The story of the so-called “family in the woods” cannot find peace. What has taken center stage in the last hours is the separation of the mother from the children and their transfer to another protected facility in the Teramo area, about 140 kilometers from the house in the countryside of Palmoli, in Abruzzo, where Catherine Birmingham And Nathan Trevallion they lived with their three children. A separation that was certainly not painless for either the mother or the children, so much so that the family’s lawyer reported “heartbreaking screams”.
The story, painful and probably deserving of greater confidentiality, is well known. The family lived in a house without electricity, with dry toilets outside. The children did not go to school and their parents took care of their education. In 2024 the report to social services, after serious mushroom poisoning. Then the investigations, the psychological assessments, the suspension, last November, of the couple’s parental responsibility, and the placement of the minors in a family home. While waiting to adapt the house in Palmoli, the father had moved to a house offered on loan for use by a local restaurateur, while the mother stayed in the same structure as the children.
Three months or more pass, evidently tiring for everyone. The expulsion order was issued last week. According to the judges, Catherine Birmingham developed hostile behavior towards teachersof the guardian and of the social services, an attitude that would have had repercussions on the children, making them difficult to manage.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, for whom the provision risks inflicting “another very heavy trauma” on children, criticized the magistrates’ decisionconsidering them the result of “ideological readings”. Furthermore, the Ministry of Justice decided to send inspectors to the Juvenile Court of L’Aquila to verify how the case was handled.
It is difficult to say what the next developments will be. Over time the affair has acquired clear political implications at risk of exploitation, especially now that the justice referendum is upon us. The parents – the father has acquired a role as mediator and peacemaker – have made it known that they intend to lodge a complaint with the Court of Appeal for a suspension of the measure. To date, only one thing is certainly certain: the story of the “family in the woods” is increasingly a tragedy about which it would be best not to speculate.


