Foster Mom Accused Of Abuse Allegedly Traded Girl For A Monkey

A Missouri foster mother has been charged with child abuse and endangerment as authorities investigate whether she traded an adopted daughter to someone in Texas for a monkey and mistreated other children in her care.

The 70-year-old woman from Winfield has been jailed on $250,000 bond since her arrest over the weekend, with her next court appearance set for next Tuesday. The Associated Press is not identifying her in an effort not to identity her child.

No attorney is listed for the woman in online court records. The 1,500-person town Winfield is about 45 miles (72.42 kilometers) northwest of downtown St. Louis.

Lincoln County prosecutor Mike Wood said Wednesday that the woman had been a foster or adoptive parent to around 200 children over a span of well over a decade. His office wrote in seeking a cash-only bond that authorities had received information that some of those children suffered physical and emotional abuse similar to the teen at the center of the case.

That girl told authorities she was beaten with wooden trim, shoes and a paddle, a detective with the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office wrote in the probable cause statement. The girl said she tried to tell people what was happening but that no one believed her.

In February, a deputy who was working as a school resource officer in Missouri was contacted about the girl missing classes, the probable cause statement said. While investigating, the deputy was told of a rumor that the girl was traded for an exotic animal to someone in Texas.

The deputy asked authorities in Texas to check on the girl. Child welfare officials in Texas took her into protective custody, and Wood said she is doing well in a group home there.

Wood said the suspect and the woman whom the girl was staying with in Texas knew each other because both own exotic animals. He said two witnesses came forward and said they were asked to take the girl to Texas and return with a monkey.

He said investigators are trying to firm up if that was just a joke or if it was actually a trade.

“There’s some smoke there,” Wood said. “We just got to find out if there’s fire, and it’ll take us some time. But there’s at least two witnesses who are coming forward saying that that was the case. As crazy as it sounds, we’ve had a few human trafficking cases in the past, so we’re treating it seriously.”

According to the probable cause statement, the girl said the woman she was staying with in Texas worked out of town and left her for days at a time to take care of exotic animals. The girl said she wasn’t subjected to forced labor or sexual abuse.

The woman told a detective she was friends with the girl’s adoptive mother and took her in to give the pair a break from each other. The girl stayed there for over a month, Wood said. When authorities interviewed the woman, she said she no longer wanted the girl there, but the girl’s mother wouldn’t make arrangements to bring her home, the probable cause statement said.

Charging documents describe the girl’s living conditions there as unsanitary and said she was inadequately supervised.

The prosecutor’s office said in a Facebook post that more charges were expected.

Wood said in an interview that his office has learned that there were around 250 calls to a child abuse hotline about the adoptive mother’s home over the course of about 15 years. Yet Wood said there were no criminal reports about the home.

He also noted that the girl stayed in the home, even after the Missouri Department of Social Services Children’s Division received a tip in November that she was being abused.

“On its face, it just seems like there was a systemic failure somewhere, and we’re looking into it to see if that is the case, how it can be addressed, and to the extent that there’s any criminal behavior associated with it, we will look into that as well,” Wood said.

Baylee Watts, a spokesperson for the Missouri Department of Social Services, provided no information about the case, writing in an email that “information related to specific child abuse and neglect investigations is closed and confidential under Missouri law, except under very limited circumstances.”

We Don’t Work For Billionaires. We Work For You.

Big money interests are running the government — and influencing the news you read. While other outlets are retreating behind paywalls and bending the knee to political pressure, HuffPost is proud to be unbought and unfiltered. Will you help us keep it that way? You can even access our stories ad-free.

You’ve supported HuffPost before, and we’ll be honest — we could use your help again. We won’t back down from our mission of providing free, fair news during this critical moment. But we can’t do it without you.

For the first time, we’re offering an ad-free experience to qualifying contributors who support our fearless journalism. We hope you’ll join us.

You’ve supported HuffPost before, and we’ll be honest — we could use your help again. We won’t back down from our mission of providing free, fair news during this critical moment. But we can’t do it without you.

For the first time, we’re offering an ad-free experience to qualifying contributors who support our fearless journalism. We hope you’ll join us.

Support HuffPost

Her email ended by urging people to call the agency’s hotline.

You May Also Like

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, April 11, 2025

Effects of a trade war by Patrick Chappatte, Le Temps, Switzerland. To…

Men drilled hole in hand of woman to obtain bank card code after kidnapping, swiped $20K in jewelry from purse before shooting her: Cops

Park Des Moines Apartments in Burien, Washington (Google Maps). Authorities in Washington…

MISSING Student Sudiksha Konanki Declared Dead, Last Person to See Her Back in the U.S.

Sudiksha Konanki, a 20-year-old University of Pittsburgh student, traveled to the Dominican…

Community Shocked After Police Fatally Shoot Autistic Idaho Teen

A family incident involving a nonverbal, autistic, and physically disabled teenager escalated…