Foster child says the Gravelles beat kids in their care



The girl said there was an alarm on her door but she was never told why it was there.
NORWALK, Ohio (AP) -- A foster child who spent time with an Ohio couple accused of caging some of their adoptive children testified Wednesday that the couple beat youngsters in their care.
The 13-year-old girl from Canton was on the witness stand in day two of the trial of Michael and Sharen Gravelle, accused of caging some of their 11 adopted, special-needs children in enclosures made of wood and chicken wire and rigged with alarms.
They are charged with 16 counts of felony child endangering and eight misdemeanor child endangering charges.
If convicted, they face one to five years in prison and a maximum fine of 10,000 for each felony count.
The girl testified that when she was 7, she spent time with the Gravelles and saw children who got in trouble sent "out to the barn to get whoopings."
The girl, who was not adopted by the Gravelles, also said there was an alarm on her door but she was never told why it was there. She also testified that she was in the house when a boy was allegedly forced to sleep in a bathroom for 81 days and said she had to scrub the shower after someone used it.
Denial
The Gravelles deny that they abused children in their care and have said they had to keep their adoptive youngsters in enclosed beds to protect them. They said the children suffered from problems such as fetal alcohol syndrome and a disorder that involves eating nonfood items.
Under cross examination, defense attorney Ken Myers asked the girl if she remember much about the time she spent in the Gravelle home. The girl said she did not.
The children ranged in age from 1 to 14 when authorities removed them in September 2005 from the Gravelle home in rural Wakeman, about 60 miles west of Cleveland, after a social worker found the cage-like enclosures over beds. The youngsters were placed in foster care last fall and the couple lost custody in March.
The social worker, Jo Johnson, was the first witness in the case and finished testifying Wednesday.
Myers said the couple are guilty only of loving the children.
Huron County prosecutor Russell Leffler said some of the adoptive children may testify this week.