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NewsSeptember 6, 2018

MADISON, Wis. -- The younger brother of a 15-year-old boy who starved to death while their family prayed and fasted for weeks wrote a letter investigators found inside the locked southern Wisconsin apartment pleading with lawyers to save him. The emaciated 11-year-old boy was clutching a Bible and an envelope containing pamphlets about death Monday when officers found him, his mother and his brother's body in the family's Reedsburg apartment, which had no power and was padlocked from the inside, authorities say. ...

Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. -- The younger brother of a 15-year-old boy who starved to death while their family prayed and fasted for weeks wrote a letter investigators found inside the locked southern Wisconsin apartment pleading with lawyers to save him.

The emaciated 11-year-old boy was clutching a Bible and an envelope containing pamphlets about death Monday when officers found him, his mother and his brother's body in the family's Reedsburg apartment, which had no power and was padlocked from the inside, authorities say. Investigators also found the younger boy's handwritten letter, which was addressed to "Lawyers of Sauk County."

"The hunger is too much," the boy wrote. "Please help me now so I may eat. I can't continue in such a life with no food. If I don't get food now I'll probably die of hunger."

The parents, Kehinde and Titilayo Omosebi, were charged Tuesday with child neglect causing death and child neglect causing great bodily harm. The charge involving death carries a maximum prison term of 25 years.

According to the criminal complaint, Kehinde Omosebi walked to the Reedsburg police station Monday to report his 15-year-old son had died in their apartment during the fast.

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The family had no food in the home and the only furniture was a bed and four metal folding chairs arranged in a square. In one of the chairs was the 15-year-old boy's body. Officers wrote the boy was so emaciated they could see his backbone and ribs under his skin.

According to the police, the father said the boy died Friday and the family prayed for two days, in accordance with their religious beliefs, before he walked to the police station to report it. Police chief Timothy Becker said Kehinde Omosebi told investigators he is a minister with Cornerstone Reformation Ministries, but they don't believe him because they haven't been able to find any record of such a ministry. He said the couple is originally from Nigeria.

Kehinde Omosebi told police the last time the family had eaten was July 17, according to the complaint. He said the family had fasted before but never for so long. Titilayo Omosebi said the family previously had lived in Missouri and Iowa, and they had planned to fast until they earned God's blessing to leave Reedsburg. Kehinde Omosebi said God had told him to move to Atlanta, police contend.

Leonie Dolch, a public defender who represented Kehinde Omosebi during his initial court appearance Monday, told the court Omosebi had worked at a local iron foundry, Grede Foundries, but had been unemployed since February. The company didn't immediately reply to a voicemail left Wednesday.

Reedsburg, a city of about 9,000 people, is about 50 miles northwest of Madison.

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