Indiana couple charged with holding woman in a dog cage for weeks
A young Indiana mother was gagged with chloroform and held captive
for two months, forced to wear a dog collar tethered to an "intricate
restraint system" and kept in a wooden cage built by one of her "sadist"
captors, police said. The woman was repeatedly beaten and raped until a
stranger risked his own life to rescue her, officials said.
CNN does not name victims
of sexual assaults, but the woman's accused captors are now behind
bars, charged Monday with a litany of offenses.
Police said the victim's
ordeal began July 9, when the 30-year-old left the Evansville, Indiana,
apartment she shared with her boyfriend after the two had a booze-fueled
argument. She meandered the city's streets that night, bouncing between
groups of friends before being spotted by Ricky House Jr., a man who
was familiar to her, according to Chief Deputy Tom Latham of the Posey
County Sheriff's Office. House offered her a ride. She accepted.
Three days later, police
said the woman's mother reported her missing after she failed to show up
to a planned family outing. Over nearly two months, Latham said
Evansville Police followed up on plenty of leads, "they just never got
the right lead," he said.
The ride with House on
July 9 became a 40-mile drive to the mobile home he shared with
girlfriend Kendra Tooley in the small town of Stewartsville and the
victim decided she wanted to leave, according to a police affidavit.
"(The victim) got up to leave," Evansville detective Tony Mayhew
recounted in court documents, but "Ricky placed chloroform over her
mouth and nose (which caused) her to lose consciousness. (The victim)
awoke to find her clothing cut off and she was bound to a bed within the
trailer."
Throughout July and
August, police said, House and Tooley kept their victim bound to the bed
with zip ties or with "an intricate restraint system." Her captors
treated her like a dog, forcing her to wear "a red dog collar with a
rope or leash attached to it," and forced her to stay inside a "locked
wooden cage" that House built, according to court documents.
Throughout her captivity,
she was raped and beaten, she told police. Tooley told police that
House, whom she described as "a sadist," was "attempting to impregnate
(the victim) because (Tooley) was old and unable to have children of her
own."
The victim was under
constant restraint and supervision, according to police, and had seen
nobody other than her captors until September 4, when Tooley invited her
ex-husband to the trailer to show off the captive.
"(Tooley) slid over on the couch beside me and said 'I've got a girl back here in a cage.' Ronald Higgs told CNN affiliate WEHT. "I said 'you got a girl back here in a cage? What are you talking about?"
The prisoner pleaded with Higgs to help free her.
"I didn't really know
what I could do because I'm nowhere near the man I used to be," the
61-year-old father of girls told WEHT, "but (I wasn't) leaving (that)
house without her."
After his attempts to
buy her freedom were rejected, police said the encounter turned violent
and House retrieved his sawed-off shotgun.
"He stuck that shotgun
right here under my chin with his finger on the trigger," Higgs told
WEHT. "I said if you're going to effing kill me you better do it now or
I'm going to take this away from you and beat you to death with it."
Higgs said he was able
to head butt House, who retreated into another room. It was then he was
able to safely escape with the victim.
House, 37 is facing 14
counts of rape, kidnapping, criminal confinement and battery, according
to charging documents filed Monday by the Posey County prosecutor's
office. Tooley, 44, was charged with 10 counts of rape, kidnapping and
criminal confinement. A judge set House's bond at $500,000 and Tooley's
at $150,000, according to the sheriff's office. WEHT reported the pair
were assigned public defenders and the court entered a preliminary not
guilty plea.
The couple are due back in court October 1, but Higgs said he already knows what he'd like their sentence to be.
"I told the police ... I
hope you all have some real small cells," he told WEHT. "That's where
they need to spend the rest of their lives, in a real small cell."
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