Wyoming Police: Children endured decade of torture, abuse inside adoptive parents' home
Two parents in Wyoming are facing abuse charges involving their adoptive children in what the Kent County Prosecutor's Office alleges was torture that went on for more than a decade.
Kris and Alan Jones, of Wyoming, each face three counts of torture and three counts of child abuse. Torture is a felony in Michigan and carries a maximum life sentence if convicted.
It's believed there were three children in the home at the time.
According to a probable cause document filed in 62A District Court this week, Kris and Alan Jones became the legal adoptive parents of those three children in 2011.
In the years following, it's alleged the children faced poor living conditions that included being put in dog collars, and forced to eat dog food with milk and oatmeal with hot sauce. The children were also forced to run miles, were pushed down the stairs, held down, punched and choked.
Investigators said the abuse began around March 2013 and continued until June 2023.
Several complaints were made with Child Protective Services, which claimed the parents put dog collars on the children and locked them in the garage for extended periods of time.
Documents say Kris didn't cooperate with Child Protective Services and wouldn't allow workers to talk with the children.
The allegations continue to claim Kris Jones would remove the carpet from the garage steps, leaving the child forced to sleep on the concrete in all weather elements.
The parents would take the children's shoes from the garage so they couldn't run away. When one of the children was forced to spend time in the garage, she would eat dog food because she was so hungry.
When one of the children was caught eating food in the trash at her school, the parents allegedly made the children run miles daily as punishment.
Investigators also said Kris Jones demanded the children be supervised when they were bathed and needed permission to use toilet paper.
According to court documents, the children's weight and height were documented as under the 4th percentile of the CDC growth guide. No CPS referral was ever made.
In 2017, one of the primary care providers for one of the children said Kris wasn't responding appropriately to the care plans and noted possible neglect.
The judge denied the bond for both parents.
Anyone, including a child, who suspects child abuse or neglect can call 855-444-3911 to make a report. You can visit Michigan's Children's Protective Services website for more resources.