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Sissonville couple convicted of child neglect, trafficking sued by two more adopted children

WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Sissonville couple convicted of child neglect, trafficking sued by two more adopted children

State Court
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Jeanna Whitefeather (left) and Donald Lantz | File photos

CHARLESTON – A parent of two of the adopted children at the heart of a high-profile Kanawha County child neglect and human trafficking case have sued the Sissonville couple already convicted of the crimes.

E.G., as next friend of A.G. and J.G., filed the complaint April 14 in Kanawha Circuit Court against Donald Lantz and Jeanna Whitefeather.

The couple was convicted January 31 of locking three adopted children inside a closed-off area of a barn on their Sissonville property. Whitefeather was found guilty of 19 counts, including forced labor, civil rights violations, abuse and gross neglect. Lantz was found guilty of 16 counts, including human trafficking, neglect and forced labor. He was found not guilty of four counts of civil rights violations.


DiTrapano and Salango | File photos

Last month, Whitefeather was sentenced to the maximum 215 years in prison, and Lantz was sentenced to the maximum 160 years in prison.

“You brought these kids to West Virginia, a place as I know as almost heaven and put them in hell,” Kanawha Circuit Court Judge MaryClaire Akers said during the sentencing hearing. “The court will now put you in yours. May God have mercy on your souls, because this court will not.”

In February, another of the adopted children filed a civil complaint against the couple as well.

“These children have been failed by everyone at every turn in their young lives,” attorneys L. Dante diTrapano and Ben Salango said in a joint statement to The West Virginia Record. “First by their parents, then by Child Protective Services.

“We intend to hold all those responsible for the horrific acts of abuse accountable.”

The couple, who are white, were accused of mistreating their adopted Black children by locking them in a shed, forcing them to sleep on the floor and use buckets as toilets and more. The couple was arrested in October 2023 after neighbors saw Lantz lock the oldest girl and her brother in the shed before leaving the property. A Kanawha County Sheriff’s deputy had to use a crowbar to get them out.

“We are going to turn over every stone in every state to make sure these innocent children have compensation for the horrific treatment visited upon them by their foster parents and the authorities in charge of their placement and care,” diTrapano previously said.

According to the newest civil complaint, A.G. and J.G. were adopted by E.G. and her husband earlier this year in Fayette County. They had been adopted by Lantz and Whitefeather in 2017 in Minnesota and moved with them to Washington state in 2019 before moving to West Virginia.

“A.G. and J.G. experienced shocking and severe physical and emotional abuse and neglect while under the care of the defendants following their adoption until such time as they were removed from defendants’ custody by authorities in West Virginia,” the complaint states. “Defendants would deny A.G. and J.G. food and/or water for days at a time; defendants would violently strike A.G. and J.G. if defendants perceived these defenseless children were not listening to them; and defendants would not permit A.G. and J.G. to sleep inside their house, and instead required these children to sleep outside in a tent or in an outbuilding, whether it be snowing, raining, very cold or very hot.”

The complaint says A.G. and J.G. have suffered severe and permanent physical and emotional injuries and damages.

E.G. sues the couple on behalf of the two children for intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligence, battery and false imprisonment. She says there have been medical expenses, physical pain and suffering, emotional distress. She says the children also have been deprived of the enjoyment of life as well as having suffered annoyance, embarrassment, humiliation and inconvenience.

The plaintiffs seek actual damages, consequential damages, exemplary damages, punitive damages, court costs, attorney fees, pre- and post-judgment interests and other relief.

In the criminal complaint against the defendants, deputies said a 9-year-old girl was found alone crying in a loft with no protection from falling, and another child was with Lantz when he eventually returned. Deputies later were led to the couple’s youngest daughter. Deputies said the children were found in dirty clothes and smelling of body odor, deputies said, and the eldest boy was found barefoot with what appeared to be sores on his feet.

During the criminal trial, Kanawha County prosecutors also showed racist text messages they said were from Whitefeather, who denied writing them. The oldest daughter testified the children were cursed at “all the time” and that Whitefeather used racist language.

In the civil case, the plaintiffs are being represented by diTrapano, David H. Carriger and Timothy D. Houston of Calwell Luce diTrapano in Charleston and by Ben Salango of Salango Law in Charleston. The case has been assigned to Circuit Judge Stephanie Abraham.

Kanawha Circuit Court case number 25-C-499

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