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Published 11:31 09 Jul 2026 GMT
A lawyer has opened up on what it was like to speak to Elizabeth Siders, the mom in the Ohio 'house of horrors' case, where 16 children were found in conditions similar to the "third world."
The kids, aged between 18 months and 18 years old, were discovered in the feces-filled rural home by the Vinton County Sheriff's Office in Ohio on June 30.
More details have emerged since the home was found in a horrific state, as the children were described as being "kept in worse conditions than livestock”.
The children were found in a 12-by-12 room which was crumbling, as investigators noted that the children had also suffered “serious physical harm.”
Investigators said that the crime was an "intrafamily" case, suggesting that some of the children in the house may have come from sexual relations within the family.
But now, a lawyer has opened up on what the mother of these kids was really like.
The attorney representing Elizabeth Siders has spoken out about how she was following her arrest.
His description surprisingly doesn't fit into the negative coverage of both her and her husband's parenting, as the attorney admitted she looked "distraught".
Thomas Stolly spoke with her for an hour and a half after she was taken into custody, telling Criminally Obsessed that she seemed "exhausted" during their meeting.
"I had no idea what I was walking into. I saw the same headlines everyone else did. At one point, the term 'pure evil' was used to describe Elizabeth and the home, and at another point, there was a comment that livestock had been treated better," he said on the show.
"I met a woman who was timid and who was exhausted. It looked like she had been crying quite a bit. She looked distraught. And she was willing to talk to me. Able to talk to me."
Stolly said he left out the fact that the case was being heavily covered by the media, as he realised that she had no idea about how the story was being covered.
He said: "We sat down for about an hour and a half to go through the basics of this case. I asked her if she had seen any of the coverage that has been online for the better part of a day now.
"She hasn't. She does not know how the home, the conditions, the investigation is being described."
He said that this was due to how "fragile" she looked at the time, adding that she didn't fit the narrative which was built around her.
"[She's] not someone who comes across as 'pure evil,' because evil requires malice," he said, further adding: "The person that I saw there, Elizabeth, she doesn't have that in her eyes."
A relative also said that he wasn't aware of there being 16 children in the home, believing there were only 10.
Two of them were sent to specialist trauma centres, while another seven were taken to Columbus Hospitals, with one admitted to the ICU and intubated.
Four family members, believed to be the children's parents and grandparents, Gary Siders Jr, 36, Elizabeth Siders, 33, Gary Siders Sr, 73, and Christina Siders, 77, have been arrested and charged with 16 counts of second-degree felony child endangerment.
All four have pleaded not guilty.
The case is currently under investigation, with all four family members set to appear back in court.