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The secret case of Genie Wiley, the wild child. TLC Documentary

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    [News announcer] Officials in the
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    Los Angeles suburb of Arcadia
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    have taken custody of a 13 year old girl,
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    whom, they say, was kept in such isolation
    by her parents,
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    that she never even learned to talk.
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    The girl still wore diapers,
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    and was uttering infantile noises,
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    when a social worker discovered the case
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    two weeks ago.
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    The authorities are hoping
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    she still may have a normal
    learning capacity.
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    [Narrator] Among the first
    to see the child
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    was Temple City detective,
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    Sergeant Frank Linley.
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    [Eerie music]
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    [Sgt. Linley] I already knew that
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    the child was 13 1/2 years old,
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    and I took one look at her,
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    and she wasn't much bigger
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    than my daughter, Beverly,
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    who had just turned seven
    about 3 months earlier.
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    And, I really had a hard time
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    conceiving of the idea that the child
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    was the age that she was.
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    The child, uh, obviously,
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    had been severely mistreated.
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    She was still in diapers, couldn't walk,
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    she had no verbal skills at all,
    at that point.
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    [Eerie music]
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    The last time I was on this street
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    was probably 30 years ago.
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    [Eerie music]
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    Yep, there it is.
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    Hasn't changed much.
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    The back yard looks the same.
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    It's all weeds and dead grass.
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    [Eerie music]
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    Looks the same as it did in 1970.
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    [Eerie music]
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    [Narrator] The house belonged
    to Clark Wiley.
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    A loner, Clark had turned his
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    back on the world,
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    after his mother had been killed
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    in a hit and run accident.
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    After the accident,
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    things in the Wiley house
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    would never be the same again.
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    [Eerie music]
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    [Sgt. Linley] The house was
    completely dark.
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    All the blinds were drawn.
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    There were no toys.
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    No clothes.
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    Nothing that would ever
    indicate to you
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    that a child of any age
    lived there.
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    [Eerie music. Passing cars whoosh.]
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    The child's bedroom was
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    back in this corner.
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    That was the bedroom.
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    The, uh, windows were covered
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    to about 3 inches from the top,
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    which was the only natural light
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    that had ever come in there,
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    in all the time the child was
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    in the bedroom.
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    The entire furnishing to the bedroom
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    consisted of a cage,
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    with a, uh, pull-down chicken wire lid,
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    and some type of -- piece of wire,
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    securing it, when they closed it down.
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    There was a potty chair,
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    with some kind of homemade
    strapping device.
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    [Narrator] For thirteen years,
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    Genie had spent her nights
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    locked in bed,
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    her days strapped
    to a potty chair.
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    During that time,
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    Clark had ordered his son John,
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    and wife Irene,
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    never to talk to her.
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    In her darkened room,
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    she had led a life
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    or near total isolation.
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    [Eerie music]
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    Even close neighbors
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    were completely unaware
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    of her presence.
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    [Neighbor] I came home from work,
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    and the police was here,
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    and they came to question us.
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    That's when we found --
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    found out, you know,
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    what happened, and
    uh, you know,
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    that they had a little girl.
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    Nobody knew. Nobody knew before.
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    And, uh, then we found out
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    what happened, how she was treated.
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    I mean, everybody was shocked,
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    and, just -- unbelievable.
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    [Narrator] For their whole marriage,
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    Clark had imposed his will on Irene.
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    Blind with cataracts,
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    she had been too scared to resist.
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    But one day, something broke.
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    While Clark was out buying groceries,
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    she seized her chance, and fled.
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    It was the first glimpse
    the world would have
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    of Clark and Irene's dark secret.
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    [Sgt. Linley] I met Clark and Irene
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    at Temple City sheriff station,
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    and they were both
    under arrest, at the time.
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    When we interviewed Irene,
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    she would make no mention
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    of the family, whatsoever;
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    particularly, the children.
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    I attempted, along with my partner,
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    to interview Clark.
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    He refused to talk to us.
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    He wouldn't say a word.
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    He never even acknowledged
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    that he understood
    what we were talking about.
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    [Reporter] Mr. Wiley?
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    [Clark] Yes ma'am.
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    Why did you keep your daughter
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    in a room --
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    [Lawyer] Mr. Wiley has no comment.
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    [Clark] No comment.
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    [Lawyer] We haven't had time to discuss
    the charges.
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    We haven't even seen them.
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    [Narrator] Unable to face the truth,
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    Clark took matters into his own hands.
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    [Eerie music]
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    [News announcer] This morning,
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    the authorities reported
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    that 70 year old Clark Wiley
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    shot and killed himself,
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    just before he was to go to court
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    and be arraigned
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    for child abuse.
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    [Narrator] After 13 years,
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    Genie was, at last, free.
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    For scientists, she was just the case
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    they had been waiting for.
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    For 13 years,
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    Genie had lived a life
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    of complete isolation.
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    Raised in a city bedroom,
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    Genie was as much a feral child
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    as if she had been
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    brought up by wolves.
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    At 13, she was the size
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    of a six year old.
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    Worst of all,
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    she had never been taught to speak.
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    The question now:
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    Could she ever learn?
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    [Traffic softly whooshes.]
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    Genie's case was so
    scientifically important,
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    that the government funded
    a team of scientists
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    to help answer the many questions
    she posed.
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    [Clomps up the steps.]
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    [Narrator] Two of the scientists
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    who would become especially important
    to Genie
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    were child psychologist James Kent,
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    and linguist Susan Curtiss.
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    [Susan] So good to see you.
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    [Narrator] Neither had ever
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    encountered a case
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    as extreme as Genie's.
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    [Eerie music]
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    [James Kent] We looked at her
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    as a newborn, in a way,
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    even though we know she hadn't.
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    She came with 13 years
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    of memories and experiences,
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    not all of them wonderful.
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    Most of them not, I think.
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    And so, we thought we needed
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    to start to expose her
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    to what the world was going to
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    be like for her,
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    outside the hospital bed.
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    [Narrator] To Genie,
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    everything was a new experience.
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    [James Kent] We did what you would do
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    with your own kids,
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    if you were introducing them
    to the world.
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    Take them out,
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    hold them up, and show them. [Chuckles]
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    Sort of judge, from how they reacted,
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    whether this was too much,
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    or not enough.
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    And you could move on,
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    and do the next thing.
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    [Narrator] Genie was making
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    amazing progress.
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    As the experts looked on,
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    they realized that she might
    be the answer
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    to the question that
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    had troubled science for so long.
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    [Susan Curtiss] So, we
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    seized this wonderful opportunity
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    that she provided us,
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    in as loving a way as we could,
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    but, using it to...
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    finally get our chance to
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    address, head on,
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    specific hypotheses,
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    and notions about
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    human language,
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    and the human mind.
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    [Narrator] These hypotheses
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    were based on the latest ideas
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    about how children's brains developed.
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    According to the theory,
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    young children
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    could only learn certain things
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    at certain times,
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    called 'critical periods.'
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    Language was one of these
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    'critical periods.'
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    According to the theory,
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    Genie, who was now a teenager,
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    had missed her chance forever.
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    But, incredibly,
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    Genie seemed to be
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    proving the theory wrong.
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    As this footage shows,
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    Genie was blossoming.
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    Not only was she delighted
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    by the world around her,
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    but she was learning the words
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    for the new things she was seeing.
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    [Wistful piano music]
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    [Susan Curtiss] She was extremely
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    interested in everything around her.
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    She wanted to know the word
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    for everything around her.
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    She wanted to engage people
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    all around her.
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    She was not mentally deficient.
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    Her lights were on,
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    and everyone who worked with her,
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    from teachers, to therapists,
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    to me, knew
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    that she was not retarded.
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    It was clear as day.
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    And, as she began to learn
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    more and more words,
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    hundreds of words,
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    much more rapidly
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    than they ever imagined,
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    and stringing them together,
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    I began to think 'Maybe
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    I will be wrong.
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    Maybe she will be the one
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    that will prove
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    that this hypothesis is incorrect.'
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    [Narrator] But Genie could not escape
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    the effects of her past so easily.
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    She was still haunted
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    by her traumatic upbringing,
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    trapped by the memories
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    of the awful fate she had suffered.
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    Linguistically, she had stopped
    making progress.
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    [Susan Curtiss] She learned tons of words.
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    She has an enormous vocabulary.
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    But language is not words.
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    Language is grammar.
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    Language is sentences.
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    How do you make a sentence?
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    What can be a sentence?
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    What is a sentence?
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    How do you automatically know
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    something is a sentence?
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    So, it wasn't because she was
    cognitively deficient,
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    in other respects.
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    It was because she was
    cognitively deficient
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    in this island of human mind,
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    the mental faculty that we call
    'grammar.'
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    [Narrator] At the time
    Genie was found,
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    brain science was in its infancy.
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    Today, we have a much clearer picture
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    of what actually happens
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    in cases of extreme neglect,
    like Genie's.
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    [Dr. Bruce Perry] In Genie's brain,
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    the left part of her brain, her cortex,
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    that has those neural systems
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    responsible for speech and language,
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    because she never heard any words,
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    and because she was never talked --
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    spoken to very often,
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    they didn't get stimulated.
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    And, because they weren't stimulated,
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    they got smaller, and less functional,
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    and disconnected, and ultimately,
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    that part of the brain literally,
    physically changes.
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    [Narrator] Today,
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    with modern imaging technology,
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    we can actually see what happens
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    in the brains of feral children.
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    The effects are shocking.
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    Without normal stimulation,
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    their brains are smaller, and malformed.
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    The earlier this neglect begins,
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    and the longer it carries on,
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    the worse the damage will be.
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    Starved of stimulation,
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    Genie's brain had simply
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    not developed the capacity
    for language.
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    And, now that she was
    a teenager,
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    she would never be able to learn.
  • 10:15 - 10:16
    Despite this,
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    Genie continued to be a close part
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    of everyone's life.
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    But, there was more trouble ahead.
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    [James Kent] Children have to
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    belong to somebody when they grow up,
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    and she was still a child,
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    and she needed a family to belong to.
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    So, that's what we would've liked.
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    A family that she could belong to.
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    And, that's not what happened,
    unfortunately.
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    What did happen
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    is, about, the worst outcome, um,
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    I think
    we would've envisioned.
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    [Narrator] On her 18th birthday,
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    Genie moved back
    with her mother Irene,
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    into the house in which
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    she had been so terribly abused.
  • 10:51 - 10:53
    But after only a few weeks,
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    it was clear that Irene couldn't cope.
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    From here, Genie was moved
    into state care,
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    with terrible consequences.
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    [Susan Curtiss] I was a student,
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    and people wouldn't listen to me.
  • 11:05 - 11:07
    People who needed to intervene
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    did not listen to me.
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    And, so, I spent lots and lots of time
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    on the phone, pleading with people
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    to intervene, and save this person
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    who had had the worst experience
    of deprivation,
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    and isolation, in all recorded
    medical history.
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    [Narrator] Genie moved
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    from home to home,
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    sometimes with the very people
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    who served as her therapists.
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    This potential conflict of interests
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    raised tensions among the many people
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    involved in her life.
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    A tug of war erupted over the child.
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    As Genie's condition deteriorated,
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    Irene decided that Susan Curtiss
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    and the other academics had become
    too close to Genie.
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    A lawsuit followed.
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    [Susan Curtiss] I went from being asked
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    to be her guardian,
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    to, one week later,
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    being prevented from seeing her,
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    or phoning her.
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    Ever since then, I've been prevented
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    from having any contact, at all.
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    So, although I have lots of,
  • 12:03 - 12:06
    you know, I'm still a scientist,
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    I'm still interested in knowing things
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    about her language now, and
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    all kinds of interesting things
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    I would like to pursue academically,
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    primarily I would just like to see her.
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    [Narrator] Now a ward of the court,
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    Genie lives in an adult care home
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    somewhere in Los Angeles,
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    prevented from seeing the people
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    who once meant so much to her.
Title:
The secret case of Genie Wiley, the wild child. TLC Documentary
Video Language:
English
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
12:27

English subtitles

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