Skin-crawling pics inside CT house of horrors where wicked stepmom is accused of locking up son for decades
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Skin-crawling pics inside CT house of horrors where wicked stepmom is accused of locking up son for decades
"Skin-crawling photos show the haunting interior of a Connecticut "house of horrors" where a wicked stepmother allegedly imprisoned her stepson in wretched conditions for more than two decades. The images were obtained by The Post just weeks after a judge ruled Kimberly Sullivan, 57, could return to the Waterbury home, which was scorched by a fire her 32-year-old stepson set to escape from her clutches in February, according to cops."
"One room, however, appears to have been untouched by the fire, offering clues to the tastes of the lady of the house. In a hot pink den on the first floor, a large pair of women's eyes with full red lips seductively peer across the room to a poster of a kitten in a lawn chair with "Lazy Days" scrawled overtop. Hanging in a ceiling corner, a doll with blonde hair and piercing blue eyes watches over the room."
"One things remains, however - a stained lace angel's wing is pinned to the raw wood where Sullivan's stepson spent years imprisoned, going to the bathroom in bottles, and counting cars out his windows to wile away the endless hours. The stepson - known only as "S" - weighed just 68 pounds when responding firefighters discovered him covered in filth as the home burned around him on February 17."
Kimberly Sullivan, 57, faces allegations of holding her stepson captive in a Waterbury home for more than 20 years. Photographs show a scorched, gutted interior with drywall and plaster ripped away, exposed beams, loose wires, dirt, debris, and broken glass that render most rooms uninhabitable. A hot-pink den, a hanging doll, and a half-melted Marilyn Monroe poster remain amid the destruction. Upstairs, the alcove where the stepson was allegedly confined is largely destroyed, though a stained lace angel's wing remains pinned to raw wood. The stepson, known only as "S", weighed 68 pounds when firefighters found him; authorities say he set the fire to escape.
Read at New York Post
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