3 children pulled from 'filth'

Couple is arrested, may face multiple child abuse counts

Published: Saturday, Oct. 28 2006 12:00 a.m. MDT

Three young children, including a disabled 9-year-old boy, were taken into protective custody this week after investigators found them in what was described as an unbelievably filthy apartment.

"The deputies described it as one of the worst living conditions they ever experienced," said Salt Lake County Sheriff's Lt. Paul Jaroscak.

A large dog lived in the upper level apartment near 300 East and 4200 South, but he apparently never went out, Jaroscak said. There were dog feces everywhere.

"Flies and maggots and bugs were everywhere," he said. "There were no clean dishes."

Three children, ages 2, 6 and 9, lived in the house. The 9-year-old has cystic fibrosis and was supposed to be receiving medication, Jaroscak said. But when deputies asked the parents where the medicine was, they didn't know.

The 9-year-old also was supposed to wear a vest with an air compressor to help his lungs function, said Division of Child and Family Services spokeswoman Carol Sisco. She did not know how long the boy had gone without wearing it. Friday, the boy was in the hospital in non-life-threatening condition to make sure he was all right, she said.

As the deputies continued looking around the apartment, they discovered even more appalling conditions.

"When they asked the children if there was any food, they said, 'We're waiting for my mom to get a paycheck,"' Jaroscak said.

The only evidence of food was bowls of cereal filled with milk that was so old it had turned brown, he said. There was also broken glass from Christmas ornaments on the floor.

"The kids said they just throw a blanket on a pile of clothes and sleep on that," Sisco said.

The deputies, however, noted there were no clean clothes anywhere in the house, Jaroscak said.

There were two toilets in the apartment. One did not work, and one was too full of feces to work, he said. In fact, it was water overflowing from the toilet to the apartment below that eventually was the tipoff that something wasn't right.

The apartment manager, who has been in the business 10 years, said the apartment wasn't the worst she'd ever seen but "it was horrible. It was really bad."

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