🚨 SIXTEEN CHILDREN WERE FOUND LIVING INSIDE WHAT MANY NOW CALL A HOUSE OF HORR0RS… BUT THE LATEST REVELATIONS ARE LEAVING EVEN THEIR OWN FAMILY STUNNED
Disturbing details have emerged in the Ohio ‘House of Horrors’ case after a horrified relative broke his silence to insist he had no idea 16 youngsters were living in squalor.
Ronnie Fletcher, who is married to a daughter of suspects Gary Siders Sr. and Christina ‘Lynn’ Siders, said his family has been caught in the crossfire since four members of the family were arrested over the shocking child endangerment case.
‘What can I do to help? – That was the original reaction to it,’ Fletcher told WOWK-TV. ‘Horrified. Worried about the kids. It’s hard to explain the action when you’re distant family.’
His comments came as authorities referred to the crime as an ‘intrafamily’ case – suggesting some children may have resulted from sexual relations within the family.
Also, it was revealed the children’s mother Elizabeth Siders married Gary Jr. at 15 years old and had a baby just months later.
In addition to the 16 children, Elizabeth also gave birth to conjoined twins who died after being born prematurely.
The Siders – Gary Sr., Christina, Gary Jr. and Elizabeth – all face 16 counts each of child endangerment each for the disturbing crime.
Fletcher said he and his wife, who are the children’s uncle and aunt, only learned about the allegations when authorities publicly announced the arrests last week.
He insisted the extended family had become estranged over the years and had no idea what investigators now allege was happening behind the doors of the Hamden, Ohio, home.
‘If we would have known that it was like that in that home, we would have done something about it, even if it was just to go there and take the kids ourselves or give them money,’ Fletcher said.

+23
View gallery
Ronnie Fletcher said the extended family was ‘horrified’ when they learned of the allegations against the Siders family. Fletcher said he and his wife only learned of the allegations after authorities announced the arrests and would have taken the children in or helped financially

+23
View gallery
Vile photos from the dilapidated Ohio home where 16 children were rescued have surfaced

+23
View gallery

+23
View gallery
Court records show Elizabeth Siders, 33, left, married Gary Siders Jr., 36, in March 2008 when she was 15 years old. Marriage records indicate she was 7 months pregnant at the time. Gary was 18

+23
View gallery

+23
View gallery
Christina Siders, 67, left, Gary Siders Sr., 73, right. All four were arraigned in the Vinton County Court of Common Pleas last Wednesday and are being held on $300,000 cash bond. All four pleaded not guilty. Each defendant faces 16 counts of child endangering.
‘Them girls would have went there and cleaned the house themselves if they’d known it was like that.’
Instead, Fletcher says the family’s lives have been turned upside down.
‘It’s been awful for the people that had no idea that was going on the house that are related to this family,’ he said.
‘I mean, we’ve had death threats – we’ve been told that we need to be put in front of an execution line of guns and… killed and burned.’
He said even his own daughters have received threats, forcing relatives to delete their social media accounts out of fear.
‘My children, my daughters, has been threatened,’ Fletcher said. ‘It’s to the point we’ve had our pictures taken off our accounts and we’ve had to delete all our social media. I mean it’s been awful.’
The backlash has become so severe, Fletcher said, that his wife is now too frightened to go to work and he fears it could destroy the business he had been trying to launch.
‘All this is taking money off our table because we can’t live our normal lives because the way these people are trying to treat us on something we didn’t have nothing to do with.’
‘How am I supposed to start a business in this community when I’m being stapled to the face of ‘pure evil’?’
Despite the horrifying allegations now gripping southeastern Ohio, Fletcher insisted the family he first came to know decades ago looked nothing like the one now accused of allowing 16 children to live in horrific conditions.

+23
View gallery
Garbage bags, cardboard boxes, and trash are seen blocking an entrance of the home

+23
View gallery
The home in the small town was cordoned off last week with yellow police tape, while garbage littered the front yard

+23
View gallery
Police tape surrounds the rear of the home where various objects including car tires are scattered in the grass
‘You’ve got people out there saying that Lynn and Gary raised their kids that way, and they was not raised that way,’ he said. ‘I’ve known this family since grade school… Gary and Lynn did not raise their children that way.’
Fletcher’s comments come as newly uncovered court records have revealed another startling detail about the family’s past.
Elizabeth Siders, one of the four defendants, was just 15 years old and seven months pregnant when she married Gary Siders Jr. in neighboring West Virginia in 2008.
It adds yet another disturbing layer to a case that has already horrified investigators who say they found children living in conditions so squalid they resembled ‘almost feral’ animals.
The revelation comes as prosecutors continue building their sweeping child endangerment case against four members of the Siders family following last week’s dramatic raid on a home in Hamden, Ohio.
Authorities say 16 children ranging in age from 18 months to 18 years were discovered in deplorable conditions.
Marriage records from the Mason County Courthouse in West Virginia show Gary Siders Jr. was 18 when he married Elizabeth, then 15, on March 31, 2008.
The records state that Elizabeth’s parents, Brian Ray Russell and Lori Ann Raines, consented to the marriage, along with then-Circuit Court Judge David Nibert.
At the time, the couple lived only two houses apart in Gallia County, Ohio. Gary had completed the ninth grade, while Elizabeth had finished the eighth grade, according to the records.

+23
View gallery
More junk is seen through a door opening in the house of horrors

+23
View gallery
Bowls of cat and dog food were also seen sitting outside the home’s front porch

+23
View gallery
The Siders have lived in multiple Ohio counties since 2008 and have avoided establishing medical or government records
The eldest child involved in the current criminal case was born just two months after the marriage.
Elizabeth, now 33, Gary Jr., 36, his parents Gary Siders Sr., 73, and Christina Siders, 67, have each pleaded not guilty to 16 counts of child endangering after investigators executed a search warrant at the family’s Ohmer Street property.
Each second-degree felony count carries a potential prison sentence of between two and 12 years if the defendants are convicted.
The judge ordered the four defendants to have no contact with one another or the children and set bond at $300,000 for each. If released, they must wear GPS ankle monitors.
As investigators continue piecing together what happened inside the home, new questions have also surfaced about Elizabeth’s own background.
Fletcher said Elizabeth had endured a troubled upbringing before marrying into the Siders family.
‘She’s willingly there at the home. She did not have a very good home life when they got together, and she escaped,’ he explained to WOWK.
Separate social media posts reviewed by the Los Angeles Magazine included comments from a man identifying himself as Elizabeth’s brother, who claimed she had been ‘indoctrinated’ and said the siblings had only recently reconnected after being estranged for roughly 15 years.
Former prosecutor Tommy Pope discussed the newly uncovered marriage records during an appearance on NewsNation, suggesting they could become relevant as the criminal case develops.

+23
View gallery
Food containers, trash, and even high chairs are seen scattered

+23
View gallery
A cat looks out from a side door opening of the home where garbage is seen piled inside

+23
View gallery
16 children who ‘looked like feral animals’ were rescued from the tiny dilapidated home
‘It looks like she got married with her parents’ consent in West Virginia when she was 15 and was seven months pregnant,’ Pope said.
‘It almost seems like the worst of circumstances. To her credit, they kept the child and they chose life. But it seems like she’s been locked in that cycle, obviously, based on the number of kids.’
Pope also weighed in on Ohio Attorney General Andy Wilson’s repeated description of the investigation as an ‘intrafamily’ case.
‘Best I can see, it’s almost alluding to some sexual relationships within the family, perhaps with the father-in-law or something of that nature,’ Pope said.
Authorities have not publicly elaborated on what they mean by ‘intrafamily,’ although Wilson, Vinton County Sheriff Ryan Cain and Prosecutor William Archer have repeatedly stressed the investigation is not a human trafficking case and that there is no ongoing danger to the wider community.
Investigators say the family had lived in Vinton County for about four years after previously spending time in Gallia, Pike and Jackson counties in Ohio, as well as Wisconsin.
Wilson confirmed the children were not enrolled in school.
The children’s ages listed in the criminal complaints range from 18 years old down to just 20 months old, including twins aged four and another set of twins aged 20 months. Two additional child-endangering counts do not specify ages.
Authorities have said they have struggled to interview many of the children because of severe communication difficulties.
‘Some of these children couldn’t even speak,’ Wilson said.
‘This is terrible. They really, they looked like almost feral animals; it was terrible. So when we’re talking reading, writing and education, we’re talking a whole other level of expectations here. It’s hard enough just to get these kids to be able to – the 18-year-old can’t spell her name.’

+23
View gallery
One nauseating photo appeared to show a window with no glass pane, its opening blocked by piles of debris and trash

+23
View gallery
Police tape surrounds a home where authorities say they removed 16 children and arrested four adults in Hamden, Ohio, last Wednesday

+23
View gallery
Debris is strewn on the front lawn of a home where authorities removed 16 children and arrested four adults
Sheriff Cain described the conditions inside the property in similarly stark terms.
‘Our livestock are kept in better condition than these children,’ he said.
‘It was an extremely high presence of bacteria and human feces. Just a disgusting scene…. A large number of the children were kept in a roughly 12-by-12 area. It seems like that’s where they’ve spent the most of the last four years.’
Wilson said the scene left a lasting impression on him.
‘Adding on to what the sheriff said, I didn’t actually go into the room where the kids were; I just looked through the door. That was yesterday. I can still smell it – I can’t get the smell off of me or away from me right now,’ he said.
Seven of the children were taken to hospitals in the Columbus area, including two who were flown by helicopter. Authorities previously said one child was initially in critical condition.
Officials have not released updated medical information.
The investigation has also been accompanied by widespread online speculation, prompting officials and local media outlets to caution against false claims circulating on social media.
One rumor centered on the deaths of twin girls, Bailey Lee Siders and Faith Lee Siders, whose gravestone has circulated widely online.
Birth and death records reviewed by WCMH show the girls were born on November 20, 2022, at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus and died about an hour later.
Their deaths were ruled as natural causes.
Death certificates state the twins, who were conjoined twins born at approximately 24 weeks’ gestation, died from respiratory failure related to extreme prematurity.
Investigators have not linked those deaths to the current criminal case.
Neighbors have continued expressing disbelief that such conditions could have existed unnoticed in a village of roughly 700 people.
Josh O’Dell, who lives nearby, told local television station 13 News he believed the property had been abandoned.

+23
View gallery
Items including a high chair, left, are seen in the home

+23
View gallery
A bag of rice and a can of insect killer sit in an open window
Food pantry volunteer Charley Brown said he had occasionally seen members of the family but never suspected the allegations now emerging.
‘Unbelievable, unbelievable. I just would have never, never thought this,’ Brown said.
Restaurant owner Carissa Gonzalez said her business had delivered food to the home several times, but the occupants always collected the orders outside.
She also recalled frequently seeing Elizabeth at local stores.
‘You wouldn’t think that they were any different than anyone else other than they kinda had a little bit of smell to ’em,’ Gonzalez told 13 News.
‘They didn’t really mess with anyone. No one really knew nothing about ’em because they didn’t talk to nobody. They just went and got the stuff they had to do and then went back home about their day.’
Dollar General employee Ariel Gutierrez told WSYX she had served Gary and Elizabeth the day before they were arrested.
‘It was mind-blowing once I saw the mugshot. I just saw them on Monday. They were my last customers,’ she said. ‘It’s sad. It’s a crazy, sad situation.’

+23
View gallery
Police tape surrounds the house with debris is strewn on the front lawn, including a baby carrier

+23
View gallery
Baby furniture is seen among debris on the front lawn of the home
Gutierrez said Gary occasionally brought one of the children into the store but claimed ‘she was not allowed to speak’ to anyone else.
She also recalled the children appearing extremely thin and said they carried what she described as a ‘potent’ odor.
As investigators continue combing through evidence recovered from the home, officials say additional charges remain possible.
‘This case continues to reveal the unimaginable conditions these children were forced to endure,’ Wilson said, describing the allegations as ‘pure evil.’
‘Our focus remains on protecting these children, supporting their recovery and ensuring everyone responsible is held fully accountable under Ohio law.’
SOURCE: https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15961135/Ohio-House-Horrors-16-children-breaks-silence.html