Attorneys for an Iowa couple accused of neglecting and abusing adopted children have requested that the state throw out felony charges and grant the two deferred judgments.

With a judge's approval, Kenny and Kelly Fry of Osceola plan to plead guilty to two counts each of child endangerment, an aggravated misdemeanor, according to Iowa Courts Online records. Montgomery F. Brown, Kenny's attorney, and Alfredo Parrish, Kelly's attorney, filed the separate petitions to plead guilty Monday.

Brown said Tuesday the plea deals are just requests and have not yet been accepted by judge David L. Christensen. Kenny, 42, and Kelly, 40, were charged after medical professionals in February 2018 determined two of the couple's seven children were malnourished. The victims, a 10-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy, were adopted a few years back from Ghana, authorities say.

If the motions are granted, charges of child endangerment causing bodily injury and neglect or abandonment of a dependent person, both felonies, would be dismissed, reducing the possible maximum prison time from 10-plus years to four years. The attorneys requested that each person be given a deferred judgment, community service, probation and the minimum amount of fines as opposed to prison time.

Both had originally pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The couple was arrested in June 2018 after an investigation began in January. Officers were contacted Jan. 30, 2018 by a state Department of Human Services caseworker who was investigating a possible child abuse complaint at the Fry household in the 600 block of South Main Street in Osceola. The day before, a neighbor reported that two children knocked on a door of the home for 45 minutes, crying to be let in, authorities said.

After being removed from the home, the kids — then 8 and 9 years old — told officials they were required to spend most of their days isolated in their bedrooms, where they used plastic buckets as a toilet. If they came out of their rooms, which were not locked, an alarm would sound and they would be disciplined by being forced to do squats and pushups, according to a criminal complaint.

One of the children indicated the alarms were added to their doors because they would sneak out of their rooms to take food. The girl said she did not get enough food, telling investigators, "I'm hungry," authorities said.

About a week after they were placed with relatives, a physical examination determined the girl exhibited an anxious and withdrawn mood, officials said. She had several small wounds that were not healing properly, which a nurse said was likely because of nutrition deficiency.

The girl, who weighed 50 pounds and stood at 46 inches tall, had a distention of her abdomen that was consistent with malnutrition. She gained 5 pounds and did not grow in height from the year before; a child her age should grow 2 to 3 inches a year, authorities said.

Weighing 69 pounds and standing at 53 inches, the boy also had leveled off on the growth chart, according to the complaint. These findings led a nurse to believe the two were neglected.

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An officer said five of the seven children's bedrooms were typical. The other two children shared a bedroom that was divided into two rooms made of wood.

The officer described their rooms as bare, each containing a small plastic mat, a blanket and a shelf on a wall. No other furnishings or personal items were in the rooms except a plastic bucket used as a toilet, according to the complaint.

Kelly Fry indicated to the DHS worker that she and her husband constructed the rooms months earlier after the two children displayed bad behavior, authorities said. She said the two would defecate and urinate in their rooms, so they had the rooms made and it was the children's responsibility to clean up after themselves, police said.

In a later interview with authorities, the children said they would not be allowed to eat breakfast if they went to the bathroom in their buckets and did not clean them outside. One child said the two got oatmeal for breakfast, lunch and dinner, but that the other children did not have food restrictions.

The caseworker said Kelly claimed the kids chose to use the buckets instead of the home's bathrooms.

Since they were removed from the home, the children have not displayed the poor behavior the Frys claimed they had, authorities said. The two have been engaged in therapy, and about three months since they were removed, the girl has gained 8 pounds, according to court documents.

The Frys were released from the Clarke County Jail after posting $17,000 bond.

Kenneth Fry is the younger brother of State Rep. Joel Fry, a Republican who represents the 27th District. In an email, he said he had no comment at the time of the arrests.

Follow the Register on Facebook and Twitter for more news. Tyler Davis can be contacted at 515-284-8378, tjdavis@dmreg.com or on Twitter @TDavisDMR.