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Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, family members ill, large number of ill animals in home

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  • Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, family members ill, large number of ill animals in home

    This is an odd one. There are a lot of possibilites here, ranging from simply untreated seasonal ARI (including influenza), to some kind of zoonosis from the animal contact. The fact that the animals are ill too might suggest the second case.



    Dead Boy, 200+ Animals Found at Berwyn Home


    updated 9/10/2011 12:15:21 AM ET 2011-09-10T04:15:21

    More than 200 animals were rescued from a Berwyn home Thursday and Friday in a major case of animal hoarding discovered during the investigation of a teen boy.

    Officials on Thursday were called to a home on the 2800 block of Lombard Avenue after a 14-year-old boy was reported to be unresponsive. The teen, Matthew Degner, later died at a hospital.

    A Friday autopsy pointed to bronchopneumonia and his death was ruled natural, the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office said.

    A law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation said three other teens -- between the ages of 12 and 17 -- also lived in the home. All were suffering from flu-like symptoms. They're now in the care of Department of Children and Family Services personnel and are receiving medical care and therapy.

    A fourth child, an 18-year-old, remained in the hospital Friday night.

    A DCFS spokesman said it's believed the children were kept in isolation.

    "Social isolation is one of the most powerful risk factors for serious harm to children. If we, as a community, never knock on that door, that no one ever seems to open, we may never know how bad it is, or how we can help," said DCFS spokesman Kendall Marlowe.


    He said there'd been no previous contact between DCFS and the family. Neighbors said the children never went to school and that the family had lived in the home for about eight years. The children were extremely malnourished, neighbors said, and it's suspected they never saw medical care.

    The mother told investigators that all of her kids got sick on Sept. 4 with stomach problems, but she said that everyone seemed to be getting better, the source said.

    Officials refused to confirm some details, but neighbors told NBC Chicago that someone living in the home took the teen's body outside, presumably so investigators wouldn't go inside.

    They did, and investigators said they found more than 200 animals in the roughly 1,100 square-foot bungalow. The menagerie included dogs, cats, birds, rabbits, squirrels, at least one raccoon, two monkeys and two kinkajous.

    "The place was colorless. There were no rugs on the floor. There were birds flying loose on the second floor. There were cats running loose on the first floor," a source told NBC Chicago.

    The cats -- dozens of them -- are in particularly bad shape, said Terri Sparks, the Animal Welfare League's marketing and public relations director.

    "They're riddled with disease, sick and mean," she said.

    The more exotic animals will be taken out-of-state to an undisclosed rescue sanctuary, said AWL Director Linda Estrada.

    Crews from the AWL, the region's largest humane society, were on the scene in hazardous materials suits.

    "They're hungry. They're thirsty. The cages aren't cleaned. It's bad," Estrada said of the animals. "Our animal control officers who have been in some pretty horrific and disgusting environments said this home was easily the worst they’ve been in," said Cook County Sheriff's Office spokesman Steve Patterson.

    The mother was being held at the Berwyn police station Friday night. No charges have been filed.

    The mother was being held at the Berwyn police station Friday night. No charges have been filed.

    The Animal Welfare League is asking the community for assistance with the rescued animals. The animals that are well enough will soon be available for adoption. For more information, contact the AWL at 708-636-8586 or visit AnimalWelfareLeague.com.

  • #2
    Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home



    September 9, 2011 (BERWYN, Ill.) (WLS) -- An investigation into the death of 14-year-old Berwyn boy led officials to a home that contained dozens of animals, including dogs, cats, rats and raccoons.


    Matthew Degner, of the 2800-block of Lombard in Berwyn, died of bronchopneumonia and the death was ruled natural, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office. His body was found inside the home, which also contained more than 100 animals.

    A spokesperson for Illinois Department of Family Services says that it is investigating allegations of neglect against the dead boy's mother and three siblings, ages 12 to 17, have been removed from the house.

    A Yorkie Terrier mix is one of nearly 200 animals in the care of the Animal Welfare League. The group says they were found covered in feces and cockroaches.

    "The animals are dehydrated, and they were in cages with dead animals," said Linda Estrada, Animal Welfare League. "Each cage had like four or five inches of mold and feces."

    Police were initially called to the house Thursday after Degner was reported dead inside.

    Neighbors say for years the home reeked of waste.

    "I smelled feces, basically. It was horrible, nasty. It smelled like something was dying in there," said Jesse Catalan, neighbor. "I always used to assume that it was just manure for the plants the lady used to water every morning."

    Neighbors say about a year ago, the family put up this green barrier on the front lawn and posted no trespassing signs.

    "When I try to talk to them, they don't answer. If you say hi or something, they don't say nothing," said Rigoberto Cisneros, neighbor.

    The Animal Welfare League says it found dozens of birds in the house as well as rabbits, gerbils, a guinea pig and two dogs. Also recovered were more than 100 cats, many of which are seriously ill and must be euthanized.

    "There were 15 in one little cage. That was their life," said Estrada. "My heart weeps for the ones we can't save because they didn't do nothing wrong."

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

      Mother investigated after boy dies, home found overrun with animals

      By Christy Gutowski and Matt Walberg

      Tribune reporters

      9:55 p.m. CDT, September 9, 2011

      ...
      Meanwhile, police obtained a search warrant Friday to enter the two-story home, according to the source. Inside, amid feces and squalor, they found more than 100 cats, nearly as many birds, an overweight raccoon, a fruit bat, two dogs and several kinkajous, raccoon-like creatures native to Central and South America.

      ...
      Several workers needed medical treatment after groups of cats attacked them while they tried to place other cats in carrier cages, Sparks said.

      ...
      Officials said it was unclear whether the animals or living conditions were responsible for the children's illnesses. A spokeswoman for the Cook County Department of Public Health said the agency's communicable disease unit had not been asked to respond as part of the investigation.
      ...
      Twitter: @RonanKelly13
      The views expressed are mine alone and do not represent the views of my employer or any other person or organization.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

        More information, but still no good clue for the responsible etiology.



        Mom charged after son dies at 'deplorable' home overrun with animals

        The Berwyn home contained 212 animals, including nearly 100 birds.

        Tribune reporters

        2:59 p.m. CDT, September 12, 2011
        The scene was shocking enough when police answered a call at the small brick bungalow in Berwyn.

        A 14-year-old boy, severely mentally disabled, wearing only a T-shirt, lying in the backyard and not breathing.

        As he was rushed to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said they made a gruesome discovery inside. Four children -- ages 12 to 18 -- who had never been to school, living with more than 200 animals in a home covered by feces and infested with spiders and hundreds of hissing cockroaches that measured four to five inches.

        One of the children, a 12-year-old, was found to have severe autism. All four of the children inside the home in the 2800 block of Lombard Avenue were "shoeless and dirty," prosecutor Joseph Hodal said as the 14-year-old's mother appeared in court on abuse charges.

        "Their feet (were) caked with feces and dirt," police noted in their report.

        "The children have never been to school, nor did they receive any medical treatment," Hodal said in court. They were living in a home without working toilets, or a washer and dryer or a refrigerator.

        The children slept on the floor because the bedrooms were used to house 109cats, three dogs, 39 cockatiels, two kinkajous, a large racoon and other exotic animals, authorities said. Many of the animals were so diseased and malnourished, they had to be euthanized, including all the cats, authorities said.

        The children's mother, Lydia Price, 49, was charged with criminal abuse and neglect of a disabled child resulting in death, endangerment of a child, animal hoarding and cruel treatment. Price was also charged with criminal abuse and neglect of the girl with autism, authorities said.

        Price is being held on $100,000 bail.

        Berwyn paramedics received a call Thursday that the boy was lying unresponsive on the lawn at the family home, authorities said.

        The boy was taken to MacNeal Hospital in Berwyn, where he later was pronounced dead. An autopsy determined he died of natural causes related to bronchopneumonia, according to the Cook County medical examiner's office.

        Three of the other children are now in the custody of the Department of Children of Family Services after being treated for flulike symptoms, authorities said. A fourth child, 18, was being treated at the hospital, said Kendall Marlowe, a spokesman for the agency.

        Marlowe said the children had been kept isolated at the home, which has been declared unfit for habitation by the Berwyn Fire Department.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

          Seems to be slight variation in the identities of the animals as well.



          Mom charged after son found dead in animal hoarding house
          Posted: Sep 12, 2011 5:20 PM EDT
          Updated: Sep 12, 2011 5:22 PM EDT


          (Source: Berwyn Police Department)

          BERWYN, IL (CNN) - A mother has been charged after her 14-year-old son was found dead in a home overrun with animals.

          Police in Illinois say Lydia Price's son and four other children were living in horrible conditions with more than 200 animals.

          The animals included dogs, birds, rats, a large raccoon and 109 cats.

          According to police, there were also numerous insects in the home.

          Price was in court Monday to face several charges, including one related to her son's death last week.

          The medical examiner on the case says the teen died of pneumonia.

          The other children were reportedly covered in dirt and feces. They are currently in protective custody.

          Copyright 2011 CNN. The Berwyn Police Department contributed to this report.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

            OK. This is the first report of rats, which might suggest one of several zoonotic etiologies.



            Family posts bail for Berwyn mother accused of hoarding pets

            Lydia Price is charged after her son died and authorities found that she had raised her children in a filthy home filled with diseased animals and without plumbing. (Berwyn Police Dept.)
            By Christy Gutowski

            Tribune reporter

            6:23 p.m. CDT, September 13, 2011
            A Berwyn mother is free on $10,000 bail after her arrest on charges she raised her children in a filthy home filled with diseased animals and without working plumbing, authorities said Tuesday.

            Lydia Price, 49, is scheduled to appear Wednesday in a Maywood courtroom on charges alleging criminal neglect of a disabled child, child endangerment and animal hoarding.

            Price’s family helped her raise the money for her release just before 10 p.m. Monday, according to the Cook County sheriff and circuit clerk offices.

            Police said they were called to the family’s home on the 2800 block of South Lombard Street last week after Price’s 14-year-old son stopped breathing. The boy, Matthew Degner, could not be resuscitated and was pronounced dead shortly later. An autopsy pointed to bronchopneumonia as the cause.

            Officers said the mentally disabled boy and his four siblings, ranging from 12 to 18, never went to school and lived with nearly 200 animals, many deceased and malnourished, in a feces-filled home infested with spiders and rats.

            The children, all of whom had flu-like symptoms, are together in state protective custody, authorities said.

            Berwyn Police Chief James Ritz said he’ll push to have the home condemned and demolished.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

              Given the living conditions and presence of various species of animals, could it be pneumonic plague?
              "I know God will not give me anything I can't handle. I just wish that He didn't trust me so much." - Mother Teresa of Calcutta

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

                Originally posted by JimO View Post
                Given the living conditions and presence of various species of animals, could it be pneumonic plague?
                Possible, but extremely unlikely. This would be the wrong part of the country, and with the short incubation period and high fatality rate, there would be several other fatalities by now. And no human pneumonic (not bubonic/septicemic) plague cases have been reported in the US in over 75 years.

                My list of possible etiologies includes leptospirosis (found in both rats and dogs and can have a pulmonary presentation in some cases and flu-like in most), hantavirus (found in rats and would be respiratory, but possibly too severe), histoplasmosis (from the birds), and various fungal infections from the living conditions. I don't see any indication of swine among the animals listed, so an animal influenza seems less likely, too.

                It is also possible the animals are a red herring, and this is the result of seasonal pathogens, malnutrition, and toxic living conditions. Notably, the parents, who would have had most of the same exposures, except for the neglect/malnutrition, do not appear to be ill. There also does not seem to be a great deal of concern about contagion.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home



                  Details emerge in Degner case.

                  By Brett Schweinberg
                  Posted Sep 15, 2011 @ 02:52 PM


                  Berwyn, IL ? A 12-year-old autistic girl also was found in the home of Lydia Price, a Berwyn woman who is facing felony charges that she caused the death of her 14-year-old son, Matthew Degner, due to neglect.

                  Degner also was mentally disabled, multiple sources confirmed.

                  Although Price faces felony charges of criminal neglect to a disabled child resulting in death and criminal neglect of a disabled child not resulting in death, both charges are related to Matthew's death, a spokesperson for the Cook County State's Attorney's Office said.

                  MacNeal Hospital spokeswoman Carrie Brethauer also has confirmed that all members of Degner's family have been released from the hospital. Berwyn Police Cmdr. James Sassetti said Degner's 77-year-old grandmother was never actually admitted to the hospital.

                  There are plans to demolish the house that Price and Matthew lived in in the 2800 block of Lombard Avenue after the investigation is finished, officials said.

                  Degner's death has shocked the Berwyn community and even made international news. Degner was found dead in Price's house in incredibly squalid conditions. The house was overrun with more than 200 animals, and no working toilets were found inside.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

                    There may actually be several illnesses involved here. Some of what has been diagnosed in the animals appears not to affect humans.

                    News, articles and information about Lemont, Illinois, from Shaw Local, the Herald-News and My Suburban Life


                    ...Lydia Price, mother of dead Berwyn teen, bonds out of jail

                    Neglect, animal hoarding case to appear in court Wednesday.Zoom Photos. Purchase this photo Bill Ackerman .Berwyn police close the 2800 block of Lombard for an investigation on Friday, Sept. 9, 2011.

                    Posted Sep 14, 2011 @ 11:42 AM


                    Berwyn, IL — Lydia Price, the mother of a Berwyn boy who was found dead in his home last week of bronchial pneumonia, will appear in court Wednesday on charges of neglect and animal hoarding.

                    Price, 47, was charged Monday with two felonies and six misdemeanor counts related to neglect and animal cruelty. She posted $10,000 bond today to be released from Cook County Jail, with a preliminary court hearing scheduled for Wednesday morning.

                    James Young may have been the closest thing to a mentor for family members of Matthew Degner, a 14-year-old Berwyn boy who was found dead outside a squalid home in the 2800 block of Lombard Avenue on Thursday that was filled with more than 200 animals and all of their waste.

                    The case is so severe it’s left the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services warning about the dangers of extreme social isolation.

                    Young was a neighbor to the family who befriended two of Degner’s teenage sisters while they sold boxed household items on a street corner near his home.

                    According to multiple sources, including Young, Matthew was mentally disabled and unable to care for himself. Young also said none of the Degner children went to school.

                    “I felt a draw to them and I knew they needed help ... but I had no idea what was going on,” he said. “They were wonderful kids.”

                    Four additional children ages 12 to 18 were found in the home, along with their 77-year-old grandmother. The minors are now in the custody of DCFS, and have all been treated and released from MacNeal Hospital in Berwyn. The 18-year-old and 77-year-old were also treated, but their condition is not known.

                    All 109 cats found on the property had to be euthanized because they all had feline leukemia and feline AIDS. Price also was hoarding dogs, exotic birds, squirrels, rats, a large raccoon, brown bats, rabbits and two kinkajous — raccoon-like animals that are found in South America. According to a Berwyn news release, some of the other animals were also euthanized “due to tumors, rabies or other potential diseases which can be transmitted to humans.”A police official, however, said the public is not in danger.

                    The Animal Welfare League of Chicago has been heading the release of some feral animals back into the wild and taking domesticated ones into custody.

                    Although the house had running water, the toilets were not working. Police officials said the kids were found with their feet caked in human and animal feces and their bodies were covered in animal bites and scratches.

                    Price initially pulled Matthew’s body outside the home so that emergency service personnel would not have to come inside, police said. The boy was pronounced dead at 4:39 p.m. Thursday at MacNeal Hospital, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office.

                    Conditions at the house were so bad that the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office requested the home be sealed off pending the outcome of Matthew’s autopsy for fear communicable diseases may be present. It was later determined that Degner died of bronchial pneumonia.

                    The case was so unusual that many seasoned professionals were shocked by the conditions inside the home and the suffering of Matthew and his family members.

                    Kendall Marlowe, a DCFS spokesman, found the case so compelling he decided to make an additional statement about the need to check in on neighbors.

                    “Social isolation is one of the most powerful risk factors for serious harm to children,” he said. “If we as a community never knock on that door that no one ever seems to open, we may never know how bad it is or how we can help.”

                    Marlowe said the three minor children are receiving medical treatment and psychological counseling while they are in the custody of the state. Information about the 18-year-old sibling and grandmother’s whereabouts was not immediately available.

                    On Monday, Price was charged with one felony county of criminal neglect of a disabled child resulting in death, one felony count of criminal neglect of a disabled child not resulting in death, four misdemeanor counts of endangering the life of a child, one misdemeanor count of companion animal hoarding and one misdemeanor count of cruel treatment.

                    Rigoberto Cisneros, who lived a few doors down from the Degner family, described them as aloof and secretive.

                    “If you said ‘hi’ to them, they just wouldn’t say anything back,” Cisneros said.

                    A crowd of children that gathered outside the home on Friday as emergency service personnel investigated. All said they had never met the family or any of the children.

                    Young, who seemed to be the only neighbor with a connection to any members of the family, wanted to help but only encountered the two girls on the street. He said he never spoke to Price, or any other members of the family.

                    The children described themselves as not having any friends, Young added.

                    “It’s a shame that the family is broken up now,” he said. “These kids never looked like they lived in squalor. They looked clean and healthy to me.”

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, siblings ill, large number of animals in home

                      I count at least the following people as living in the home:

                      Matthew Degner, 14 year old male - deceased
                      12 year old female with autism - hospitalized and released
                      Two more female minors ages 12-17 - hospitalized and released
                      18 year old male (?) - hospitalized, condition unknown
                      77 year old female - ill, possibly not hospitalized
                      Lydia Price - 47-49 year old female, mother or step-mother to above children, arrested, no evidence of illness.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Chicago, Illinois: Child found dead, family members ill, large number of ill animals in home



                        [snip]

                        Nearly one month ago, Price placed a frantic 911 call for help after her mentally disabled son Matthew, 14, stopped breathing. Police found the teenager, who would later die of pneumonia, lying outside the small two-story home that lacked working plumbing. Amid the squalor inside, they discovered four other children and Price's elderly mother.

                        Comment

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