This is a staff list for Focal Point Academy in Mesquite, NV
This program appears to be closed.
(we are working to acquire the complete records for ALL years)
We advise current and/or former staff to report any abuses you may have witnessed while working at Focal Point Academy. For information on your rights and how to take action, visit www.heal-online.org/blowthewhistle.htm. If you were fired or forced to resign because you opposed any illegal and/or unethical practices at Focal Point Academy, you have the right to take action.
If you were harmed (family or survivor) by Focal Point Academy, please contact [email protected] if you remember the long-term employees and from which years. This will help! Also, if you recognize any of these staff as having worked at another program, please send in any information about their past or present employment at other facilities and/or cults.
Please do not subject your child to Focal Point Academy, if they are there now, rescue them!
Name |
Unit/Position |
Additional Information |
Shaquel Cannon | Owner | |
Glen Horlacher | Owner | |
Boyd Hooper | Admissions | |
OTHER | OTHER |
Links for more information on lawsuits and abuse at this facility: http://www.nowpublic.com/green-vs-focal-point-academy-sue-scheff |
External Link: www.teenadvocatesusa.org/sue_scheff_lawsuit.html | ||
Tough Love and Free Speech--August 24th, 2007--...At some point, Sue Scheff became aware of online bulletin boards where teens who had been in WWASP programs were telling horrific stories of sexual, physical, and emotional abuse. Users also posted media accounts detailing how nine WWASP-affiliated programs were closed following police investigations, regulatory infractions and/or allegations of child abuse. Scheff later wrote on her website that she had become uncomfortable with some of the organization's methods. She removed her daughter from the program, and began posting her own allegations against WWASP on online forums, under several different names. She also set up her own consultant business, called Parents Universal Resource Experts (PURE), and began taking referral payments for placing teens, just as WWASP does. While this sort of practice isn't illegal, it's widely considered unethical. Conflicts of interest arise when consultants get higher referral fees from some programs than they get from others. The temptation arises to place kids in the programs that pay more, even though these may not be the programs best suited to a particular child. Once you're being regularly paid by a program, it’s hard to be objective about its quality. This is why codes of ethics in psychology and psychiatry typically bar such "dual relationships." Under the Lanham Act, which bans business competitors from making false and inflammatory claims about rivals, WWASP sued Scheff over her critical online posts. Because the court was able to substantiate Scheff’s claims with vivid testimony from victims, WWASP lost. Soon, however, the online boards buzzed again with yet more reports of abuse at new programs, and this time they included programs where Sue Scheff was referring children. It was around this time that Scheff launched her own lawsuit against Bock. Scheff had helped Bock remove her two sons from a WWASP program, but Bock eventually become outraged by what she considered to be Scheff’s unethical referrals. The $11 million judgment resulted only after Bock didn't show up in court to defend herself. Meanwhile, child welfare investigators substantiated charges of abuse in 2005 at the Whitmore Academy in Utah, a program to which Scheff made referrals. Regulators shut the program down. Just last month, another complaint was filed against Scheff and another program where she places teens, the Focal Point Academy in Nevada. In that filing, a Florida couple alleges that Scheff failed to disclose that she was being paid by Focal Point, nor did she tell them that the business was licensed only as a foster home, not for residential treatment. The complaint describes these failures to disclose as “fraudulent misrepresentations” and “kickbacks.” For complete story, click here. |
||
On February 4th, 2016, HEAL visited www.focalpointacademy.com and found it was no longer owned by Focal Point Academy in NV. It appears to have closed in late 2008 or early 2009. There is no answer at the number available for this program. It is on this basis that we report this program is closed. | ||
PROGRAM NAME/LOCATION | UNLICENSED | RESTRAINT | SOLITARY | INCOMMUNICADO | DECEPTIVE |
Focal Point Academy More Info | ? | Y | ? | Y | Y |
*(Focal Point Academy, like many other programs in this industry, keeps a "tight lid" on any specific information regarding their staff, qualifications, and practices. Please contact us with the names of any staff of which you have firsthand knowledge or experience. Thank you for your help.)
Return to www.beyondbusiness.net/youarenext.htm or top of page