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Fentress Co. grand jury indicts parents accused of starving two adopted daughters

Jason and Jessica Klimp were charged after Fentress County authorities responded to reports of a young girl collapsing at their home.

A Fentress County grand jury indicted a Michigan couple on six counts of aggravated child abuse and neglect after two of their adopted children were found to be severely malnourished. 

Earlier this month, Jason Klimp, 45, and Jessica Klimp, 43, appeared for a hearing on police warrants in Fentress County. The judge at that time found probable cause to believe the Klimps had been neglectful, and he sent the case to the grand jury for review and possible indictment.

The judge at that time set their bond at $300,000.

In late February, Fentress County authorities responded to reports of a young girl collapsing at the Klimps' house. According to warrants, they told authorities their adopted daughter was walking back from being outside when she collapsed. Jason Klimp said he put her in a shower to try and wake her up, records show.

Credit: WBIR
Jason Klimp appears in court for his first hearing after being charged with abusing two of his adopted daughters.

Jonathan Richards, a Fentress County paramedic who responded to the scene, testified during the hearing and told the judge that the child's body temperature was 95.6 F. Discoloration of her skin caused enough concern for him to request a helicopter.

Richards said the Klimps told him they had been fostering the child since she was 3 years old. He said the parents initially didn't want to fly her to a hospital, and Jessica Klimp's lawyer said that was because they believed it would have been expensive at the time.

Jason Klimp's lawyer also questioned Richards about the child's body temperature. Richards said anything below 98 degrees is abnormal.

Richards said he saw no red flags between the father and daughter, but he still felt concerned when he was responding.

Detective Jerry Mifflin with the Fentress County Sheriff's Department also responded to the scene and took the stand at the hearing earlier this month. He said the girl's skin was purple, her nails were white and she was shivering. 

When he arrived, he said the child was on the father's lap with a towel. He said the father told him that he had put her in a cold shower because she had a seizure in the kitchen. 

At first, Mifflin thought the child was around 8 years old based on how she looked.

The detective learned that the girl and her biological sister, who is also adopted, didn't eat solid food. Jason Klimp previously told the investigator that the girl would only eat food from a bottle because she couldn't keep down regular food or wouldn't eat at all if it wasn't from a bottle.

In February, investigators asked the 12-year-old girl about the incident. According to the warrant, she said she couldn't remember much about the incident that sent her to the hospital. However, she said she had to eat from a bottle because "she and her sister eat too much and would get sick."

The detective was concerned enough that the Sheriff's Office received paperwork to perform a welfare check and evaluate other children in the home. During the examination, it was revealed that the girl and her sister were severely malnourished and underdeveloped. 

According to a warrant, the children also told authorities the girls had to sleep in plastic totes without covers in a brisk basement and would eat from bottles. 

When authorities spoke with all the children, the warrant said they all effectively told them the same thing — the two girls were made to sleep without covers in plastic totes in a basement that's usually around 60 degrees Fahrenheit as punishment for peeing the bed. 

Credit: WBIR
Jessica Klimp sits in Fentress County Court on Thursday during her first hearing.

During the hearing, the detective revealed that he learned from church members that the girl had previously collapsed a day before. 

The Klimps' lawyers argued that if the parents were committing a crime, they never would've called officials in the first place to report their daughter's collapsing.

According to the arrest warrant, seven other children were in the care of the Klimps and a referral was made to the state Department of Children's Services. Four of the children were biological children and four were adopted, according to the warrant.

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