62°F
weather icon Mostly Cloudy

US couple accused of ditching adopted girl, moving to Canada

INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana prosecutors have charged a couple with abandoning their adopted daughter in 2013 and moving to Canada, leaving the girl, who was just 11 years old and has dwarfism, in a rented apartment but providing her with no other financial support.

Tippecanoe County prosecutors filed neglect charges Sept. 11 against Kristine Elizabeth Barnett, 45, and Michael Barnett, 43. They had not been booked or arraigned as of Friday and online court records don’t list an attorney for them.

According to a probable cause affidavit filed in the case, the couple adopted the girl in 2010 and a doctor who examined her that year determined she was about 8 years old. When a detective spoke to Michael Barnett earlier this month, he said he and his wife had the girl’s age legally changed to 22 in June 2012 and that his wife told her to tell anyone who asked that she “looks young but was actually twenty-two.”

Barnett told the detective that he and his wife rented an apartment in Lafayette in July 2013 and, despite knowing that the child knew no one in that city, they left her there and moved to Canada, investigators wrote in the affidavit. Barnett said that other than paying the apartment’s rent, they provided the girl with no financial support.

The girl told a detective with the Tippecanoe County Sheriff’s Department in September 2014 that she had come to the U.S. “through an adoption” in 2008 from her native Ukraine and that the Barnetts adopted her two years later. She said she lived with the Barnetts in Hamilton County, just north of Indianapolis, for about two years, after which they rented the apartment for her in Lafayette, the Tippecanoe County seat about 60 miles northwest of Indianapolis.

“She was left alone in the apartment in Lafayette while the rest of the Barnett family moved to Canada,” investigators wrote in the affidavit, adding that the girl hasn’t seen the Barnetts since.

The affidavit leaves a lot unclear, including how long the girl lived alone in the apartment before her plight was discovered and why an investigation that apparently began in September 2014 took years to result in charges against the Barnetts. It also doesn’t say where in Canada the Barnetts lived or whether they have since returned to the U.S., though the Barnetts have different addresses listed in Indianapolis.

Prosecutors did not respond to several questions emailed to them Friday about the case, saying only in a reply that they had asked a county judge to issue an order for the Barnetts to appear at an initial hearing on the charges.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Vance hails progress on Gaza peace accord despite violence

The vice president traveled to the region about a week after President Donald Trump unveiled a U.S.-led agreement to end the two-year war between Israel and Hamas.

Amazon cloud outage takes down online services around the world

A problem with Amazon’s cloud computing service disrupted internet use around the world Monday, taking down a broad range of online services, including social media, gaming, food delivery, streaming and financial platforms.

Renewed fighting tests Gaza ceasefire

Gaza’s fragile ceasefire faced its first major test Sunday as Israeli forces launched a wave of deadly strikes, saying Hamas militants had killed two soldiers.

Thieves steal crown jewels in 4 minutes from Louvre Museum

The heist about 30 minutes after opening, was among the highest-profile museum thefts in living memory and comes as staff complained that crowding and thin staffing are straining security.

US Embassy issues warning to Americans in Trinidad and Tobago

The U.S. Embassy in Trinidad and Tobago cautioned Americans on Saturday to stay away from American government facilities as tensions grow between the United States and Venezuela

MORE STORIES