by Bhavesh Jinadra by CNB
Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: FRIDAY, January 1, 1993 TAG: 9301010110 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-1 EDITION: HOLIDAY SOURCE: Associated Press DATELINE: ST. CHARLES, ILL. LENGTH: Medium
`HOME ALONE' PAIR POST BAIL
A couple accused of leaving their two young daughters home alone during a nine-day Christmas vacation to Mexico walked out of jail Thursday after posting cash bail of $5,000 each.David and Sharon Schoo refused to answer reporters' questions as they left the Kane County Corrections Center.
Their attorney, Gerard Kepple, has said that the case would "turn out quite differently" from people's impressions.
But at a news conference Thursday afternoon, Kepple declined to say why the children were left alone or whether someone was supposed to have been watching the girls and did not show up.
At the news conference, which the couple did not attend, Sharon Schoo's father, Joseph Kuzma, said the Schoos and their daughters likely will need psychiatric help.
"I think there is something wrong somewhere" if the children were left alone, he said.
Kuzma, 72, said he arranged for the couple's bail money even though he had not seen his daughter and granddaughters in eight years because of a conflict between Sharon Schoo and her stepmother.
A preliminary hearing is set for Tuesday.
The couple's children, 9-year-old Nicole and 4-year-old Diana, were discovered Dec. 21 by neighbors when they fled their home after a smoke alarm was accidentally triggered.
The girls told authorities their parents had flown to Acapulco the previous day, leaving them with no adult supervision.
Neighbors said Thursday they still want some answers.
"We knew they were going to get out sometime," said Connie Stadelmann, whose house is across the street from the Schoos. "We're just waiting for the next chapter. Everybody wants to know their explanation for why they left their children alone."
The two girls had run to her house when the smoke alarm went off.
"It's fine that they're out," said neighbor Toni Potts. "But we're wondering what life is going to be like around here."
Neighbors say the couple kept to themselves.
The Schoos were arrested Tuesday after their plane landed at O'Hare International Airport. They each face felony charges of child abandonment and cruelty to children and misdemeanor charges of child endangerment.
The children were placed in the care of the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. Under terms of the couple's release, they are barred from seeing the children.
David Schoo, 45, is an engineer with a smoke-alarm manufacturing company, System Sensor.
He was a registered pharmacist until 1978, when he voluntarily agreed to the revocation of his license, according to a consent decree on file with the Illinois Department of Professional Regulation. According to the decree, Schoo admitted stealing 1,900 Valium pills from an Aurora drugstore.