Lawyer reveals ‘telling’ first thing mom of 16 “feral” children rescued from Ohio home said after arrest
The Vinton County case has become a national symbol of unthinkable neglect: sixteen siblings pulled from a home described as worse than a barn, some airlifted to trauma centers, one intubated in intensive care. Authorities say the children looked “feral,” their development stunted by years of confinement and squalor. To Ohio’s attorney general, it was “pure evil” made visible. Yet inside the jail, the woman painted as a monster was found sobbing, exhausted, asking not about her bail, her charges, or her future, but whether her children were safe and when she might see them again.
Her attorney insists that detail matters. He argues this is not a story of cartoonish malice, but of isolation, generational control, and a girl married at 15 who never learned another way to live. The courts will decide guilt. The public, watching in horror, must wrestle with a harder question: where neglect ends, and a lifetime of being shaped in the dark begins.