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2 arrested after girl with autism found locked in cage at Tennessee home

WATCH ABOVE: A couple was in a Tennessee courtroom Tuesday afternoon accused of keeping their 10-year-old child with autism in a wooden cage – Feb 8, 2017

Two people were charged with child abuse after deputies found a girl with autism locked in a cage at a home in northeastern Tennessee.

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Deputies conducted a welfare check at the home Monday after receiving reports that a child was being held in a cage, Washington County Sheriff Ed Graybeal said in a statement.

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He said deputies entered a bedroom to find a locked wooden cage with a mattress and a child inside. Deputies were told the 10-year-old was autistic, he said.

“They did find a 10-year-old child in a makeshift cage, like a wooden pin with about the size of a twin-sized mattress,” Captain Shawn Judy told WCYB. “That’s about four-and-a-half-foot tall by 72 by a little over three-feet.”

Officials said that child and three others at the home were removed.

A court document described the condition of the home when police entered, saying they found “ground up feces” on the kitchen floor and in carpeting throughout the house.

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READ MORE: Lawyer says father of boy with autism shot by police had hands up

Two adults, 69-year-old Mickey Sparks and 43-year-old Patricia Laws, were each charged with aggravated child abuse and neglect. They were being held at the Washington County Detention Center pending arraignment. It wasn’t immediately clear whether they have attorneys.

A court document cited by the Johnson City Press said Laws told deputies that the state Department of Children’s Services had approved the use of the cage as a means of controlling the girl three or four years ago.

Deputy Jared Taylor checked with a Child Protective Services supervisor, who told him there were no records to indicate a locked cage had been approved for the girl, the document said.

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