Emaciated and alone, Mitch Comer didn't even know his home address or what Georgia town he was from when last week, at the age of 18, he was discovered by a security guard at a Los Angeles bus station.
Joe Gonzalez, a security guard at the Greyhound station in downtown L.A., came upon Comer looking frightened and perplexed last Tuesday. After speaking to him for a bit, Gonzalez learned that the teen had arrived alone after a cross-country journey he was sent on by his stepfather.
Alarmed by what he was told by the frail teen, Gonzalez, a former police sergeant, notified the LAPD, who questioned Mitch.
"The story we got was that the stepfather took the kid to the bus depot, said 'Here's $200, here's a list of the homeless shelters in Los Angeles, you're a man now, and don't come back,'" LAPD Commander Andrew Smith told WABC.
Police soon learned from the frail teenager that his solo cross-country journey was just part of what the Paulding county sheriff's office in Dallas, Georgia, where Mitch grew up, is calling "a severe case of child abuse and neglect."
Mitch told officers that his parents, Paul Comer, 48, and Sheila Comer, 39, had taken him out of school in the 8th grade and kept him locked in a bedroom for four years. According to Dick Donovan, the district attorney in Dallas, Paul Comer drove Mitch to a bus stop in Mississippi on his 18th birthday.
Paulding County Sheriff?s Office
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Watch Video Today, police cars were parked outside the Georgia home where he says he remained captive by his stepfather and mother for most of his teenage years.
"We don't have any reason to believe that he's lying, based on his appearance, the stories he's told and the interview with his mom and dad," Ashley Henson, who's with the Paulding County Sheriff's Department, told ABC News.
Henson said that when he was found, Mitch, who is 5 foot 3 inches, weighted 87 pounds.
"He knew he had come from Paulding county, and what his name was. My understanding is that his father confessed, and said, 'Yes, I gave him a list of shelters and $200 and sent him to LA," Paulding County District Attorney Dick Donovan told ABC News.
The FBI and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation have now joined the investigation into what went on at the Comers' home.
Mitch also has two younger sisters, who Henson said are Paul and Sheila Comer's biological children. The girls knew very little of the brother who was living in the house with them, kept under lock and key.
"The sisters that were inside the house apparently didn't even know what color hair this kid had because they hadn't seen him in a couple years, because he'd been locked in that bedroom for several years," Commander Smith said.
John White, who has lived next door to the Comers since April, told ABC News that he rarely saw the couple, and that he was surprised to hear that there was a teenager living in the house. He said that he rarely saw the couple's girls.
"I'd see the girls in the yard, in the back yard riding their bikes. Never out of the yard, always in the back. They tried to socialize with the kids next door, but she told me the father wouldn't let them play," White said.
The girls, who Donovan said are 11 and 12, are now in the custody of the Paulding County Division of Family & Children Services.
According to Donovan, Mitch is the adopted son of Paul Comer, though Henson said the sheriff's office has yet to see any documentation that Mitch had actually been adopted by his stepfather.
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