NJ - Teen Escapes Captivity & Abuse Since 2018 by Brenda Spencer and Branndon Mosley, Gloucester Twnsp May 2025

  • #41
ADMIN NOTE:

This thread is dedicated to discussing this specific case and is getting derailed with off topic bickering.

Please get back on topic by discussing THIS case .

Thanks !!
 
  • #42
Have they said if her 13 year old sister was allowed to come and go from the house like normal or was she also confined? Seems like she would have told someone about her sister if she could.

I suppose their bio father is nowhere in the picture?
 
  • #43
Their parents. It’s the sole job of every parent to protect their children. They are solely responsible in every way.
If anyone in proximity to the child suspects abuse, it should be reported to the authorities.

IMO
Like this young lady’s parent. smh
 
  • #44
Have they said if her 13 year old sister was allowed to come and go from the house like normal or was she also confined? Seems like she would have told someone about her sister if she could.

I suppose their bio father is nowhere in the picture?
initial article said this:

A teenager escaped a New Jersey home where prosecutors say she was confined to a dog crate and held captive with her younger sister for years, allegedly by a couple who are in custody on abuse and kidnapping charges.
Teen locked in dog crate escapes New Jersey home where confined for years, prosecutors say

but another article says:
The victim lived in the home with her 13-year-old sister, who observed some of the abuse, Testa said.
New Jersey couple accused of abusing child for years to stay in jail until trial: "domestic torture"

So I am thinking the 13 year old, who is 5 years the junior of the victim, wasn't abused but observed the abuse. One of the articles I linked above also states the victim suffers from an unnamed disability so perhaps that is why they selected her as the victim/scapegoat. Or perhaps the 13 year old old is only victim's half sibling (being the child of the stepdad) and that is why she apparently didn't suffer quite the same abuse as victim. The article also says victim's bio father is jailed for SA ing her. So this poor child has already been victimized and then her mother chooses to allow the stepfather to do the same and worse to her :mad: 🤯
 
  • #45
Have they said how she was able to escape??
 
  • #46
I've done work at the Camden County jail and have been everywhere in the building. Rest assured, (to quote Spinal Tap) these two are living in a hellhole. They're on different floors and will have unique experiences. If the woman isn't claustrophobic, she will be. She'll know the feeling of being trapped in a dog cage - only she'll be sharing it with many (hungry) wolves. The guy will be roaming the same floor as the inmates in the red jumpsuits. Considering his charges, he'll want to stay away from the inmates in the red jumpsuits.
 
  • #47
Since this took place in New Jersey, here are the relevant homeschooling laws there:
  • Alternative education provision: New Jersey law exempts students who “receive equivalent instruction elsewhere than at school” from compulsory school attendance. Parents must provide “equivalent instruction” between ages 6 to 16, but there are no notification, parent qualification, instruction time, bookkeeping, or assessment requirements.

Education Elsewhere

State statute requires that students “attend the public schools of the district or a day school in which there is given instruction equivalent to that provided in the public schools for children of similar grades and attainments or to receive equivalent instruction elsewhere than at school.” See New Jersey Statutes Annotated § 18A:38-25.

Notification
None. However, the New Jersey Department of Education requires that if a “parent/guardian decides to remove an enrolled student from his/her high school educational program, the parent/guardian will be required to complete a transfer form which includes information related to the intent to provide instruction elsewhere than at school for the purposes of collecting accurate data on high school enrollment.” See N.J. Homeschooling FAQ.
Qualifications
None.
Days Or Hours
None. All children, including homeschooled children, must be educated from age 6 to 16. New Jersey Statutes Annotated § 18A:38-25
Subjects
Instruction must be “academically equivalent” to that provided in public school.
Bookkeeping
None.
Assessment
None.
Intervention
Failure to educate is included in the state’s definition of neglect. Should a homeschool be reported for educational neglect, a state official may investigate to determine whether equivalent instruction is being provided. Should a local board of education become concerned that a given homeschooled child is not receiving equivalent instruction, the they may request evidence of the child’s education from the parent. In either case, the parent must provide evidence that the child is receiving “equivalent instruction,” but the state then has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that a family’s curriculum is not academically equivalent to a public school education. See State v. Massa 95 N.J. Super 382 (1967).

A parent or guardian who fails to educate their child “shall be deemed to be a disorderly person and shall be subject to a fine of not more than $25.00 for a first offense and not more than $100.00 for each subsequent offense.” New Jersey Statutes Annotated § 18A:38-31.
Other
n/a

Source: New Jersey
 
  • #48
i still haven't read anything about how she escaped. I know a neighbor helped, but that's all.
 
  • #49
Home schooling can be a great thing if done by the state's rules, etc., etc.
I knew of several N.C. families who practiced home schooling in my neighborhood. They knew the rules and followed them with no problems. Their kids did well, and the kids joined extra-curricular things and joined in after-school sports and other activities.
A true homeschool curriculum would cover the necessary subjects as well as various electives, foreign languages, and health courses.
Homeschool curricula must abide by each state's requirements.
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The particular "schooling" in this NJ horror above was on an entirely different planet, IMO.
 
  • #50
  • #51
A question for the neighbors: curious, did you notice a lot of dogs? Were they walking a big pack of dogs? Eight dogs, including five Great Danes, a husky and two others … generally large dogs … I’m typing this looking out my front windows, I can see 5 or six of my neighbors’ houses from this angle, I’m asking myself: if any of these people had eight large-ish dogs, I’d notice, it’d seem a little strange, right? But I wonder, maybe it happens and I’m deluding myself …
 
  • #52
A question for the neighbors: curious, did you notice a lot of dogs? Were they walking a big pack of dogs? Eight dogs, including five Great Danes, a husky and two others … generally large dogs … I’m typing this looking out my front windows, I can see 5 or six of my neighbors’ houses from this angle, I’m asking myself: if any of these people had eight large-ish dogs, I’d notice, it’d seem a little strange, right? But I wonder, maybe it happens and I’m deluding myself …
I only saw her walk one dog and not regularity.
Unless, they all look the same.
 
  • #53

Arrested in May, Branndon Mosley, 41, and Brenda Spencer, 38, were charged with kidnapping, aggravated assault and endangering the welfare of a child.

1757541064471.webp
 
  • #54
Just saw this new horror...

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From People Magazine...

'House of Horrors' Parents Accused of Holding Girl Captive for 6 Years, Chaining Her to Toilet​

The mother and stepfather of an 18-year-old girl in New Jersey were arrested and charged with severely abusing her, say prosecutors...'
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"She was removed from school in the sixth grade at Spencer’s discretion and confined to her home,” the CCPO said in the post. “She stated that shortly after this, she was forced to live in a dog crate for approximately one year and was let out periodically.”
The mother and stepfather of an 18-year-old girl in New Jersey were arrested and charged with severely abusing her, say prosecutors'

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By K.C. Baker is an award-winning journalist at PEOPLE and PEOPLE.com.
People Editorial Guidelines
Published on September 10, 2025 12:45PM EDT
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  • #55

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