Relative of 16 ‘almost feral’ kids found living in Ohio house of horrors says they’re getting death threats

Relative of 16 ‘almost feral’ kids found living in Ohio house of horrors says they’re getting death threats

A distant relative of the 16 “almost feral” children rescued from a feces-filled Ohio house of horrors said his whole family has been getting death threats even though they had no idea what was happening there.

Ronnie Fletcher – who is married to a daughter of Gary Siders Sr. and Christina Siders – told WOWK that he was “horrified” to learn the children were living in squalor inside a cramped 12-by-12 room after the shocking allegations emerged last week.

“It’s been awful for the people that had no idea that was going on the house that are related to this family,” the dad of three said.

Ronnie Fletcher — a family member of the Siders — said he’s faced death threats in light of the shocking allegations. WOWK

“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.”

Fletcher said his children have even been targeted with threats – leaving his family living like “hermits.”

“It’s to the point we’ve had our pictures taken off our accounts and we’ve had to delete all our social media. It’s been awful,” he said.

“My wife’s not being able to go to work because she works within the public and she’s scared. 

“So 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.

“Hermits right now. Not trying to be out there.”

Fletcher stressed he would’ve taken action if he knew the true extent of the conditions inside the Hamden home

Gary Siders Sr., Christina Siders, Elizabeth Siders and Gary Siders Jr have been arrested on child endangerment. Southeastern Ohio Regional Jail

He thought there were only 10 children living inside the home — as opposed to the 16 who were found.

“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,” he said. 

“Them girls would have went there and cleaned the house themselves if they’d knowed it was like that.” 

Gary Siders, 73, Christina Siders, 67, Gary Siders Jr., 36, and Elizabeth Siders, 33, were all charged with 16 counts of child endangerment after cops swooped on the home to carry out a warrant for an unrelated investigation.

Debris fills a window of the home where the children were rescued. AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

Ohio Attorney General Andy Wilson had said investigators wore masks as they made their way inside the trash-stacked home, adding that the children looked “almost feral.”  

“Conditions you cannot even imagine people being in, let alone children being in,” he said.

The oldest child found inside the home, which had just five rooms and a bathroom, is 18, according to the authorities. They were born in May 2008 – just two months after Elizabeth Siders married Gary Siders Jr in West Virginia when she was 15.

They are developmentally disabled and unable to write her name, according to the authorities, who said that none of the children were enrolled at school.

“One of the investigative challenges is that [the children] are limited,” Ryan Cain, the Vinton County Sheriff, said.

Cardboard boxes and a bicycle are strewn outside the home. AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

“They can communicate but it’s extremely limited and some not at all. The scene is horrific and these are horrific allegations.” 

Cain also revealed feces was found inside the home and was likely contaminated with bacteria.

“It was just a disgusting scene,” he said. “Our livestock are kept in better condition than these children.”

William Archer, the Vinton County prosecutor, said, “This is an intra-family situation. This is not human trafficking.”

Court records show the other children’s ages as 16, 15, 14, 13, 11, 10, 8, 6, and 5, along with 4-year-old twins, 2-year-old twins and 1-year-old twins.

The kids were taken to hospitals across Ohio after the rescue. Some were listed in serious condition, including two who were airlifted to trauma centers and at least one who had to be intubated, according to officials. 

Wilson vowed, “Justice will be served for these children.”

All four suspects pleaded not guilty during their arraignment last Wednesday.

With Post wires.

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