Twelve religious group members arrested over Australian girl's death
- Published
Twelve members of a religious group have been arrested over the death of an eight-year-old girl in Australia.
Elizabeth Struhs died on 7 January at a home south of Brisbane, after the type one diabetic was allegedly denied insulin for almost a week.
Earlier this year, her parents were charged with murder, torture and failing to provide necessities of life.
Police now say they will charge another 12 people - aged between 19 and 64 - over the girl's death.
The group had been aware of Elizabeth's deteriorating medical condition, but did not seek help, Queensland Police said in a statement.
Her parents - Jason and Kerrie Struhs - are members of a small, tight-knit religious group in the city of Toowoomba that is not associated with any mainstream church, according to local media.
Police allege the pair and others prayed for Elizabeth's recovery as she became gravely ill, the news outlets said.
Authorities weren't called until a day after the child died.
Detective Acting Superintendent Garry Watts said police had been surprised by what they found, calling the investigation unprecedented.
"In my 40 years of policing, I've never faced a matter like this," he said.
"And I'm not aware of a similar event in Queensland, let alone Australia."
In a fundraiser set up to support Elizabeth's siblings, her oldest sister Jayde Struhs said her extended family had been left "completely shattered and heartbroken".
"We have faced the brutal reality that the people who should have protected her did not, and we may never know the full extent of what took place," she wrote.
She said her estranged parents were part of a "fear-driven and controlling" cult that took religion to its extremes.
The 12 people arrested on Tuesday are expected to appear in court on Wednesday. Jason and Kerrie Struhs will return to court later in July.