Five malnourished children have been found living in car at Walmart with healthy parents, police say.
A deputy said he was on a routine patrol in Greenacres, Florida, last weekend when he spotted a blue Toyota in a Walmart parking lot. It wasn't the look of the vehicle that caught his attention but the smell emanating from it - an odour "similar to that of homeless camps", he said.
Inside was a family of seven. The parents seemed healthy, police said, but the five children, aged from 4 to 14, were filthy, fatigued and so malnourished that their bones were protruding from under their skin, according to WPTV. The oldest reportedly weighed a mere 23kg, just 2kg more than his 8-year-old sibling.
The parents, Donell Barron and Rikki Hart, 34, were arrested on charges of child neglect, according to WPTV. As of Wednesday evening, they were being held in the Palm Beach County Jail in lieu of $1000 bail, the Palm Beach Post reported.
The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office told local media that the children, all of whom were described as "underweight," were taken to a hospital, where at least one was treated for unusually high blood pressure. The five kids are now in custody of the Florida Department of Children and Families, the Palm Beach Post reported.
Police said they took some of the children to eat at McDonald's, where they "ravenously ate the meals, as if they had not been fed in quite some time".
When interviewed by the sheriff's office, Barron gave a grim account of how the family wound up living out of their car.
According to the Palm Beach Post, Barron told police that they had been evicted from their home in Port St Lucie about a year ago and had spent about 10 months hopping from one hotel to another before they ran out of money. They had lived in the car for the past two months, he told police, during which time they bathed in park bathrooms and urinated in a bucket they carried in the vehicle. Deputies reported that the children ate about once a day, their meals consisting mostly of salad and bread, and hadn't seen a doctor in years, according to the Palm Beach Post.
None of the children was enrolled in school, and instead were home-schooled inside the car, Barron told police.
At times, Barron gave contradictory statements to deputies. First, he told them that he attended "three years of law school and practices law, but not as a lawyer", according to a police report reviewed by WPTV. Later, he said he lost his money trading stocks and had never attended law school. He described himself as a Native American with a "corporate name" and said he was "not the property of the US or any corporation," the Palm Beach Post reported.
Police told local media that Barron and Hart appeared to be clean and in good health at the time of their arrest.
Richard Hart and Robin Johnson, identified by WPTV as Hart's parents and the grandparents of the five children, told the station they had fallen out of touch with their daughter and didn't know how the family ended up in such a state. They said she was once a homecoming queen and attended college on an academic scholarship.
"Here I am sleeping in a comfortable bed and my babies had to be sleeping in a car all crammed up like that," Richard Hart said. "She was a very loving parent. She was a very doting parent. She took care of her children. How we get to this point, that's a question we can't answer."
The Palm Beach Post reported that the couple ran a blog called "Holistically Beautiful" that they launched in 2014. The blog's "about" page says Donell and Rikki Barron created the site "to show the benefits of living a healthier lifestyle and discuss topics which can enrich one's life."
"They believe in the importance of living a balanced life and the importance of constantly improving oneself," it says.
A call to the number listed on the site went to a disconnected line and an email to the blog wasn't immediately returned.