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Police: Parents admit 'gifting' teen to Bucks man; all 3 arrested

A 51-year-old Bucks County man was arrested after he was found living with 12 girls, including a teenager he considered his wife, and a baby and a toddler he fathered with her, authorities said Friday.

Police put up crime scene tape around the Lower Southampton Township home of Lee Kaplan (inset) on Friday, June 17, 2016.
Police put up crime scene tape around the Lower Southampton Township home of Lee Kaplan (inset) on Friday, June 17, 2016.Read moreJoseph Kaczmarek

A 51-year-old Bucks County man was arrested after he was found living with 12 girls, including a teenager he considered his wife, and a baby and a toddler he fathered with her, authorities said Friday.

Lee Kaplan was arrested Thursday morning at his home on the 400 block of Old Street Road in Lower Southampton after an anonymous tip led county child welfare workers and police to his door, Lower Southampton police Lt. John Krimmel said.

Some of the children were hiding in the small house.

"We kept finding more children," Krimmel said. "It's just a crazy situation."

The oldest girl, now 18, told police she was the mother of two of the girls, a 3-year-old and a 6-month-old, Krimmel said.

The teen's parents, Daniel and Savilla Stoltzfus, of Quarryville, Lancaster County, also were arrested after they told police they had "gifted" their daughter to Kaplan four years ago.

The girl was 14 at the time, and Daniel Stoltzfus gave her to Kaplan as thanks "for helping his family out of financial ruin," according to the criminal complaints.

The Stoltzfuses said they were the parents of all of the children except the two youngest, who were their grandchildren, Bucks County District Attorney David Heckler said. Officials on Friday still were trying to determine how the other nine children came to be living with Kaplan, and whether he had abused any of them.

"We've got a ways to go to figure out what's really going on here," Heckler said.

Heckler described the Stoltzfuses as "straightforward."

They told police they were going to lose their farm until Kaplan "comes along and gives them money somehow," possibly employing Daniel Stoltzfus in a scrap business.

Once their farm was saved, Daniel Stoltzfus, now 43, did some internet research and concluded that it was legal to give their daughter to Kaplan, Heckler said.

Savilla Stoltzfus, 42, was at Kaplan's house when the child-welfare check was made, Heckler said.

The Stoltzfuses "think he's a wonderful man," Heckler said.

Some of the girls also said good things about Kaplan, Heckler said, describing them as "brainwashed" by Kaplan.

Kaplan and the 18-year-old were not married, but Heckler said they acted as husband and wife.

The girls apparently did not attend school and it was unclear if they had ever been to a doctor, Heckler said. They did not appear to be in bad health and did not show visible signs of trauma, he said.

Because of an apparent Amish influence on the children, police asked child-welfare workers from Lancaster County who are familiar with Amish culture to interview the children, Krimmel said.

Police were unable to find birth certificates for any of the children and said they did not have Social Security numbers.

Heckler said all of the children are in protective custody and are together.

Kaplan and the Stoltzfuses each are being held on $1 million bail.

Kaplan was charged with two counts of statutory sexual assault and related offenses. Daniel Stoltzfus was charged with criminal conspiracy and endangering the welfare of children. Savilla Stoltzfus was charged with endangering the welfare of children.

The Stoltzfuses were born into the Amish religion, but renounced it amid a years-long fight with community elders, according to a federal lawsuit they filed in 2009 against their former church.

In the 2009 complaint, the Stoltzfuses said they had 11 children and had owned their property on Pumping Station Road in Kirkwood, Lancaster County, since 1997. They operated a metalworking business on the property. The Stoltzfuses suggested that sect leaders, among other things, frowned on them for doing business "with an individual of the Jewish faith named Lee Kaplan," the complaint says.

The lawsuit was dismissed later that year.

Neighbors on Friday said the arrests brought unprecedented activity to an otherwise quiet neighborhood, with news helicopters overhead and media vans swarming the streets.

Kaplan's empty house, with a bright-blue door and at least one window boarded up, was guarded by police Friday night.

Jen Betz, 37, a mother of two young children, said she was the neighbor who called a child-welfare hotline about Kaplan. She said she called Bucks County Children and Youth on Wednesday because she was concerned about the girls - some 7 or 8, some young teens - she saw at his house, which she noticed had boarded windows and high weeds.

They all wore blue dresses and had long, unkempt hair, she said.

"The guy drives that creepy blue van," she said. "He looked creepy."

Then Betz learned that there was an infant in the house. Being a new mother to a little girl helped make the decision for her.

"Something needed to be done," she said.

Betz talked to a woman from the Bucks agency on the phone Wednesday. "She asked, 'Do I need to send the police?' I said absolutely," Betz said.

bmoran@phillynews.com

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@RobertMoran215

Staff writer Laura McCrystal contributed to this article.