The adoptive fathers, LGBTQ activists William Dale Zulock and Zachary Jacoby Zulock, are in jail accused of producing "homemade" child pornography of the years-long sexual abuse and inviting pedophile clients over to molest their adopted sons—ages 9 and 10 when the children were raped "at least once a week."
As the child-prostitution case heads to trial, an open house was held inside the married men's "mini mansion" now-seized by Walton County and listed for $729,000. I attended and filmed the public event before being ordered to "delete everything" at the state's behest. I did not comply.
The children's underwear, used bedsheets ($6), and mattress from the master bedroom ($650) were among the hundreds of items for sale. All of the couple's LGBTQ-themed belongings were removed beforehand and out of sight. None of the buyers I talked to, though Atlanta-area natives, were aware of what happened inside the home or informed of the merchandise's history.
The estate sale's proceeds purportedly went toward a restitution-styled trust fund that's established on behalf of the abused boys, the clean-out company claimed. Both boys are back in the state's custody—returned to the foster-care cycle; their whereabouts and whom they've been placed with are not publicly known.
The adoptive fathers, LGBTQ activists William Dale Zulock and Zachary Jacoby Zulock, are in jail accused of producing "homemade" child pornography of the years-long sexual abuse and inviting pedophile clients over to molest their adopted sons—ages 9 and 10 when the children were raped "at least once a week."
As the child-prostitution case heads to trial, an open house was held inside the married men's "mini mansion" now-seized by Walton County and listed for $729,000. I attended and filmed the public event before being ordered to "delete everything" at the state's behest. I did not comply.
The children's underwear, used bedsheets ($6), and mattress from the master bedroom ($650) were among the hundreds of items for sale. All of the couple's LGBTQ-themed belongings were removed beforehand and out of sight. None of the buyers I talked to, though Atlanta-area natives, were aware of what happened inside the home or informed of the merchandise's history.
The estate sale's proceeds purportedly went toward a restitution-styled trust fund that's established on behalf of the abused boys, the clean-out company claimed. Both boys are back in the state's custody—returned to the foster-care cycle; their whereabouts and whom they've been placed with are not publicly known.
@NoAgendaLara