Children Found Alive In 'Nailed Boxes' in Suspected Child Trafficking Operation

Children may have been inside the boxes 'for weeks.'

© press Children may have been inside the boxes 'for weeks.'

A couple in Missouri allegedly enclosed four adopted children in nailed plywood boxes in a what a sheriff described Tuesday as "deplorable" conditions.

It is suspected that the four children may have been prepared to be trafficked as authorities cannot find any other explanation as to why they were there.

Laura Cheatham, 38, and Daryl J. Head, 38, were arrested following the discovery of the children and charged separately with eight counts of child endangerment and kidnapping.

St. Francois County Sheriff Daniel Bullock said that the children may have been inside the boxes "for weeks."

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Fox News reports: A couple in Missouri allegedly trapped four children in boxes secured with plywood and screws inside a home, in what a sheriff described Tuesday as "deplorable" conditions.

Laura Cheatham, 38, and Daryl J. Head, 38, were arrested Tuesday and charged separately with eight counts of child endangerment and kidnapping.

St. Francois County Sheriff Daniel Bullock told reporters he feared the children may have been kept in the homemade boxes for weeks.

He said the kids, whose ages range from 6-12, had no access to water, restrooms or windows, and the home reeked of urine.

"I've seen some pretty nasty things, but nothing this deplorable," the sheriff added.

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He said the four children, three girls and a boy, had been adopted by Cheatham and her estranged husband, but she was living with another man -- Head -- in the home.

Two of the four children are related to each other but none are related to the adults, the sheriff added.

The charges could put the suspects behind bars for decades, prosecuting attorney Jerrod Mahurin said.

Law enforcement responded earlier Tuesday after someone called Missouri’s Child Abuse Hotline to report the home in Farmington, Fox 2 reported.

When investigators tried to enter the home, Head reportedly would not let them in at first.

Ultimately they said they saw Cheatham unscrewing the plywood holding the boxes shut.

The four children have been placed in the care of Missouri’s Children’s Division.

Farmington is about an hour's drive south of St. Louis.