3 Youngsters Found Left Alone in Squalor
NORTH HILLS — A 25-year-old woman was arrested on suspicion of felony child abuse Sunday after Los Angeles police found her three young children alone in their bug-infested, garbage-strewn apartment.
A neighbor called police about 2 a.m. to report that the children, ages 2, 4 and 5, had been left unattended at their apartment in the 15100 block of Parthenia Street, said Officer Curtis Faulkner, an LAPD spokesman.
Concerned about conditions in which the children were living, officers called investigators from the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services.
“It was filthy,” Faulkner said. “It was in enough shambles that it was determined that it was a child endangerment situation.”
The children, who were not hurt, were taken into custody by the Family Services department, Faulkner said.
Police declined to identify the children’s mother, who was arrested on suspicion of child abuse when she returned home Sunday morning. Police could not say how long the children had been left alone.
Ignacio Cardenas, manager of the apartment building, said he had visited the woman several times to ask for rent that was past due, but she never allowed him into the apartment.
“I didn’t know anything about this,” he said Sunday afternoon.
Inside the apartment, children’s toys lay among piles of garbage, half-eaten food and soiled underwear. In the kitchen, bugs crawled on every surface.
Neighbors said the woman did not work and seldom left her apartment during the day, only venturing out at night when she would sometimes sit in front of the complex with her children. She regularly sent the children out to beg, the neighbors said.
“The little girl used to come around saying my mommy told me to ask for $3, or my mommy told me to ask for $5,” said one neighbor, who declined to give her name. “I’d usually give her a box of cereal, maybe a half a dozen tortillas.”
The neighbor said the children--girls 2 and 5, and a boy, 4--were often dressed in dirty clothes and seemed to always be suffering from colds. Their mother would take them out into the heavy rainstorms without protective gear, she said.
“I felt bad for those children,” the woman said.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.