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Father Admits Years of Torture, Gets Life for 12-Year-Old’s Murder

A Chester County father pleaded guilty to murdering his 12-year-old daughter after years of neglecting and abusing her, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

Rendell Hoagland, 54, admitted that he “repeatedly and systematically” abused his daughter, Malinda, for years during a two-hour court appearance on Friday, Jan. 16, officials said.

Malinda’s family and first responders spoke in court about how her death has impacted them, according to officials.

“We still have more work to do, but today we took a big step towards getting justice for Malinda,” Chester County District Attorney Christopher de Barrena-Sarobe said Friday.

Life Sentence Plus Decades More

Rendell Hoagland was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole plus 30 to 60 years after he pleaded guilty to charges including murder, kidnapping, conspiracy and other offenses.

Malinda’s stepmother, Cindy Warren, is scheduled to go to trial on June 8, 2026, for her connection to the case.

Chester County officials want to remind everyone that if you are concerned about the safety of a child, please call 911 or the Childline at 1-800-932-0313.

The Night Malinda Died

On May 4, 2024, Malinda Hoagland was taken to Paoli Hospital’s Trauma Unit. The girl’s father, Rendell Hoagland, had called 911 and claimed his daughter struck a tree while riding her bicycle around 12:30 a.m. that morning.

Medics at the scene as well as staff at the hospital noticed the girl was severely emaciated and had numerous injuries all over her body. The girl later died that night while in surgery shortly before 10 p.m.

Investigators later determined Malinda had lost consciousness that day and didn’t get help for hours.

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“They took about three quarters of a day to call 911,” DA Barrena-Sarobe said.

The autopsy revealed Malinda died from starvation and multiple blunt force injuries. The girl weighed 50 pounds at the time of her death and had suffered around 75 bruises, contusions, ulcers and pressure sores throughout her body, investigators said.

Years of Abuse and Torture

Chester County investigators determined Malinda Hoagland had suffered years of abuse and torture at the hands of her father, Rendell Hoagland, and her stepmother, Cindy Warren.

“Information from the Coroner’s Office and medical experts demonstrates a years-long pattern of extensive torture and abuse,” Barrena-Sarobe said. “Moreover, text messages and hundreds of videos show that the Defendants engaged in a calculated and systematic method of terrorizing, manipulating, and dehumanizing Malinda.”

Through search warrants, investigators later obtained hundreds of videos and images from the suspects’ cellphones as well as security cameras, officials said.

The videos showed the girl’s ankle cuffed to furniture while her father and stepmother berated her through an in-camera speaker while they weren’t physically present, officials said. Text exchanges between the suspects showed they punished the girl for:

  • Forgetting chores or schoolwork
  • “Stealing” food
  • Not smiling during school sessions over Zoom
  • Urinating on herself while cuffed to the furniture

Rendell Hoagland and Warren also often texted about hiding injuries from concerned family members and reporters, officials said.

Isolated from the Outside World

Malinda was removed from in-person schooling in November of 2023, investigators said. School records revealed the girl had around 25 unexcused absences in 2023 and an additional 10 excused absences, according to officials. She attended a cyber school after being pulled from school at the end of 2023.

According to investigators, Malinda’s father and stepmother used makeup to cover up her beatings and shackled her legs to the floor during her virtual classes.

Barrena-Sarobe also said they forced the girl to do hours of pushups and stand for hours while holding books over her head. They also recorded themselves beating the girl whenever she dropped a book, investigators said.

Resources for Those in Need

If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline by calling 1-800-799-SAFE (7233), visiting www.thehotline.org or texting LOVEIS to 22522.

Author

  • I’m Olivia Bennett Harris, a health and science journalist committed to reporting accurate, compassionate, and evidence-based stories that help readers make informed decisions about their well-being.

    Olivia Bennett Harris reports on housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Philadelphia, uncovering who benefits—and who is displaced—by city policies. A Temple journalism grad, she combines data analysis with on-the-ground reporting to track Philadelphia’s evolving communities.

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