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THE REAL
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TEEN
LIBERTY/TEEN TORTURE INDUSTRY NEWS
Miss. juvenile detention
case near end--June
26th, 2009--A preliminary agreement has been reached
in a federal lawsuit that claims youth were abused
at a south Mississippi juvenile detention center and
forced to live in squalid conditions. For
complete story,
click here.
Supreme Court Says Child's
Rights Violated by Strip Search
--But if
the student had been suspected of having illegal
drugs that could have posed a far greater danger to
herself and other students, the strip search might
have been justified, the majority said. 26 Jun 2009
In a ruling of interest to educators, parents and
students across the country, the Supreme Court
ruled, 8 to 1, on Thursday that the strip search of
a 13-year-old Arizona girl by school officials who
were looking for prescription-strength drugs
violated her constitutional rights. The officials in
Safford, Ariz., would have been justified in 2003
had they limited their search to the backpack and
outer clothing of Savana Redding, who was in the
eighth grade at the time, the court ruled. [Needless
to say, GOPedophile Clarence Thomas thinks it's a
good idea to strip thirteen-year-olds.]
For complete story,
click here.
Can Wilderness Camps Kill
Your Kid?--June
22nd, 2009--It's
an industry that preys on desperation.
If
your teenager has emotional issues, abuses drugs, or
is promiscuous, help is just a phone call away.
Wilderness intervention programs promise to "fix"
bad behavior by teaching your child life skills and
building self-esteem. These facilities offer a
beacon of hope for
parents
like Crystal Manganaro, who sent her son, Matthew,
to a wilderness camp outside of Houston. But what
Crystal didn't realize was that the camp she
entrusted with her son's life would so carelessly
take it away. For complete story,
click here.
Are Troubled Teens
Tortured?--June
23rd, 2009--Yesterday,
we brought you the story of
Matthew Meyer, a troubled teen who died at a
wilderness camp. Today, we bring you the story of
Nick Gaglia.
Gina
Kaysen Fernandes:
Imagine a world where your
child is locked away for
years, spending days at a
time in a windowless room.
Communication is shut off
and you have no way of
knowing about their
treatment, which may include
being physically restrained
for hours on end. This
horrifying scenario isn't
prison -- it's a voluntary
program aimed at treating
troubled teenagers.
It's a
place where Nick Gaglia
spent two and a half years,
because "my life was
spinning out of control."
The residential
treatment program
known as "Kids of North
Jersey" in Secaucus, New
Jersey, "seemed like a great
fit," says Nick, who was
abusing drugs and alcohol at
the age of 13. Nick's
parents saw
advertisements for the
program on television and
soon enrolled their son.
They hoped professionals
would get Nick clean and
sober so he could put his
life back on track. But
instead of giving Nick the
coping skills he'd need in
the outside world, he became
a prisoner subjected to
verbal abuse, psychological
torment, and physical
restraint. "I would call it
torture and abuse," says
Nick, who shared his
harrowing ordeal with
momlogic. For complete
story,
click here.
ADHD Drugs Linked to Sudden
Death--June
15th, 2009--On
that morning, the 54-year-old mother of two living
in McAllen, Texas, was preparing to take her eldest
son to school. She had an early appointment, so her
husband, Rick Hohmann, would be dropping off younger
son, 14-year-old Matthew, at his school that day.
About a month earlier,
Matthew had been diagnosed with
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or
ADHD. And like an estimated
2.5 million other children in the United
States, he was taking
medication for the condition.
It was Ann Hohmann who
gave Matthew his
Adderall XR pill that morning with a glass
of water. But it was her husband who later found
him after he had collapsed on the bathroom
floor.
"To me, he seemed fine,"
she recalled. "My husband had seen him walking
around, brushing his teeth. Then he walked in
and found him flat down on the floor in the
bathroom.
"When he turned him
over, his lips were blue," Hohmann said.
She said that her
husband called her first, and then he called
911. He performed CPR until the ambulance
arrived. But it was too late.
"They worked on him for
a while, but he was dead," she said. For
complete story,
click here.
Special Report from VERACARE:
How the Pharmaceutical (DRUG) Industry and US
Government Promote Chemical Assault of American
Children!--June
12th, 2009--This
has been a grim week for anyone who cares about the
precautionary principle guiding civilized medicine
and the welfare of children.
If anything, the Obama administration seems to be
pushing the radical pharmacological envelope even
further than the Bush administration----at the very
least, nothing has changed for the better in the
government-assisted determined push to control /
engineer America's children.
On Wednesday, an FDA advisory committee gave the FDA
a green light to expand the marketing license of
three toxic antipsychotic drugs--Seroquel, Geodon,
and Zyprexa--for use in children. Such approval
gives manufacturers a shield
from liability--for illegally promoting the drugs
for off-label use. And such approval ensures
increased use of these drugs. Manufacturers and
mental health providers will profit while children's
physical and mental health will be sacrificed. These
drugs pose severely disabling, potentially lethal
hazards--including diabetes, metabolic syndrome,
cardiovascular disease.
The body of evidence showing these drugs to be
harmful is irrefutable: it is documented in FDA's
postmarketing database, and in secret internal
company documents uncovered during litigation.
Did the FDA provide the advisory panel members with
the evidence ? And if not, why not?
See, Evelyn Pringle's report, "FDA
Throws Lifeline to Antipsychotic Pushers"
http://www.counterpunch.org/pringle06122009.html
An article in TIME magazine
http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1903873_1903871_1
903857,00.html gives credence to a not
yet released report commissioned under the Bush
Administration by a panel convened by the National
Academies of Science.
The report, "Preventing Mental, Emotional, and
Behavioral Disorders Among Young People: Progress
and Possibilities" (2009) re-iterates the earlier
national mental health policy directive under
President Bush: The President's New Freedom
Commission on Mental Health (2002)--which promoted
universal mental screening and the expanded use of
patented psychoactive drugs (those listed in
industry-initiated, TMAP algorithm prescription
guides).
See the
report brief
to policymakers issued, March 2009:
http://www.bocyf.org/prevention_policymakers_brief.pdf
The NAS report also recommends aggressive screening
and pharmacologic intervention with toxic
psychoactive drugs for children. The provocative,
unsubstantiated premise is that mental illness can
be detected through genetic screening--a la eugenics
rationale--and that they can be prevented.
"Hundreds of studies that have appeared in just the
past decade collectively suggest that the brain
isn't so different from, say, the arm: it doesn't
simply break on its own. In fact, many mental
illnesses - even those like schizophrenia that have
demonstrable genetic origins - can be stopped or at
least contained before they start."
"This isn't wishful thinking but hard science." If
the consequences of psychiatry's delusions weren't
so serious, that statement is laughable. As every
real medical scientist knows, psychiatry lacks even
the rudimentary objective, scientifically verifiable
tools of science, much less, "hard science."
The TIME reporter is impressed with NAS report
weight in pagination: "a 500-page report, nearly two
years in the making, on how to prevent mental,
emotional and behavioral disorders."
"The [NAS] report concludes that pre-empting such
disorders requires two kinds of interventions:
first, because genes play so important a role in
mental illness, we need to ensure that close
relatives (particularly children) of those with
mental disorders have access to rigorous screening
programs. Second, we must offer treatment to people
who have already shown symptoms of illness (say, a
tendency to brood and see the world without
optimism) but don't meet the
diagnostic criteria for a full-scale mental illness
(in this case, depression)....."
According to TIME, the authors of the NAS report
recognize but rationalize the reality that mental
screens will mislabel healthy individuals as
mentally ill:
"Early-detection programs will identify as
candidates for mental illness some people who are
merely persnickety or shy or eccentric."
Indeed, a responsible reason NOT to screen is the
high false-positive rate of mental screens. For
example, the false-positive rate of TeenScreen, the
mental health dragnet of school children, is as high
as 84%.
TIME reports that that the invalid screening tools
did not deter the NAS authors from recommending
mental screening--even acknowledging that those
mislabeled may be prescribed toxic antidepressants
and/ or antipsychotics:
"Some prevention programs even prescribe psychiatric
medications, including antipsychotics and
antidepressants, to people who aren't technically
psychotic or depressed....But those who contributed
to the National Academies report say preventing the
suffering of people with mental illness is worth the
risk of some false positives, partly because of the
enormous cost of treating mental illness after it's
struck."
The NAS report is available online in its unedited
version--it has not yet been released.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=12480
Former teen counselor gets
jail time--June
9th, 2009--A
former counselor for troubled teens who was accused
of having sex with one of her students has accepted
a plea negotiation with prosecutors after turning
down a similar deal last year.
Cathleen Crowley, 30, of Rye was sent to the
Cheshire County jail in Westmoreland for a month as
part of the deal that was finalized last week.
Crowley withdrew her first guilty plea connected to
the student’s accusations during a hearing last
November in Cheshire County Superior Court.
The plea Crowley and her attorney, Gary S. Lenehan
of Manchester, first negotiated with prosecutors
would have kept her out of jail.
Judge Brian T. Tucker was expected to hand down
suspended, one-year jail sentences on misdemeanor
charges of sexual assault and giving alcohol to a
minor.
But after hearing the case against Crowley — she was
accused of giving the student alcohol and engaging
in sex acts with him in her van and a hotel in Keene
in 2007 — Tucker said he would reject the deal she
made with prosecutors and hand down a six-month jail
sentence....The state Division for Children, Youth
and Families has substantiated an abuse finding tied
to the student’s allegations against Crowley,
Assistant Cheshire County Attorney John S. Webb
said.
The finding appears on Crowley’s permanent state
record and should
[but, probably won't] prevent her from working again
as a youth counselor or in a similar position, he
said. For complete story,
click here.
'Orwellian
language' in schools turns pupils into 'customers',
finds damning report
09 Jun 2009 Schools
using the 'Orwellian language of performance
management' are undermining teenagers' education by
turning them into 'customers' rather than students,
a landmark report says today. Teachers who are
forced to use phrases such as 'performance
indicator' and 'curriculum delivery' lack enthusiasm
for the job, the six-year investigation found.
For complete story,
click here.
Police recruits to be
trained at Tranquility Bay--June
4th, 2009--The
Tranquility Bay facility at Treasure Beach which was
previously used as an offshore reform school for
rebellious children, mostly from the United States,
will now be used to train police recruits for at
least the next two years.
At a meeting
Tuesday with Treasure Beach residents and in
subsequent response to journalists' questions,
Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of
administration, Jevene Bent said training
"operations" would begin "somewhere in the middle of
the month".
The complex
sited on two and a half acres of beach front land,
referred to by locals as Old Whard, was
controversially used for 12 years by the United
States group, World Wide Association of Speciality
Programmes and Schools (WWASP) as a 'boot camp' for
teenagers. It was closed in January.
The Jamaica
Constabulary Force's two-year lease on the
privately-owned facility begun on June 1. For
complete story,
click here.
Juvenile safety feared--June
2nd, 2009--Seven juveniles have attempted
suicide at Hinds County's youth detention center
since January, according to a report obtained by The
Clarion-Ledger. For complete story,
click here.
"He’s gonna come back, we’re
all (going to be) distant, we’re all (going to be)
strangers here," his grandmother said. "We know we
love each other. He knows we’re mom and dad, . . .
but it ain’t gonna be the same. There’s a distance
there."
The 14-year-old boy, raised
by his maternal grandparents since he was four, is
at a short-term treatment centre in the temporary
care of the Community Services Department. If the
family isn’t successful, he will be sent to Cinnamon
Hills Youth Crisis Center for an undetermined time.
For complete story,
click here.
(To learn more about Cinnamon Hills and abuse,
click here.)
Brianna Turnbull Pleads No
Contest--June
1st, 2009--A
North Platte woman pled no contest to charges she
helped a teenage boy escape from state custody and
hide for three months. Two felonies were reduced to
misdemeanors against Brianna Turnbull. The
23-year-old pled no contest to charges of attempted
violation of custody order; attempted juvenile
escape, and contributing to the delinquency of a
child. Turnbull is the daughter of a Lincoln County
Judge. The case is behind handled by a special
prosecutor Charles Brewster of...Turnbull worked at
the Salvation Army's Quinn Wilcox house in North
Platte when she met Kaden Clark-Guthrie of Trenton.
For complete story,
click here.
Congressional
Hearing on Death/Abuse in Schools and Programs Using
Physical Restraint--May
19th, 2009--
Click here
for the online video from C-Span.
Teacher's aide in Maryland
Heights convicted in sex case--May
21st, 2009--A
teacher's aide at a school for troubled teens in
Maryland Heights was convicted late Wednesday of
having sexual contact with two students. Bruce
Germany, 55, was convicted on 14 felony counts of
sexual contact with a student by a teacher between
September 2006 and April 2007. The charges
involve two 15-year-old girls who attended Lakeside
Center for Troubled Youth at 13044 Marine Drive.
For complete story,
click here.
Thousands beaten, raped in
Irish reform schools--May
20th, 2009--DUBLIN – A fiercely debated,
long-delayed investigation into
Ireland's Roman Catholic-run institutions
says priests and nuns terrorized thousands of boys
and girls in workhouse-style schools for decades —
and government inspectors failed to stop the chronic
beatings, rapes and humiliation.
Nine years in the making, Wednesday's 2,600-page
report sides almost completely with the horrific
reports of abuse from former students sent to more
than 250 church-run, mostly residential
institutions. But victims' leaders said it didn't go
far enough — particularly because none of their
abusers were identified by name.
The report concluded that church officials always
shielded their orders' pedophiles from arrest to
protect their own reputations and, according to
documents uncovered in the Vatican, knew that many
pedophiles were serial attackers.
The investigators said overwhelming, consistent
testimony from still-traumatized men and women, now
in their 50s to 80s, had demonstrated beyond a doubt
that the entire system treated children more like
prison
inmates and slaves than people with legal
rights and human potential. For complete
story,
click here.
(Webmaster note: Switch out Irish for American
and you will understand America's teen "help"
industry.)
Feds end 11-year oversight
of Ga. juvenile facilities--May
18th, 2009--Georgia’s juvenile justice
system has been released from federal oversight, 11
years after the U.S. Justice Department investigated
reports of overcrowding and abuse at the state’s
youth detention facilities, the governor said
Monday. For complete story,
click here.
Counselor accused of sex
with teen--May
15th, 2009--A man accused of carrying on
a monthslong sexual relationship last fall with a
teenager in a school for troubled girls is in Tooele
County jail facing seven felony charges.
Kaysville
resident Jonathan Carver, 29, and
his wife were both working as
live-in counselors at the Alpine
Academy in Erda during the man's
alleged relationship with a
17-year-old female student starting
in October 2008. For complete
story,
click here.
State investigating ab slapping of teen
boys--May
12th, 2009--A controversial video
appears to show a juvenile justice official in Seminole County
striking adolescent detainees in their abdomens.
But although physical contact between officials and detainees is
mostly prohibited, the state Department of Juvenile Justice says the
boys may have volunteered for the military-style treatment at the
Seminole County Juvenile Detention Center.
"There has been speculation that it was used for training purposes,"
said Frank Penela, a spokesman for the department, who has not yet
seen the video.
Nonetheless, the department, which has been stung in recent years by
the death of one detainee at a boot-camp-style facility and as well
as the discovery of a graveyard containing unidentified graves near
another, is investigating the incident. For complete story,
click here.
Group Home Employee Accused Of Molesting
Teens--May
8th, 2009--A Sacramento man who helped troubled teens at a
group home is under arrest and accused of molesting girls while on
the job.
In
a place where people are watching your every move, Sacramento County
authorities say Jeffrey Caldwell was able to make major
inappropriate moves this past February while working at the
Sacramento County Assessment Center. For complete story,
click here.
Audit: Hempstead
nonprofit used money for beer--Sept. 5th, 2008--A
Hempstead agency that housed troubled
teens allegedly used public money to buy beer and violent video
games, and to pay $47,865 in bonuses to its workers in violation of
its contract with the county, according to a
Nassau County audit released yesterday.
It also billed other counties for the use of
beds that Nassau County had already paid for, in what amounted to
$834,000 in overcharges, Nassau County Comptroller Howard Weitzman
said in the audit.
The audit sketched out a broad pattern of
wasteful and inappropriate spending by the Leadership Training
Institute that Weitzman said was the worst case of fiscal abuse he
had ever seen by a nonprofit agency. (Unable to locate story
at time of archiving. Source:
www.newsday.com Date: September 5, 2008)
New Report Calls to End Beating of
Children in Public Schools --Read
the report,
A Violent Education: Corporal Punishment of
Children in U.S. Public Schools.
A shocking report illuminates the state
of disturbing forms of discipline in U.S.
schools. Released last week by the ACLU and
Human Rights Watch, the report finds that
more than 200,000 public school students in
the U.S. were punished by beatings during
the 2006-2007 school year. Further,
minorities and students with mental and
physical disabilities are punished at
disproportionately higher rates in the 13
states that corporally punished more than
1,000 students per year -- despite no
evidence that these students commit
disciplinary infraction at such
disproportionate rates.
The report,
A Violent Education: Corporal
Punishment of Children in U.S. Public
Schools,
found that children ranging in age from 3 to
19 years old in Texas and Mississippi are
routinely physically punished for minor
infractions such as chewing gum, talking
back to a teacher, or violating the dress
code, as well as for more serious
transgressions such as fighting.
Corporal punishment, legal in 21 states,
typically takes the form of "paddling,"
during which an administrator or teacher
hits a child repeatedly on the buttocks with
a long wooden board. The report shows that,
as a result of paddling, many children are
left injured, degraded, and disengaged from
school.
"Every public school needs effective
methods of discipline, but beating kids
teaches violence and it doesn't stop bad
behavior," said Alice Farmer, Aryeh Neier
Fellow at Human Rights Watch and the ACLU,
and author of the report. "Corporal
punishment discourages learning, fails to
deter future misbehavior and at times even
provokes it."
The ACLU and Human Rights Watch call
upon the U.S. government to prohibit
corporal punishment in all public schools
and urge state governments, school boards,
superintendents, and administrators to
eliminate physical punishment in their
schools.
>> Learn more, and read the report. For
complete story,
click here.
Miss. man accused
in Medicaid scam--August 1st,
2008-- COLUMBUS,
Miss. (AP) - The founder of an
organization dedicated to helping troubled
teens stay out of jail is himself behind
bars, facing felony charges stemming from an
alleged Medicaid scam.
Aaron Ray Pulsifer of Columbus is former
executive director of the Youth Challenge Program. He was being held
Thursday at the Lowndes County Adult Detention Center.
Prosecutors
accuse the 31-year-old Pulsifer of using the
organization to aid in a nearly 3-year
scheme in which he illegally received more
than $1.1 million.
Court
documents say Pulsifer stole the identity of
a woman, then made false reports to the
state Division of Medicaid claiming she had
provided diagnostic and counseling services
for dozens of program Youth Challenge
participants. For complete story,
click here.
Children as Big Pharma Guinea Pigs: 98
Percent of Drug Trials on Children Have no Safety Checks--August
18th, 2008--(NaturalNews) Fewer than 2 percent of drug trials
conducted on children have independent safety advisory boards, a
review published in the journal Acta Paediatrica has found.
Researchers from Nottingham University
reviewed reports on 739 international drug trials that had been
published between 1996 and 2002. They found that although 74 percent
of studies described their safety monitoring procedures,
less than 2 percent included an independent
safety review committee.
Such committees are composed of independent
health experts who can review the study data as it comes out and
warn if the drug appears to be placing study participants at risk.
"It is invaluable to have an independent
monitor who can swiftly question any adverse drug reactions or
differences in illness and death rates between groups taking part in
the clinical trials," said lead researcher Helen Sammons. "Parents
also need to be made aware of the risks of adverse drug reactions
when a child takes any medicine so that they can make informed
decisions that balance those risks against the possible benefits the
drug
may provide their child."
The Nottingham University review also
suggests that independent committees lead to more rigorous safety
standards. Of the 13 studies with independent review committees, six
were halted early due to highly toxic drug effects.
None of the studies without independent
committees were stopped early.
Although the researchers looked only at
studies conducted on children, they said the statistics for adult
trials are probably similar. For complete story,
click here.
Sentencing Children to Die in Prison--August
18th, 2008--Ian Manuel was 13-years-old when he participated in
a robbery attempt in Florida, leaving the victim with a nonfatal
gunshot injury. Ian turned himself in to police, and his attorney
told him he would receive a 15-year sentence if he pled guilty.
Instead, he was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Ian's is one of several stories told in the
Equal Justice Initiative's (EJI) new report, Cruel and Unusual:
Sentencing 13- and 14-Year-Old Children to Die in Prison (pdf). The
Equal Justice Initiative of Alabama is a private, nonprofit
organization that provides legal representation to indigent
defendants and prisoners. The EJI study found 73 cases in the United
States where 13- and 14- year-olds have been sentenced to life
without parole--in other words,
sentenced to die in prison. EJI argues that
giving this harsh sentence to young teenagers violates the U.S.
Constitution's Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and
unusual punishment and is also counter to international conventions.
The United States is almost alone in the world in imposing life
sentences without parole for crimes committed by children at such a
young age. EJI notes that giving such sentences to juveniles has
been condemned in a number of international agreements, including
the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. This
appalling pattern of injustice has prompted a nationwide litigation
campaign to challenge these harsh penalties and have the children
considered for parole-eligible sentences as soon as possible.
For complete story,
click here.
Police Say Cult Starved Toddler--August
12th, 2008--A
toddler whose remains were found inside a
suitcase in Philadelphia this spring was
starved to death by members of a religious
cult, including his mother, in part because
he refused to say "amen" after meals, police
said.
Ria Ramkissoon, 21, the
mother of Javon Thompson,
was charged Sunday with
first-degree murder in the
boy's death, and Baltimore
police said Monday that
three other members of a
group called 1 Mind
Ministries have also been
charged with first-degree
murder.
Members did not seek medical
care for Javon when he
stopped breathing, and the
boy died in his mother's
arms, according to court
documents that described
police interviews with a
confidential informant and
two children. He would have
been about 19 months old
when police say adults
stopped feeding him in
December 2006. For
complete story,
click here.
Federal agency: Shoreline schools excluded
children with disabilities--August
7th, 2008--The
Shoreline School District discriminated
against students with disabilities, a
federal civil-rights investigation has
found.
The 15-month investigation
centered on the district's
February 2007 decision to
exclude from its classrooms
children newly placed at the
Fircrest School, a state
residential facility in
Shoreline for people with
disabilities. As a result of
that decision, the
investigation found, 11
Fircrest youths didn't go to
school at all, some for as
long as three months. Others
received an inadequate
education.
The
records of 23 youths at
Fircrest were reviewed by
the U.S. Department of
Education's Office for Civil
Rights (OCR). All but one
had attended public school
before going to Fircrest.
"I
think what the investigation
confirms is that public
schools are for every
child," said Stacy Gillett,
who filed the complaint as a
board member of the Arc of
Washington, an advocacy
organization for people with
disabilities.
Shoreline officials didn't
return repeated calls
seeking comment.
While
it did not admit wrongdoing,
the district entered into a
settlement agreement with
OCR that requires it to
revise its policies and
practices. Kids with
disabilities will not be
excluded from public school
and will have opportunities
to participate with other
children. An independent
team of professionals, along
with OCR, will oversee
Shoreline's progress.
For complete story,
click here.
State Senator Wants Juvenile Prison Shut
Down--August 7th, 2008--SPRINGDALE
- If Sen. Sue Madison had her way, the
Arkansas Juvenile Assessment and Treatment
Center in Alexander would be closed and
bulldozed.
She called the
juvenile prison
in southwest
Pulaski County a
"grim" place
while discussing
child welfare
issues during a
meeting of the
Arkansas Kids
Count Coalition
on Thursday.
It's a place
where the state
is "warehousing
juveniles
because someone
is mad at them,
either the
juvenile judge
or school
officials,"
Madison said.
The state's
challenge is
finding the
money to replace
the treatment
programs with
community-based
programs that
are more
effective, she
said.
Reform of
Arkansas'
juvenile justice
system is one of
a laundry list
of issues the
Coalition
supports to
improve the
welfare of
children across
the state, said
Paul Kelly, a
senior policy
analyst with
Arkansas
Advocates for
Children and
Families.
The juvenile
justice system
relies too
heavily on
confined
incarceration of
children who may
have family or
mental health
issues rather
than criminal
behavior.
The Kids Count
Coalition recommends
greater attention on
preventive measures,
placing children in
smaller therapeutic
environments and
expanded community
services to better
serve children
rather than shipping
them off to secure
confinement, away
from their schools
or families.
For complete story,
click here.
Teen Screen Lawsuit Advances: Federal Court
Affirms Family's Rightto Sue School for Subjecting Teen to Mental
Health Test Without Parental Consent--August 6th, 2008--SOUTH
BEND, Ind. A federal court has given the green light to a civil
rights lawsuit filed by Rutherford Institute attorneys in defense of
a 15-year-old Indiana student who was subjected by school officials
to a controversial mental health examination without the knowledge or
consent of her parents. In ruling that the lawsuit filed on behalf
of Chelsea Rhoades and her parents, Michael and Teresa Rhoades, may
proceed to trial, the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of
Indiana upheld the claims that the local school district deprived
the Rhoades family of their federal constitutional rights to family
integrity and privacy when it subjected Chelsea to the "TeenScreen"
examination. A copy of the lawsuit is available here:
http://www.rutherford.org/PDF/Filed_Complaint.pdf. For
complete story,
click here.
Straight, Inc. and KHK survivors protest
locally--July 15th, 2008-- Numerous
Straight, Inc. and Kids Helping Kids
survivors, along with other concerned
activists, traveled from 5 different states
and the Greater Cincinnati area to
participate in the July 11, 2008 protest in
Milford, Ohio. The group protested Kids
Helping Kids, a Pathway Family Center (aka
Pathway Family Center, PFC and/or KHK), a
behavior modification teen treatment
facility which is not only the current
renamed version of Straight, Inc, it also
still uses the STRAIGHT, Inc. treatment
modality.
The protesters’
mission was to express opposition and to
educate local residents about the “treatment
methods” used by PFC, methods which this
group believes pose a substantial risk of
harm to children. Specifically, the
protesters strongly object to, among other
things, the use of coercive thought reform,
isolation from parents, peers and society,
unlicensed host homes, unqualified peer
staff, unnecessary and/or disproportionate
punishments, and the denial of basic human
rights such as total bathroom privacy.
Additionally, the demonstrators are
extremely concerned about children having
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and other
serious mental health issues caused by their
ordeal in Pathway. Repeated reports to state
agencies of systematic abuse and other
improprieties have also been ignored for
years.
This protest comes on the heels of the U.S.
House of Representatives overwhelming
approval of H.R. 6358, The Stop Child Abuse
in Residential Programs for Teens Act of
2008. Recent congressional investigations
uncovered thousands of allegations of abuse,
neglect and youth deaths in private teen
behavior modification facilities in the
United States. This legislation aims to
protect youth in all private treatment
facilities, including Pathway Family Center.
The rocky start of the
protest itself did not deter the determined
activists from sharing their message. One
Pathway official (Monica Mertens, according
to Pathway insiders who spoke with
protesters) displayed unprofessional conduct
by confiscating one of the protestor’s
signs. PFC officials also summoned Miami
Township police twice. The first time was to
remove protesters from the far side of the
driveway who occasionally crossed it without
blocking incoming traffic. The second time,
participants were later told, was an attempt
to stop protesters from videotaping the
public event. Demonstrators did comply with
law enforcement’s request to stay off to the
sides of Pathway’s entrance but were never
asked to stop filming. In spite of these
incidents, the peaceful protest resumed
without further confrontation.
At the demonstration
itself, protesters carried and displayed
numerous signs including “Coercive Thought
Reform is Not Treatment,” “KHK Tortured Me,”
and “Close PFC Now”. Many drivers showed
solidarity either by honking, giving the
thumbs up or by shouting “Thank you! My
friend (or relative) was in there. This
place stinks!” In addition, many passersby
stopped, took literature and were given the
free DVD set of the congressional hearings
and KHK news footage. Even former clients of
Straight and KHK, with no previous knowledge
of our protests, no prior contact with
activist survivors, saw the protest and
stopped to speak with survivors. Both
supported our efforts.
As the event was
winding down, current PFC peer
staff/graduates initiated peaceful
discussions. At times the talks became a bit
heated and emotional. Certainly there was
much disagreement. But for the most part,
both sides remained civil.
At the end of the day,
the exhausted survivors unanimously agreed
that this event was nothing less than a
smashing success and felt rejuvenated by the
interest from the community. All
participants vowed to continue their quest
to educate the community about the harmful
Straight Inc treatment model used by Kids
Helping Kids, a Pathway Family Center. Their
mission is to protect children from these
harmful treatment methods.
(Webmaster Note: This protest was
organized in large part by
HEAL-KY. Want to join in
taking action to protect children from
torture,
contact us now!) For
complete story,
click here.
Charges filed in teen's
death at boot camp--July 15th, 2008--A
Montrose County grand jury Tuesday handed up a raft of charges
against operators and staff of a youth-rehabilitation camp in
connection with the death of a 15-year-old Utah boy who died in
their care. Caleb Jensen died in May 2007 from an untreated
staph infection at a court-ordered wilderness camp run by
Alternative Youth Adventures in Montrose. The program was
shuttered after his death and surrendered its state license.
The grand jury filed various charges of negligent homicide, child
abuse resulting in death and manslaughter against the staff and
management, as well as Keith Hooker, the camp's medical director.
For complete story,
click here.
US school rebuked for ibuprofen strip search--July
12th, 2008--A
divided US appeals court has ruled an
Arizona school violated the
constitutional
rights of a 13-year-old student by
conducting a strip search
for ibuprofen.
Suspecting that a
student had violated a policy against
prescription or over-the-counter drugs
without permission, public school
officials in Safford, Arizona, ordered a
search of Savana Redding.
A school nurse had
her remove her clothes, including her
bra, and shake her underwear to see if
Ms Redding was hiding anything.
The 2003 search,
prompted by a tip from another girl, did
not find ibuprofen, which is found in
common medications like Advil and Motrin
to treat pain like cramps and headaches.
Higher doses require
a prescription.
Previous court
decisions ruled the school did not
violate the US Constitution's Fourth
Amendment rights against unreasonable
searches and seizures because officials
have a legitimate interest in protecting
students from prescription drugs.
The 6-5 ruling by a
panel of the 9th US Circuit Court of
Appeals on Friday overturned an earlier
decision, setting out its reasoning in
an extensive 75-page ruling with many
details on the complications of eighth
grade life.
"Directing a
13-year-old girl to remove her clothes,
partially revealing her breasts and
pelvic area, for allegedly possessing
ibuprofen, an infraction that poses an
imminent danger to no one, and which
could be handled by
keeping her in the
principal's office until a parent
arrived or simply sending her home, was
excessively intrusive," Justice Kim
McLane Wardlaw wrote for the majority.
For complete story,
click here.
Memories of Casa by the Sea--July 10th,
2008-- I'm
not sure if your organization publishes
e-mails, but you have my permission to
publish mine. Yes, my name is Ramey Smith.
I read some of the articles on your web site
and found a few about a place called Casa by
the Sea in Ensenada, Mexico. I spent almost
one year there, from January to November in
1999. On my first day at Casa, I was pulled
off my bed, which was the top bunk, and fell
to the concrete floor busting my face and
nose . As I lay there bleeding, I thought
these people are going to kill me.
I was in fear for my
life at Casa, so I played along with the
program the best I could . I made it to
level four in the Bold Family. That is how
they identified us. They put us in a group,
gave it a name, and called it a "family."
Anyway, I finally got out of there when my
mother's terminal cancer got so bad my
father pulled me from Casa by the Sea. I
spent the last 2 1/2 months of my mothers
life at her bed side.
In my opinion, WWASP
are a bunch of criminals who manipulate
parents. But they did teach me one valuable
lesson which I can pass on to troubled
youth. Watch out. Your parents can send you
to a foreign prison over night and there is
nothing you can do about it. You have two
choices. You can resist and get beat up, or
you can play along until you get out.
I'm glad they finally
closed down Casa by the Sea. That place was
crazy. Sometimes I actually started to think
I was going crazy.
WWASP does have a
wonderful program for brain washing or pain
washing children to make them behave. But
I'll tell you what. It doesn't last. I ran
in to one of the upper level kids that
graduated from the program. We were at a
Taco Cabana at like 2:30 am and he and some
other kids came stumbling in drunk. He
didn't change. Not for long, at least.
Like in Mexico, where
Room Restriction (R&R) consisted of lying on
your face, chin pressed on the hard tile
floor, and your hands behind your back. They
might as well have hog tied us because if
you didn't hold that position on your own
for 4 to 6 to 12 hours, they had plenty of
un-educated idiots to make you wish you had.
I heard so many times kids screaming for
help, screaming to there parents, screaming
for mommy or daddy, screaming out to God to
help them. What could we do? If we tried to
help, we would be in the same boat. We'd
lose our few privileges, get demoted to
Level One and spend 2 to 4 weeks in R&R with
our chins on the floor.
I wish we had been
strong enough and organized enough to take
that place over by force. I remember
thinking about it all the time when I began
my captivity there. We out-numbered the
staff by at least 20 or 30 of us to 1 staff
member. I would have enjoyed hog tying those
bastards up and letting them enjoy some Room
Restriction, and feed them rotten fish and
other horrible things like they fed us. I
won't even go into how bad the food was.
Well, that's why they wouldn't let us talk
without permission, or speak English. They
knew if we had gotten organized, we would
have overrun the place.
I had dreams about it
after I left that godforsaken crap hole. I
would wake up in the middle of the night and
run into the hallway of my house for
formation.
I learned a lot of
Spanish while I was in Mexico because I had
no choice. But I still can't stand it. I had
a dream of going back there one day and
liberating all the children whose parents
are paying top dollar to have them
victimized. For complete story,
click here.
PRISON NEWS
Innocents Lost--June
21st, 2009--A MAJORITY OF the Supreme Court ruled last week
that prisoners do not have a constitutional right to
post-conviction DNA testing. The decision was based in large
part on the assertion that federal judicial intervention was
unnecessary because the great majority of state legislatures
already had passed laws to give prisoners adequate access to the
revolutionary technology. The majority's argument has merit, but
the decision in District Attorney's Office v. Osborne was
nonetheless wrong.
The decision sprang from the case of
William G. Osborne, who was convicted of
the brutal 1993 kidnapping, rape and
assault of an Alaska woman. A
rudimentary DNA test performed on semen
found at the crime scene excluded two
suspects but not Mr. Osborne. Mr.
Osborne's trial lawyer declined a more
advanced DNA test for fear that the
results could definitively implicate her
client.
On appeal, Alaskan courts denied Mr.
Osborne's request for further DNA
testing, concluding that eyewitness
accounts and other evidence against him
were so strong that DNA tests would
likely not be dispositive. A federal
appeals court ultimately ruled that Mr.
Osborne was entitled to further testing;
the Supreme Court by a 5 to 4 majority
overturned this decision last week.
For complete story,
click here.
Keystone Cops at the Police Lab--June
18th, 2009--When CSI became the most popular drama on
television earlier this decade, forensic scientists employed by
police departments emerged from anonymity. Discerning viewers
seemed to understand that real- life police laboratory personnel
(filling a job description officially known as "criminalist")
do not solve murders and rapes within an hour. Still, the
glamorization generated by television drama had begun,
increasing exponentially with the spinoff shows CSI: Miami and
CSI: New York.
Many criminalists indeed serve justice well, conscientiously
analyzing evidence found at crime scenes, including blood,
fingerprints, scrapings from beneath fingernails, hair, dirt,
shoe impressions, tire tracks, hard copy documents, computer
messages and more. The good ones keep up with new forensic
techniques, write objective reports, consult openly with
defense attorneys as well as prosecutors, testify truthfully in
court and never lose sight of the
ultimate goal — convicting the guilty while excluding the
innocent from the pool of suspects.
But as it becomes increasingly evident that wrongful
convictions constitute a cancer within the criminal justice
system, it becomes simultaneously obvious that numerous
criminalists are part of the problem. One incompetent or
dishonest criminalist can infect hundreds of cases in a crime
laboratory, with some of those cases mutating
into wrongful convictions. For complete story,
click here.
Elusive Justice Overdue In the Case
of Political Prisoner Paul Minor--June
18th, 2009--It is time for the Obama Justice Department
to reverse one of the most egregiously political persecutions of
the Bush era - Paul Minor's bogus conviction on trumped up
charges of public corruption "bribery" despite a total lack of
evidence that his role as the top
funder of Democratic candidates in Mississippi netted him
anything other than misery and a harsh prison sentence.
Attorney General Eric Holder stated recently that "elections
have consequences." That premise should apply not just to
President Obama's pick for the Supreme Court and appointment of
new U.S. Attorneys, as Holder mentioned. It should compel a
swift review of the unjust prosecutions of prominent Democrats
targeted by the Bush Justice Department.
Paul Minor's case is Exhibit A.
Paul Minor's attorneys recently filed a straightforward,
compelling brief with the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
outlining the multiple errors the prosecution made in convicting
Minor for bribery despite the government not being required to
prove a quid pro quo. In such cases, crystal clear case law
requires the presiding judge to instruct the jury that they can
only convict a campaign fundraiser of bribing public officials
if clear "this for that" evidence exists of a quid pro quo
agreement leading to a specific official act by the recipient in
exchange for the campaign contributions. For complete
story, |