A sick Kentucky couple will spend the next two decades behind bars after they were convicted of heinous child abuse in their vile house of horrors — where one kid had to suck insulation to stay hydrated, reports said.
Mary Hall, 44, was granted guardianship of her sister’s three children after she died in a tragic car accident in 2018 and the children’s father went to prison for manslaughter charges, WYMT reported.
Hall moved to Pike County in Kentucky with the three children after beginning a relationship with 44-year-old Jerome Norman, and the children’s teachers and principal soon began to notice worrying signs of abuse — including mysterious bruises and hunger patterns by at least one of the children.
Authorities were first alerted after things turned dire in 2025, when one of the children returned to school from an extended break due to a winter storm, malnourished, bruised and with a chipped tooth, prosecutors argued in court.
An immediate investigation by the Kentucky State Police determined that the children had been living in a situation similar to torture, in a room that was locked from the outside with the windows boarded up.
One child appeared to suffer the worst abuse and harrowingly had to “suck the insulation in the walls trying to get water,” according to Amber Hunt, appointed guardian.
Officials claimed the couple — who forced the children to do manual labor and punished them in a number of ways, including withholding food — were not doing it out of a lack of resources.
The children were taught to hide the truth from others and the child who endured the brunt of the abuse was not allowed to go on class trips or have cake or pizza with his fellow peers, Pike County Commonwealth’s Attorney Bill Slone claimed.
Due to their triggers and mental states from vicious ongoing abuse, the three young children are sadly unable to be placed in a home together, according to an advocate.
The sick couple entered a blind plea deal after attorneys said the details of the case would be too emotional for a jury to see past. But they did ask the judge for leniency with their sentence.
Both Hall and Norman were sentenced to the maximum of what was agreed — 20 years each for one count of criminal child abuse in the first degree, and five years for each count of second-degree child abuse, to run congruent for a total of 20 years, the outlet reported.
“Our laws don’t allow for cruel and unusual punishment, even to prisoners,” Slone said. “So, they’ll never be subjected to the kind of punishment that they subjected those children to.”
Slone praised the staff at school for speaking up, saying the outcome could have been far more heartbreaking if they had not alerted the authorities.