Four years ago, Philadelphia police
found four adults locked in a basement room with no food and only a bucket for
a toilet, authorities said.
A small group of captors led by Linda
Weston had beaten the victims, kept them chained and captive in locked closets,
basements and attics, deprived them of adequate food and medical care, and
moved them between Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, and Florida, the U.S.
Attorney's office in Philadelphia said in a statement.
"The purpose was to steal their Social
Security and disability payments," authorities said.
Weston, 55, of Philadelphia was
punished on Thursday. A federal judge sentenced her to life in prison plus 80
years. She was ordered to make restitution of $273,463 to the Social Security
Administration and pay $19,600 in a special assessment.
The enterprise victimized six disabled
adults and four children from 2001 to 2011, prosecutors said.
"While confined, the captives were
often isolated, in the dark, and sedated with drugs placed in their food and
drink by Weston and other defendants," prosecutors said.
Two people died. Weston told the other
people in her ring to move the bodies to other locations before contacting
police, the statement said.
Weston pleaded guilty earlier to
racketeering conspiracy, kidnapping resulting in the death of the victim,
forced human labor, involuntary servitude, multiple counts of murder in aid of
racketeering, hate crime, violent crime in aid of racketeering, sex
trafficking, kidnapping, theft of government funds, wire fraud, mail fraud, use
of a firearm in furtherance of a violent crime and false statements.
Her daughter, Jean McIntosh, and
co-defendant Eddie Wright previously pleaded guilty. Co-defendants Gregory
Thomas, Sr., and Nicklaus Woodard are awaiting trial.
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