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RESEARCHSARMSUGFREAKeudomestic
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WTF?? Boyfriend Charged in Woman Stuck-On-Toilet Case

beefcake28

New member
NESS CITY, Kansas -- A man whose girlfriend authorities say spent nearly two years in a bathroom in their house, sitting on the toilet so long that the seat adhered to her body, has been charged with mistreatment of a dependent adult.

Kory McFarren, 37, was charged Monday in Ness County District Court.

McFarren called the Ness County Sheriff's Office in late February to say something was wrong with his girlfriend. When authorities arrived at the home, they found Pam Babcock, 35, stuck to the toilet, which they think she had sat on for about a month.



McFarren told authorities that Babcock feared leaving the bathroom and may not have left it in two years, although said he was unsure how long she was in there. He said that he took her food and water daily, and that he repeatedly asked her to come out but that she usually replied "maybe tomorrow."

"The only thing I am guilty of is I didn't get her help sooner," McFarren told The Associated Press nearly a week ago.

Ness County Attorney Craig Crosswhite said the mistreatment charge most closely fit the situation.

"I looked at the statutes and spoke to the attorney general's office," he said. "This was a very unusual set of circumstances, and this is the law that most closely applied to the situation."

Authorities said Babcock sat on the toilet so long that open sores developed and caused her to become attached to the seat. Sheriff Bryan Whipple has said that he used a pry bar to remove the seat from the toilet, and that the woman was taken to the hospital with the seat still attached.

"She would have to be sleeping on the toilet," Whipple said.

Doctors at a Wichita, Kansas, hospital where Babcock was taken told McFarren that an infection in her legs had damaged her nerves and could leave her in a wheelchair. She was still at the hospital Wednesday night.

McFarren's first court appearance will be in April, Crosswhite said.


Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


:worried: :worried: :worried:





:beer:
 
I don't really understand why he was charged unless he lived there. If she can't get off the can and doesn't even want to that's on her, not him.
 
Dial_tone said:
I don't really understand why he was charged unless he lived there. If she can't get off the can and doesn't even want to that's on her, not him.

Exactly what I thought... Why the hell are they charging him?




:beer:
 
Law is weird like that.
You are not obligated to get involved, but once you do you can be held liable.

For example, if your roommate kidnaps a chick and you come home and this chick is tied up on your couch, you dont have to do anything. You dont have to report the crime. If you just walked out and pretended you never saw it, you would not be criminally liable. But if you bought the chick a soda and smoked a joint with her while watching Maury Povich, well then you are involved in the kidnapping.

If they didnt live together and she refused to come out of the bathroom and he just left and never talked to her again, then he would have no liability. He is liable because he fed her and tried to take care of her.

There are reasons beind this, but I dont feel like getting into policy arguments.
 
they lived together and the state had been checking her mental status... obviously, it wasn't good.
 
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