The boy was being treated for malnutrition and a very low heart rate at a hospital, Griffin Police Department Investigator Jodi Spears said. When officers found the child on Friday, he was “very thin” with discolored skin. Neighbors who first saw the boy walking down Westminster Circle took him in and called the police.
“At the time he was taken to the hospital, he only weighed 36 pounds,” Spears said.
The Schindleys are also accused of causing their son “dental injury and disfiguration” and withholding medical attention.
Additionally, the warrants allege the boy’s parents “locked the juvenile child inside his bedroom, leaving the child alone in the residence, for extended periods and on multiple occasions, with no access to lights, food, clothing or adult interaction and/or assistance.”
And inside his torture cell-like bedroom, the Schindleys’ warrants allege, the boy lacked access to “hot or warm running water, [an] outside view, toilet paper, electronic communication, human interaction, adult supervision or access to [an] exit.”
The boy was also allegedly locked up "for extended periods of time, and on multiple occasions, with no access to lights, food, clothing or adult interaction."
lawandcrime.com