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Parents Charged After Missing Child Leads Police to 10 Kids ‘Living in Squalor’ as Mom Denies Abuse

May 15, 2018 by  
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Ten children were removed from a home in Fairfield, California, after police discovered they were “living in squalor and unsafe conditions.”

Fairfield Police Department announced, Monday, that the discovery was sparked after a 12-year-old child was reported missing on March 31. When the juvenile was located and returned to the home by police, they discovered nine more children, ranging in age from 4 months old to 11 years old.

Fairfield Police Lt. Greg Hurlbut said during a press conference on Monday that feces, garbage and rotten food littered the floor of the home, according to NBC Bay Area.

All 10 children were taken into protective custody by Solano County Child Welfare Services, police said.

The children’s mother — Ina Rogers, 30 — was arrested and booked into Solano County Jail for child neglect on March 31. She was released after posting $10,000 bail on April 9, Fox News reported.

A joint investigation by the Fairfield Police Department’s Family Violence Unit with Child Welfare Services and the Solano County District Attorney’s Office uncovered “a long and continuous history of severe physical and emotional abuse of the children,” police said.

Sharon Henry, chief deputy district attorney for Solano County, said at a news conference that the alleged abuse was done with “sadistic purpose,” according to the Washington Post.

“Based upon what the children stated in their interviews, we believe torture occurred in this house,” she said.

The Solano County District Attorney’s Office directed PEOPLE to the press conference when asked for further comment.

The children’s father — Jonathan Allen, 29 — was booked into the Solano County Jail for seven counts of felony torture and nine counts of felony child abuse on May 11, according to online records. The Washington Post reported that Allen pleaded not guilty in court on Monday. He is being held for over $5 million bail.

The Solano County Public Defender’s office did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for information on Rogers’ or Allen’s representation.

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Rogers called the charges “ludicrous” when speaking to reporters in front of her house on Monday, according to NBC Bay Area.

“There’s no broken bones, there is no major scars, nothing,” the mother said. “My kids get bumped and bruised and scratched because they’re kids but that’s it.”

All the kids slept on cots in one bedroom, but Rogers said that was by their own choice, NBC reported. She added that her oldest child ran away after she took away his tablet as a punishment, and their home was messy due to their frantic search for him.

Rogers added that she and her husband are great parents.

“My husband has a lot of tattoos. He looks like a scary individual, and that’s why people are so quick to judge him,” she said, according to the Washington Post. “But my husband is an amazing person. I am an amazing mother.”

RELATED VIDEO: “House of Horrors” Mom Believes She Did “Nothing Wrong”

The situation bears similarities to a mid-January discovery in Perris, California, when police uncovered the 13 children of David and Louise Turpin had apparently been living in a house of horrors. Allegedly kept malnourished from lack of food and regularly abused, nearly all of the kids had also been imprisoned and tortured in the home, authorities believe.

The Turpin parents were soon arrested and remain in custody, having pleaded not guilty to the dozens of charges against each of them. Their attorneys have noted they are presumed innocent.

The children, ages 2 to 29 at the time they were rescued, were hospitalized for months where they reportedly provided information to investigators and adjusted to new lives.

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Primary elections: Pennsylvania crucial to Democratic hopes for winning House majority

May 15, 2018 by  
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Democrats are trying to take a major step toward winning control of the House, as voters pick nominees Tuesday in Pennsylvania, one of the ripest states for the party to make gains in November’s midterm elections.

A redrawn congressional map, a string of Republican retirements and opposition to President Trump have opened the door for Democrats to pick up as many as half a dozen seats in Pennsylvania. They need 23 to win the House majority.

But before they can focus on the fall campaign, they must first settle some divisive and crowded primaries. Polls open at 7 a.m.

Pennsylvania voters have swung back and forth in recent elections. In 2016, Trump became the first Republican presidential nominee to win the state in 28 years. Earlier this year, Democrat Conor Lamb won a special election in a Pittsburgh-area district where Trump defeated Hillary Clinton by 20 points.

The perennial battleground state also features a governor’s race and a Senate contest that Democratic incumbents are favored to win, but could become competitive. Trump recorded an 11th-hour robo-call for his preferred Senate candidate, Republican Rep. Lou Barletta.

Pennsylvania is one of four states holding primaries on Tuesday. Voters are also heading to the polls in Nebraska, Idaho and Oregon for nominating fights that could provide fresh signs about the mood of voters less than six months before Election Day.

In Pennsylvania, the retirement of Rep. Ryan Costello (R), the resignation of Rep. Patrick Meehan (R) and the revised map ordered by the state Supreme Court have led Republicans to effectively cede two districts in the Philadelphia area.

In one of the districts, Democrats are facing a competitive, crowded primary in which Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) endorsed a candidate — irking the backers of one of his opponents. Sanders also picked sides in an Allentown-area district that Democrats are aiming to pick up in November.

Elsewhere, Democrats are trying to unseat Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R), who is running for reelection in a swing district. Wealthy philanthropist Scott Wallace and military veteran Rachel Reddick are the leading candidates in the Democratic primary.

Republican Rick Saccone, who lost to Lamb, is seeking redemption in a Pittsburgh-area district that favors the GOP. He has one primary challenger. Lamb has opted to run in a different district near Pittsburgh that is less conservative. He will face Rep. Keith Rothfus (R) in November.

In the Pennsylvania Senate race, incumbent Democratic Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr. awaits a likely showdown with Barletta. The Republican got a late boost from Trump, who called him a “very special guy” in the robo-call.

“Lou Barletta was one of the very first people to get behind me in Pennsylvania,” Trump says in the recording. “He was with me early on, before everyone else started jumping on board.”

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf will face the winner of a crowded Republican primary that state Sen. Scott Wagner is favored to win. There are contested primaries for lieutenant governor in both parties.

Sanders endorsed Braddock, Pa., Mayor John Fetterman, who is running on universal health-care and marijuana legalization, over Lt. Gov. Mike Stack (D). It’s one of several races where left-wing candidates are trying to replace incumbent Democrats; in Pittsburgh, two longtime legislators are being challenged by self-identified Democratic Socialists.

“It’s about filling office after office with people who can make these priorities a reality some day,” Fetterman said.

In Idaho, a competitive Republican primary for governor features three leading candidates: Rep. Raúl R. Labrador, a founding member of the hard-right House Freedom Caucus; Lt. Gov. Brad Little, who has the support of outgoing Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter; and Tommy Ahlquist, a businessman and physician who has the support of 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney.

The leading Democratic candidates are Paulette Jordan, a former state legislator who would be the country’s first Native American governor; and A.J. Balukoff, the party’s 2014 nominee.

“People are ready for something new,” Jordan said in an interview. “I’m not about the party; I’m not about the system.”

Nebraska’s Republican senator and governor are favored to keep their seats in November. They will find out who their Democratic opponents will be after Tuesday’s primary.

In Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, a pickup opportunity for Democrats, former congressman Brad Ashford is seeking a comeback against nonprofit executive Kara Eastman. The winner of their primary will face Rep. Don Bacon (R).

In Oregon, incumbent Democratic Gov. Kate Brown has drawn a pair of primary challengers but is expected to advance to the general election. The race has attracted a crowded field of Republicans.

Oregon is a heavily Democratic state, and Brown is favored to retain the governorship.

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