
Children were
isolated and hogtied, they report
Boulder woman exposes network of
compounds that incarcerates kids in the
U.S.
and abroad
By Lou
Kilzer
News Staff Writer (Rocky Mountain News -- November 15, 1998)
Matt Grise is
not alone.
The
15-year-old honor student from Rifle captured Colorado's attention
this month with reports that he is locked inside a fundamentalist
Christian compound in Louisiana. He committed no crime but is not
even free to talk to his grandmother.
Many American
teen-agers share his fate.
Alexia Parks,
a Boulder businesswoman, has for two years led a national movement
to expose a network of religious and secular compounds that
incarcerate
America
teen-agers both in the United States and in places as remote as
Western Samoa.
Unlike what
friends say of Matt, most of these youths are truly troubled. Their
parents -- or often their single parent -- simply thought that a
private lockup was the way to save their offspring from drugs,
alcohol and crime.
Some programs
work well. But sometimes when the parents buy into "tough love" as a
way to readjust their daughters and sons, they unwittingly buy into
terror.
That point
was driven home last week when police in the Czech Republic raided a
school for American youths that is part of a network based in St.
George, Utah.
Fifty-seven
youngsters were freed from the
Morava
Academy,
and four staffers were charged with child cruelty, including Glenda
Roach, the principal of the school, and her husband, Steven, of St.
George.
Some of the
children complained that they were isolated in a room and forced to
lie flat on their stomachs with their hands tied behind their backs,
said police investigator Petr Netik. They were not free to leave and
were involved in strict "behavior modification" courses.
Robert
Bezdek, an attorney for the staffers, told The Associated Press that
the children may have lied to police.
The St.
George consortium is known by various names: Teen Help, World Wide
Association and Adolescent Services International. It sends kids,
sometimes shackled and surrounded by guards, to facilities in
Mexico, Samoa and Jamaica as well as Montana, South Carolina and
Utah.
Parks, who
runs a Boulder-based Internet firm, agrees that many parents who pay
up to $150 a day for their child to be locked up believe they have
done the right thing. But many, she learned, have not.
Her journey
into the world of private youth incarceration began with the
independent fundamentalist compounds in the South, like the one
holding Matt Grise.
In the summer
of 1996, a young relative came to visit Parks. The 13-year-old with
a genius IQ was having trouble with her mother.
To Parks, the
girl was nothing other than a warm, affectionate child with a keen
imagination and a desire to attend law school at Stanford. The two
got along well, and the teen-ager began answering phones at Parks'
business.
But by the
fall of 1996, the girl was back with her mother and trouble resumed.
Soon Parks heard that the woman had sent her child to a compound
three hours south of St. Louis.
Parks
investigated and discovered a network of schools that incarcerate
children, often in the name of the Lord. She dug deeper.
Some of these
places have a similar structure, Parks said. For the first 30 days,
the child must remain within six feet of a "buddy," walk with his or
her head down and speak with no one else. Corporal punishment is the
rule. Touching is prohibited. Often medical treatment is prohibited
for the first 30 days.
It is not
unusual for the child to be confined to a dark, small room as a
punishment. Contact with the outside world, if allowed, is
restricted to parents. No grandparents are allowed. The educational
emphasis is on the Bible.
What Parks
also found was how little anyone could do for these children. In a
lengthy article she has written on the World Wide Web called An
American Gulag, Parks says: "In America, adults can be
locked up after a public trial with guarantees of due process. It is
only children who have no way to defend themselves from adults. Only
children who can be locked up with no witnesses, no evidence, no
defense attorney, no independent judge, no rules of procedure, no
watching public, no right of appeal, not even a right to be heard."
She's right,
according to child advocacy officials.
"Children
really have no rights," said Seth Grob, a lawyer for the Rocky
Mountain Children's Law Center. "Basically, parents who have legal
custody of their children can determine where to send their
children, and that decision is not reviewable unless some party
brings it to a court's attention."
Even then, it
is difficult to act without proof of child abuse, and proof is hard
to come by because of the child's inability to contact the outside
world.
"When it
comes to children's rights in this country and what parents can do
to their children, the stories I have heard are unimaginable.
Unimaginable," said Christine Doyle, lead researcher for Amnesty
International in New York. "Sending them to Hawaii, to Jamaica to
make them straight instead of gay, to make them go through shock
therapy. The fact of a juvenile's inability to take care of
themselves, to have any say in their future is frightening.
"I've come
across these stories and, trust me, they're absolutely horrific."
One case that
gained national media attention this year involves David Van
Blarigan.
The
16-year-old was awakened just after midnight last November in his
Oakland, Calif., home. Two large men had come to take him away.
Though he did
not drink or use drugs and had no criminal record, his parents found
him hard to control and decided that the services of the St. George
consortium were needed. The men were from an arm of the St. George
group that specializes in seizing children and delivering them to
institutions.
As he
screamed to be let go, the men took him out of his house and took
him to the Brightway Adolescent Hospital in St. George.
Found by the
hospital to be needing longer term care, David was sent to
Tranquility Bay in Jamaica, one of the consortium's foreign
detention centers. Through a momentary mix-up by the transport team,
David was able to break away long enough to call an adult friend
who, in turn, called the Alameda County District Attorney's Office
in California.
Deputy DA
Robert Hutchins thought he had a possible case of kidnapping and
went to court. The psychological exam at Brightway was a smoke
screen, he said, since David's parents had already signed on for a
year at Tranquility Bay.
Judge Ken
Kawaichi was not impressed with the arguments. As he dismissed
Hutchins' motion to have David returned, some 100 parents and
supporters of the Teen Help group broke out in cheers.
Parental
rights were reaffirmed.
California
attorney Thomas M. Burton, who is preparing 10 individual lawsuits
against the Teen Help and its related companies, says he understands
the parents.
"Single
mothers become hysterical, desperate, looking for help and as a last
resort turn to these groups at $3,000 a month. ... They're willing
to pay anything, borrow anything, mortgage anything to come up with
the money. Because no one is more important to a parent than one's
child."
Often, he
said, they find high quality facilities that help their children.
However, he
said, the Morava Academy in the Czech Republic; Tranquility Bay;
Paradise Cove in Western Samoa; Casa By the Sea in Ensenada, Mexico;
and Teen Help's operations in the United States are not the garden
spots their brochures depict.
"(The kids)
are being hog-tied with their feet behind up next to their hands,"
he said about some of the facilities. "They are kept in isolation.
Food is very, very bad. Very primitive accommodations. They claim to
have an educational component, which is a joke. It's a self-study
test is what it is."
The children
are held incommunicado for the first few months, then progress
through six levels of increasing freedom. "The more courageous these
kids are in standing up to this abuse, the longer he or she stays at
that lower level," said Burton. "Also we find that the richer the
parent, the longer the kid is going to need the services of that
program."
Justin
Nielson, a manager at Adolescent Services International's St. George
office, defended the quality of the programs.
He said that
98.6 percent of parents say they made a good choice in putting child
in program, while 96.7 percent would recommend the program to a
friend.
The transport
service does not constitute kidnapping, he said. "In all cases, we
have to have a signed and notarized permission from the parents
which states exactly what we are supposed to do and exactly where
the youth is being transported from and where they are going to."
Since
publishing American Gulag on the Internet, Parks has
become a lightning rod for the controversy surrounding private
imprisonment of American kids. She receives so much e-mail that she
has established a Web page --
www.TeenAid.org -- where parents can compare notes, and she is
discussing with New York publishers converting American
Gulag into a hard-cover book.
http://www.teenliberty.org/Teens_Locked_Inside_Gulags.htm
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