Turpin family sister cries as she reveals she thought ‘at least I died trying’ when calling 911 to escape horror home
A TURPIN family sister has cried reliving the moment she thought "at least I died trying" to escape the horrors she and her siblings endured at the hands of their parents.
As Jordan Turpin recounted calling 911 as she attempted to get out of captivity nearly four years ago and told ABC News' Diane Sawyer: "It was literally a now or never. If something happened to me, at least I died trying."
Twisted David and Louise Turpin were sentenced to 25 years in jail after pleading guilty to 14 counts including cruelty to an adult-dependent, child cruelty, torture, and false imprisonment.
The 13 Turpin siblings, who were between the ages of two and 29 when they were abused, escaped their California home in 2018.
Never-before-seen bodycam footage shows the moment the children were rescued from the home where they were chained to beds and beaten.
Video shows the moment cops enter the California property in January 2018 before the children were finally freed.
In the clip, twisted parents David and Louise Turpin are asked how many kids do they have when quizzed by cops. They both say "13."
Officers discover two of the kids in chains shackled to the bed.
One cop says: “Sarge we’ve got another room in the front right here with two kiddos in the bed.”
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Officers discovered chains dangling from what appears to be a bunk bed.
Jordan, then 17, had escaped the home via a window in 2018 and told cops that her siblings were being abused and they lived in filth.
She is now speaking out - alongside her sister Jennifer Turpin - about their horrifying ordeal for the first time in a new 20/20 special that's set to air on November 19.
In a preview clip, Jordan told reporter Diane Sawyer: "My whole body was shaking. I couldn’t really dial 911 because… I think it was us coming close to death so many times.”
She explained: "If something happened to me, at least I died trying."
In the 911 call, which was played during the preview, Jordan is heard saying: "I just ran away from home because I live in a family of 15 and we have abusing parents."
The Turpin sisters explained how they had a lack of food, education, hygiene, sleep, and health care for a long period of time.
Jordan also recounted her mom "choking her," leaving her to believe she would die.
Jennifer said the "only word" she could use to call their circumstances is "hell."
She told Sawyer that she hopes the Turpin family name is remembered for how "strong" they are and that they're "not broken" after what they endured.
One daughter, identified as Jane Doe No.4, said her parents had taken “her whole life away," but she was reclaiming it, reports.
She said: "They almost changed me but I realized what was happening and I immediately did what I could to not become like them."
The unnamed daughter said she's a fighter and she's "shooting through life like a rocket."
In a statement through his lawyer, before he was sentenced, David Turpin said: “I never intended for any harm to come to my children."
The statement concluded: “I hope the very best for my children in their future.”
David, then 57, and Louise, 50, were sentenced to 25 years behind bars for the hideous abuse and imprisonment of their kids.
The pair was nabbed in January 2018, and later pleaded guilty to abusing and imprisoning their children in their Perris home.
The couple's arrests were made after one of the 13 siblings escaped and called the police to say her 12 brothers and sisters were being held captive.
'MALNOURISHED AND DIRTY'
Cops thought the child was ten years old at first as she was so emaciated.
Siblings told police that some of the kids were bound with chains and padlocks.
Cops found kids shackled to their beds in "dark and foul-smelling surrounds".
A statement from the Riverside County Sheriff's Office said: "Deputies located what they believed to be 12 children inside the house, but were shocked to discover that seven of them were actually adults.
"The victims appeared to be malnourished and very dirty."
Neighbors told local media they had no idea there were children in the house, while others said they only saw them at night.
Pictures were later made public which showed an unkempt garden, dirty carpets, and doors with scratches on them.
Riverside Country District Attorney Mike Hestrin said while the children were deprived of food, the Turpin parents ate well.
They reportedly tormented the kids by leaving out apple and pumpkin pies.
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The lawyer revealed that the eldest child, a 29-year-old woman, weighed only 82 pounds - the typical weight of a seven-year-old.
Escape from a House of Horror - A Diane Sawyer Special Event - airs on 20/20 on November 19.
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