The Abuse Mansion
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https://townhall.com/tipsheet/miacathell/2023/01/17/zulock-case-pt-1-n2618219
A months-long Townhall investigation reveals disturbing new details about the affluent LGBTQ-activist couple accused of sodomizing their young adopted sons—now ages 9 and 11—and distributing "homemade" child pornography of the sexual abuse. Half a year after the shocking story made national news, Townhall is the only outlet following up on the criminal case in Georgia that has since seen zero headlines written about it. We've found that it's far, far worse than what was first reported.
Not only did the married men allegedly rape the two boys who were adopted through a Christian special-needs adoption agency, they were pimping out their children to nearby pedophiles in Atlanta-area suburbs, Townhall's follow-up investigation discovered.
Recorded jailhouse calls, a trove of never-before-seen court documents, and testimony from a family member who spoke exclusively with Townhall uncover the extent of the physical and emotional trauma the two elementary school-aged brothers endured as well as the red flags that the state overlooked during the same-sex couple's "faster than expected" adoption process.
According to a copy of the 17-count indictment Townhall has obtained, the adoptive dads allegedly performed oral sex on both boys, forced the children to perform oral sex on them, and anally raped their sons. In at least one instance, the anal rape injured the older Zulock child, who just turned 11-years-old in mid-December. Court records indicate that the child sexual abuse stretches back to as early as late 2019 and intensified in January 2021, March 2021, and December 2021, as the offense dates are listed.
Much more at the link.
Part 2 describes a wide-ranging network of people. RICO: https://townhall.com/tipsheet/miacathell/2023/01/18/zulock-case-pt-2-n2618321
Part 3 describes how this happened and how agencies failed:
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/miacathell/2023/01/19/zulock-case-pt-3-n2618323Townhall has learned that seven years prior to the adoption, Zachary was accused of being a child rapist, but was never charged.
More than a decade ago, there was a 2011 probe into Zachary's alleged pedophilic behavior when he was accused of luring a 14-year-old boy to a residence in Walton County, the same jurisdiction as today's horrifying child sexual abuse case, and having anal sex with the underage victim. But, the 2011 child rape case was shut down and no charges were pursued against Zachary.
The house went up for sale, and a reporter was told not to video anything:
As the child-prostitution case heads to trial, an open house was held inside the married men's "mini mansion" now seized by Walton County and selling for three-quarters of a million dollars. Townhall attended and filmed the public event before being ordered to "delete everything" at the state's behest. We did not comply.
"Ma'am, we're going to have to ask you to leave. We're going to have to ask you to delete your footage. All of it," a woman working with the clean-out company told—well, more like scolded—me. "That's very inappropriate for you to be talking to people about this. This is a very sad situation, and there's no reason. No reason. We're going to need you to delete it—everything."
I was cornered in one of the children's bedrooms, accosted adjacent to the walk-in closet where a pile of the boy's underwear was for sale. Hanging overhead were the same doll-like suits the biological brothers, then 5- and 6-years-old, wore within the judge's chambers years ago on "Gotcha Day," when Georgia's courts expeditiously made "the family" official and the adoption final. The boy's bed, also an item available for purchase, was covered in a sickening shade of dark-red, perhaps purplish, satin that's far too mature for a kid's bedspread. Nearby, diapers were displayed on the connecting Jack-and-Jill bathroom countertop.
"Every day that we're here, the state's been here with us," she said, assertively. "And we have been asked to remove [...] anything with a name on it, anything whatsoever. We've signed stuff saying that we would not—We've been investigated. They've come in time and time [again] and overlooked everything that we've done. Everything," emphasized the sales representative.
Demanding I delete the pictures and video I had documented along my walkthrough of the house, she was part of the family-owned and -operated small business, specializing in downsizing and "junk" removal, that facilitated the three-day estate sale.
"The only reason our company is even involved in this is for these children, because it's benefiting the children and only the children," insisted the saleswoman. Accordingly, the estate sale's proceeds were purportedly earmarked towards a restitution-styled trust fund that's allegedly established, or to be forged in the future, on behalf of the abused boys, the company claimed.
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I get it. It is sad, disgusting, and horrible. Those people should be lock up for life, or even worse.
But unfortunately, I am pretty sure that there are child abuse cases that are equally as bad which probably never made headlines except for maybe local news.
I dont think that all (insert your favorite job occupation/gender/ethnic person/politic party) are terrible because of the action of one.