneak and watch TV or open the windows and poke their heads out for some fresh air.
Some of the older children at this point were trusted with smartphones so that David and Luis could contact them if needed.
And on these smartphones, Jordan would sometimes get the opportunity
to watch Disney Channel and Justin Bieber videos.
And through watching, she realized there was a whole other life outside of her home.
So she started secretly posting videos of herself singing on social media.
At one point, someone reached out to her asking her why her videos are always taken in her room.
And she opened up to that person about her life.
He then told her she needs to call the police.
And that's when Jordan realized this whole time she had been right.
She was not in a normal situation.
And then one day, in 2015, she was caught watching a Justin Bieber video.
Her mom choked her and took the phone away,
and it was soon after this that she realized she needed to get out. The plan to escape took over
two years. Jordan was supposed to escape with her sister Jennifer, but Jennifer got nervous
and stayed back. And finally, on the morning of January 14, 2018, Jordan crawled out of the window
and called 911. David and Louise Turpin were ultimately charged with 12 counts of torture,
6 counts of false imprisonment, 7 counts of abuse of a dependent adult, and 6 counts of child abuse. David received his own charge of a lewd act on a child
under 14 and eight additional felony perjury counts for lying about properly schooling his
children. David's bail was set at $12 million, Luis's at $9 million. David and Luis weren't
able to post bail, so they sat in jail awaiting sentencing and at their
sentencing hearing on April 19th 2019 at least three of the Turpin children told the court that
they had forgiven their parents one of their sons recounted the torture he endured during his
statement to the court saying in part I cannot describe in words what we went through growing up. Sometimes I still have nightmares of things that happened, such as my siblings being
chained up or getting beaten. That is in the past and this is now. I love my parents and have
forgiven them for a lot of the things they did to us. I have learned so much and have become very
independent. I live in an apartment and go to a nearby college.
I'm getting a bachelor's degree in software engineering, and after I get my bachelor's
degree, I'm going to get a job as a software engineer and go to school part-time to get
my master's degree.
He said how he had learned to ride a bike and now rides a bike wherever he can.
That son also read a statement on behalf of one of his sisters
and said, I love both of my parents so much. Although it may not have been the best way
to raise us, I am glad they did because it made me the person I am today. I just want to thank
them for teaching me about God and faith. I hope they never lose their faith. And a lawyer read a statement on behalf of
another daughter who asked the court to remove the restraining order so she could visit her parents
in jail. The statement read, in part, I want the court to know our parents loved each other and
loved each of their children. I remember our mother sitting in her recliner saying she doesn't know what to do.
She didn't want to use rope or chain, but was afraid her children were taking in too much
sugar and caffeine. Another child who wasn't so forgiving said, my parents took my whole life
from me and now I'm taking my life back. I'm a fighter, I'm strong, and I'm shooting through life like a
rocket. She also said, I saw my dad change my mom. They almost changed me, but I realized what was
happening. Now to me, it seems kind of obvious that some of these children were a bit brainwashed in a way. And I know that their parents taught them lessons by way of the Bible
and kind of justified their punishments and behaviors through the Bible.
So it's very possible that their children don't realize how crazy their parents actually were.
And that is why some of their children are willing to forgive
them. As far as David and Luis, they both cried as they heard each statement from the kids,
and cried as they apologized themselves for how they treated their kids. In a statement prepared
by David, but read by his lawyer, David wrote,
My homeschooling and discipline had good intentions. I never intended
for any harm to come to my children. I love my children and I believe my children love me.
I hope the very best for my children in the future. Louise spoke to the court without her
attorney's assistance and said that she was truly sorry for what she had done and that she
loves her children so much and she really looks forward to the day she can see them, hug them,
and tell them she's sorry. Before handing down their sentence, Judge Bernard Schwartz explained
that the treatment of their children was selfish, cruel, and inhumane. He went on to say, at an early age in the proceeding, and you spared your children having to relive the
humiliation and the harm they endured in that house of horrors.
David and Louise were each sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after
25 years.
David is currently serving time in the California State Prison, and Louise is serving her sentence
at the Central California
Women's Facility. Once the children were freed from the reign of their parents, they spent
several weeks in the hospital, recovering from starvation, filth, and emaciation. Jennifer,
the oldest daughter, remembers feeling her first sense of freedom at the hospital. She says there was a
day when no one was around and music was playing and she just got up and danced. And in that moment,
she says she finally felt free. But if you think the story ends here, sadly, it doesn't.
Unfortunately, once the children were released from the hospital, the six minor Turpin
children were placed in a foster home. Their caseworker at the time said she would do everything
she could to find the children a nice, loving family to try to make up for everything the kids
had been through. The children were placed with foster parents in early 2018, and as it would turn
out, the caseworker didn't keep her promise. Once again, the kids landed in the hands of another abusive couple.
And this time, it wasn't just the foster parents contributing to the abuse.
It was the foster parents and their oldest daughter.
The children would be hit in the face with sandals, have their hair pulled, hit with belts, and some of the kids would be forced to eat excessively and then eat their own vomit.
Finally, in 2021, after three years of enduring even more abuse, the foster parents and their daughter were arrested. And just last month, in July, the children brought suit against
the foster care agency, Child Net Youth and Family Services, and Riverside County, California.
The suit alleges that Child Net was aware that the family was unfit to be foster parents,
because the family had a prior history of physically and emotionally
abusing children, as well as severely neglecting children who had been placed in their care.
The complaint goes on to say, as to ChildNet, it had a financial motive to continue placing a large
number of children in this foster home and thereby strengthening its relationship with the county of Riverside.
And it put that financial motive ahead of its responsibility to the children.
The complaint alleges that the agency was aware of the family's prior history of alleged abuse,
and that the agency failed to act once they were alerted to the allegations of abuse by the Turpin children.
According to one of the complaints, because there were two different complaints filed separately,
the Turpins remained in this foster care home for three years despite the alleged abuse that
was brought to the agency's attention and that the defendants were put on notice that the foster parents and their adult daughter were
sexually, physically, and emotionally abusive and severely neglecting them. After an investigation
into the foster home, the family was arrested last November and now they all face multiple
child abuse charges. The foster father, Marcelino, has been accused of grabbing and fondling the children,
and kissing them on the mouth, as well as making sexually suggestive comments towards them.
Mr. O, as the complaint names him, would tell the female children that they were sexy,
and suggest that they wear revealing clothing. The foster mother, Rosa, or Mrs. O, as the complaint
names her, and the daughter, Lennis, would force the children to sit in a circle and recall their
past abuse. Rosa and Lennis also face charges of fraud and witness intimidation. On one occasion, the family gave one of the Turpin children,
who was five years old at the time, a sleeping pill and forced her to stand against a wall,
sprayed her with water, and rang a bell in her ear while telling her,
you don't let us sleep, so we're not letting you. The child ended up collapsing on the floor because she
wasn't able to stand once the sleeping pill kicked in. The family would lock the five-year-old in her
room for nine hours at a time and not change her diaper. When the children would express to their
foster parents that they felt depressed, their foster parents would give them ideas as to how
they could take their own lives. According to the felony complaint
against the foster family, which is linked on my website, the family faces 17 total counts.
The foster parents pled not guilty to all of their charges in December of 2021. They posted bail,
and at this point, they're awaiting trial. According to the civil complaints filed last month against the county
and the agency, during the time that these children were living in this foster home,
one of the children actually spoke up to their social worker. The child explained the abuse
and recounted stories of what the children were experiencing, but the social worker did nothing. The foster care agency turned a blind eye.
In a statement to People Magazine, Brett Lewis, Director of Development and Communications at
ChildNet Youth and Family Services, said,
At this time, our organization is not at liberty to disclose facts or discuss the allegations made
in the complaint. We look forward to providing the facts at the appropriate time in court.
Our agency has been serving California's most vulnerable, traumatized youth for over 50 years.
We have a strong track record of providing excellent care and continue to demonstrate
our commitment to these children. In an interview done last month, Jordan Turpin told People
Magazine that she wasn't ready to discuss details of what went on in that foster home. But she did say that during that time, she was extremely traumatized
and fell into a very deep depression. Over the course of time, the children have received $600,000
in donations from random strangers, but haven't been able to use it. This money was placed into an official trust managed by the court
and hidden from public oversight. The court also appointed the children a legal guardian
who was supposed to teach them basic life skills and provide them with necessities but failed to
do so. The reality is these children have been failed not only by the foster care system,
but by the court, by their legal guardian, by their own parents, by literally everyone
that they've been in contact with throughout their lives, aside from their attorneys.
This past February, Jordan Turpin moved into her own apartment. She says she finally feels free.
Jordan is actually also on TikTok and Instagram and loves being able to use social media.
She wants to continue her education and become a motivational speaker.
Four of the Turpin children are still in foster care, but their attorneys ensure that they
are safe, together, and working towards recovery.
If you want to follow Jordan on social media, her username is Jordan underscore Turpin,
T-U-R-P-I-N, on TikTok, and Jordan underscore underscore Turpin on Instagram.
So one underscore on TikTok, two on Instagram.
She really is such a bright light despite everything she's gone through and someone that I personally have so much admiration and respect for because not only did she single-handedly
save her siblings, but she's now using her story to help other people that have been in similar
situations. So over time, we'll see what happens with the trial against the foster care agency in
the county of Riverside, as well as the with the trial against the foster care agency in the county of
Riverside, as well as the criminal charges brought against the foster family. I'll be sure to keep
you guys updated, whether it be on TikTok or YouTube, so make sure you follow along on there
as well. My handle on all of my platforms is JordanIsMyLawyer, so I'm super easy to find no
matter where you look. And my website is also Jordanordanismylawyer.com for those who don't
know. And I announced in yesterday's episode that I introduced a new comment section on each episode
description webpage. So you can go to my website, go to the episode description page for this
episode or whatever episode you're listening to, and actually comment your thoughts on that episode
so we can kind of engage with each other and have more of a conversation about the topics that I cover. And if you haven't already, make sure you listen to
yesterday's podcast episode, which covered some major news stories. So with that, I will talk to
you guys on Monday. Bye.