A Teen Endured Months of 'Heinous' Torture Before Dying. Many Participated — and Her Caretaker Orchestrated It

Mar. 15, 2025

Sylvia Likens.Photo:Sylvia’s Child Advocacy Center

16-year-old Sylvia Likens who was tortured and murdered by her caregiver, Gertrude Baniszewski, in 1965.

Sylvia’s Child Advocacy Center

Content warning: The following article contains disturbing descriptions of abuse.

In October 1965, police officers in Indianapolis, Ind., found Sylvia Likens, 16, dead on a mattress in her caretaker’s home.

The teenager’s body, emaciated and weak from malnutrition, was covered in old and fresh bruises, burns and sores, according toThe Indianapolis Star. One area of her skin was marked with the imprint of a hot metal brand, while the words “I am a prostitute” were cruelly etched into her abdomen.

However, the dark truth soon came to light, revealing that Sylvia had been tortured and held captive in Baniszewski’s home for several months prior to her death. Baniszewski spearheaded the abuse, and the participants included her children as well as others from the neighborhood.

Baniszewski had agreed to look after Sylvia and her sister Jenny for $20 a week that summer while the girls’ parents left town for a lengthy-work trip, theIndy Starreported. Baniszewski, who was divorced, had already been caring for her six children, the oldest of whom was her 17-year-old daughter Paula, and the youngest of whom was an 18-month-old boy.

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According to the website forSylvia’s Child Advocacy Centerin Indiana, the girls “continued to live as teenagers do, singing, skating, earning modest incomes during the summer break, and doing housework.” But as time went on, the payments to Baniszewski began to wane. Angry, Baniszewski began beating the sisters more than a dozen times a week, often for “benign issues like eating too much food,” per the website.

According to theIndy Star, children from the neighborhood also took part in the abuse, after which Sylvia was made to take painfully hot baths as punishment, to “cleanse her of her sins.”

“By the end of the summer, Sylvia was being raped, verbally tormented, assaulted with objects physically and sexually, starved, beaten, burned, and forced to commit humiliating or heinous acts,” the advocacy center said. Sylvia was eventually forced to remain in the house and was forbidden from attending school.

Sylvia died on Oct. 26, 1965, from her extensive injuries and malnourishment, theIndy Starreported. At Baniszewski’s trial the following year, she pleaded not guilty, though she was eventually convicted of first-degree murder. Her daughter, Paula, was found guilty of second-degree murder. Both were sentenced to life in prison, according to the outlet.

Gertrude Baniszewski.Bettmann/Getty

A mother of seven children, Mrs. Gertrude Wright, 37, of Indianapolis, and Richard Dean Hobbs, 15, her neighbor, were held on preliminary charges of murder in the brutal death of Sylvia Maria Likens, 16.

Bettmann/Getty

Baniszewski’s son and two neighborhood children also stood trial but served little time behind bars, according toIndianapolisMonthly.

In December 1985, Baniszewski was released on parole. She lived in Iowa under a new name until her death from cancer in 1990, theIndy Starreported.

Sylvia’s case was instrumental in the Indiana law mandating that every person who knows of child abuse must report it to the Department of Child Services.

“This law was enacted as a direct result of Syvlia’s case; lawmakers were horrified to know that the neighbors heard Sylvia screaming and did not call the police,” says Kassie Frazier, Executive Director of Sylvia’s Child Advocacy Center.

“In 1965, it was common practice not to get involved in others’ business; however, we, as a state, said we would stand with our children,” Frazier added in the statement shared with PEOPLE on Nov. 27.

The organization, one of eleven nationally accredited child advocacy centers in the state, says onits websitethat it is “dedicated to [Sylvia’s] memory and the cause of protecting children from abuse in every corner of our community.”

According to Frazier, child advocacy centers offer therapy and medical exams, plus courtroom preparation, victim advocacy, case management and other services.

If you suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to www.childhelp.org. All calls are toll-free and confidential. The hotline is available 24/7 in more than 170 languages.

source: people.com