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Home»International News»Off-grid family offered free home in Italy to help with return of children
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Off-grid family offered free home in Italy to help with return of children

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auDecember 1, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
Off-grid family offered free home in Italy to help with return of children
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Off-grid family offered free home in Italy to help with return of children

Trevallion said: “Grazie mille. Thank you, thank you everyone. I have trust in the judiciary and have no further comment at this time.”

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Carusi was born and raised in the cottage, which had no central heating when he was growing up.

“I am not scandalised by the family’s lifestyle because I lived it myself when I was little,” he said. “It was the natural thing to do.”

The business owner and his daughter have since remodelled the cottage with modern comforts, including Wi-Fi and an indoor bathroom. They offered it free as temporary lodging to Trevallion while he makes court-ordered upgrades to his own home.

The Briton was previously living with his family in a dilapidated stone farmhouse he bought for €20,000 ($35,485). They lived together without electricity, an indoor toilet or plumbing, water mains or gas, relying instead on solar power, water drawn from a well, a nearby creek and home-grown food. The children were homeschooled.

But social services began investigating after the entire family were poisoned by mushrooms they had foraged and had to receive medical aid. A battle ensued over a lack of documented paediatric visits and their refusal to allow educational and psychological assessments.

The juvenile court of L’Aquila alleged mistreatment due to the “absence of habitability” at the house.

In mid-November, police removed the children from the home, saying their wellbeing was at risk.

After negotiations, the children’s mother was allowed to accompany them to a shelter in the coastal town of Vasto, while Trevallion moved in with a neighbour. The family’s lawyers have formally filed an appeal.

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“There is no negligence, no abuse – the kids’ lives are not in danger,” she told London’s The Telegraph in November, calling the situation “insane”.

The family is part of a growing cadre of expats fleeing consumerism and technology for a back-to-the-land lifestyle in rural Italy, where property is cheap due to depopulation.

More than 150,000 people have signed a petition to “save the family living in the forest”, and Salvini, leader of the right-wing League party, chastised the judiciary for not applying the same standards to Roma gypsy camps.

On Saturday, Salvini posted a video of the key handover and vowed to follow the case “until this family is happily reunited, free to choose how to raise, educate and love their own children”.

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