We advise current and/or former staff to report any abuses
you may have witnessed while working at Mount Bachelor 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 Mount Bachelor Academy,
you have the right to take action.
This program is closed.
Name
|
Unit/Position
|
Additional Information |
Sharon Bitz |
Executive Director |
Bitz has been with Mount Bachelor for 18 years (since 1991--Since it was
CEDU) |
Matthew Lovell |
Program Director |
Lovell was also Program Director at Cascade School, and private practice
Family Therapist and most recently (prior to Mount Bachelor) Dean of
Advising at Carlbrook School. |
Kelli Hoffman |
Admissions Director |
Hoffman has been with Mount Bachelor since 1990 (CEDU). |
Bill Hoffman |
Residential Director |
(Husband to Kelli Hoffman) Hoffman has worked at Mount Bachelor since 1990 (CEDU). |
Alex Bitz |
Co-Founder |
This is definitely a CEDU
program to this day (July 28th, 2009). |
Will Bucknum |
Department Head |
|
Stephanie Drynan |
Spanish Teacher |
|
Jason Jackson |
Teacher |
to MBA, be was a House Parent for Vanessa Behan Crisis Nursery. Jason
was hired at MBA in 2004. |
Sammie Joy Meek |
Librarian |
Sammie started working at MBA in September 2001. |
Christina Munjar (Kimbel) |
Registrar |
Christina (Kimbel) Munjar, our Registrar, has been with MBA since February
2007. |
Mike Phay |
Department Head |
Mike has worked at MBA since 2007 and has worked with youth for over 14
years.* |
Patsy Savage |
Sub Teacher |
|
Jeff Smith |
Teacher |
|
Robin Smith-Jackson |
Teacher |
Robin joined the MBA cult in 2005. |
Alan Stearns |
Teacher |
|
Stephen Strong |
Department Head |
|
Susie Carroll |
Finance Manager |
Susie has been at MBA since the beginning in 1988 (
CEDU). |
Kathy Carter |
Human Resources Mgr. |
She joined the MBA staff in 1988, two weeks before our first students
arrived.( CEDU). |
Bill Gowen |
Director of Operations |
|
Carla Culpepper |
Exec. Asst. |
Carla coordinates all of our Parent Seminars and is the Assistant for Mount
Bachelor's entire Administration Team, including Sharon Bitz, Executive
Director, Mathew Lovell, Program Director, and Jim Clark, Clinical Oversight
Coordinator. |
Carol Kirsch |
Asst. |
|
Melody McKenzie |
Asst. |
Prior to MBA, Melody worked for the Crook County District Attorney and the
Crook County Sheriff‘s Department. |
Dana Jones |
Admissions |
|
Alex Bitz |
Alumni Services |
He is a founding
staff member of MBA. |
Ron Cavanaugh |
Residence Supervisor |
Ron joined Mount Bachelor in 1996. He has worked for CEDU and Cascade School
in California, and the Amity School in Italy. |
Mina Steen |
Parent Liaison |
Mina determines when and if parents can speak with or visit their children.
She has completed the Professionals In
Residence Program at the Hazelden Foundation‘s Center for Youth and
Families. Her degree is from
Capella University. Steen has also worked in medical
research. |
Lynn K. Vigil |
Phase IV Counselor |
|
Jim Clark |
Oversight Coordinator |
Jim was the Director of Residence of Happy Valley School for 17 years. |
Erick Bauman |
Facilities |
Erick Bauman joined the Mount Bachelor Academy family in
2008. |
Janet Bechard |
Food Services |
Janet started work with MBA in 1995, and has 11 years experience with youth.* |
Jerry Bell |
Maintenance |
|
Karen Bell |
Food Services |
Karen joined the MBA team in 2002. She has worked with youth for over 5 years. |
Jon Cason |
Driver |
Jon joined the MBA team in 2008. |
Diane Dendy |
Transportation |
Diane joined the MBA team in 2002. |
Diane Hoke |
Food Services |
Before coming to MBA in 1994, she was a cook at Crook County High School. |
Gary Marletto |
Driver |
|
Ray Merriam |
Driver |
|
Sue Puckett |
Food Services Asst. |
Sue joined the MBA team in 2000. She has been working with at-risk youth for
about 11 years.* |
Jerred Ashcraft |
Phase I Leader |
Jerred “Red” Ashcraft came to MBA in May of 2005. He spent his first three
years working in Phase II in the roles of Mentor and Assistant Phase Leader.
Reportedly worked for 4 years at Boy Scouts of America until reportedly
terminated for using same tactics he used at MBA. He's now reportedly
operating an Adult Foster Care Home called "Sunflower Foster Homes" in
Prineville, OR. This was reported via e-mail to HEAL on 6/10/19. |
Dean Bonanno |
Phase I Supervisor |
Dean Bonanno, Phase I Field Supervisor, has been on staff since September
1994. |
Corey May |
Phase I Staff |
Corey has most recently worked as a wilderness instructor at
Second
Nature and Adirondack
Leadership Expeditions. |
Randi McDonnell |
Phase I Staff |
McDonnell began at Mount Bachelor in April, 2008. |
Frank Menhams |
Phase II Leader |
There is no additional info on this staff.* |
Carol Churchill-Dicks |
Phase II Staff |
Carol joined the MBA team in 2007. |
Steve Houghton |
Phase II Staff |
Steve joined the MBA team in 1988, its founding year. |
Kori Kuaana |
Phase II Staff |
In 1995, Kori "graduated" from the MBA program as a student. |
Tasha Mohr |
Phase II Staff |
|
Laura Moore |
Phase II Staff |
Laura joined the MBA team in September 2007. She holds a Bachelors in
Biochemistry from Lehigh University and and is also working on her PhD in
Biochemistry at Northwestern University. |
Jared Sartell |
Phase II Staff |
|
Gregg Andrick |
Phase III Leader |
He has 10 years of working in the boarding school setting the specialize in
"Emotional Growth"[cult-like coercive thought reform]. Prior to MBA he
worked for several years at
Boulder
Creek Academy as a Team Leader. |
Kaysie Dannemiller |
Phase III Staff |
She has also worked with Catherine Freer Wilderness Expeditions, Ascent, and
Phoenix Outdoor. |
Morgan Davis |
Phase III Staff |
Prior to joining the MBA team, he worked at a wilderness therapy program and
an all male treatment facility. * |
Scott Johnson |
Phase III Staff |
Scott joined the MBA team in June 2009. He comes to us with a over 25 years of
experience working with youth.* |
Naty Zamora |
Phase III Staff |
Naty has 20 years of
experience working with adolescents.* |
Jeff Morse |
Program Asst. |
Jeff joined the MBA team in 2006. Before MBA, he worked in a myriad of
professions, including remodeling motels. |
Shelly Powell |
Program Coordinator |
Shelly started working at MBA in November 2006. |
Mark Rhoden |
Program Asst. |
|
Anne Stout |
Program Asst. |
|
Tracy Best |
Night Staff |
Tracy joined the MBA team in 2007. She is a Managing member of Tracy Best &
Associates LLC. |
Rebecca Griffith |
Night Staff/Night Watch |
Beckie Griffith has been a member of Mount Bachelor's Night Watch staff since
August 2008. |
Kirk Lange |
Night Supervisor |
Prior to joining the MBA team, Kirk was a Life Skills Facilitator Rimrock
Trails Alcohol Treatment Center in Prineville, Oregon. |
Tony McLain |
Night Supervisor |
|
Jessica Mueller |
Residential Asst. |
|
Allison Wilson |
Night Watch |
Allison joined the MBA
team in July 2008. She comes to us with experience in the food service and
lumber industries. |
Jaime Zamora |
Residential Asst. |
|
Deborah Coehlo |
Medication Oversight |
|
Thomas Coehlo |
Medication Oversight |
Deborah's husband. |
Crystal Cox |
Medical Asst. |
Crystal joined the MBA team in July 2008. |
Susie Fisher |
Health Services Coordinator |
Susie joined the MBA team in 2008.* |
Kat O'Brien |
Phase II Staff |
Reportedly ran the "Forever Young" life step. |
Jon Prins |
Staff |
Reported by survivor via e-mail on 9/19/21. |
Malia Mullahey |
Staff |
Reported by survivor via e-mail on 9/19/21. |
Desiree West |
Staff |
Reported by survivor via e-mail on 9/19/21. |
|
|
|
*(Mount Bachelor 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.) |
|
|
|
DHS, Mount
Bachelor Academy Settle Case--October
2nd, 2010--(source: ktvz.com)--PRINEVILLE,
Ore. -- Nearly a year after the state Department of Human Services
ordered closure of the Mount Bachelor Academy, a therapeutic boarding school
for teens east of Prineville, a settlement has been reached that the
shuttered school’s owners say should clear the way for them to open a new
school at the location.
Early
last November, the state gave Aspen
Education Group, operators of the private
boarding school 26 miles east of Prineville,
72 hours to remove students, claiming its
seven-month investigation into the programs
found several incidents of “abuse and
neglect,” and “serious violations of
Oregon’s licensing standards.” For complete
story,
click here.
For more on this story,
click here.
|
State finds
child abuse and neglect at school--November
4th, 2009--The
state of Oregon has shut down a boarding school for troubled teens in
Central Oregon after allegedly finding a pattern of child abuse and neglect
of its students, forcing parents around the country to scramble to bring
home their children.
"Our first priority is to ensure the safety of the students at Mt.
Bachelor Academy," Erinn Kelley-Siel, Director of the Children, Adults and
Families division of the Department of Human Services, said Wednesday in a
statement. "Ultimately, the investigations revealed such serious abuse and
widespread violations of Oregon's licensing rules that we decided we needed
to take immediate action."
The results of the Oregon Department of Human Services seven-month
investigation of the Mount Bachelor Academy outside Prineville, Ore., were
given to Crook County authorities to decide whether to pursue criminal
charges.
Triggered by a complaint, the investigation found nine cases of alleged
abuse and neglect involving five students since 2007.
Most came out of a mandatory treatment program called Lifesteps. At least
two students were forced to act out sexual roles in front of staff and other
kids during treatment sessions, one had to act out past physical abuse, one
was not properly supervised on a trip to Europe, and others were subjected
to obscene and degrading comments from staff, the investigators alleged. For
complete story,
click here.
For more on this story,
click here
,
here,
here,
here, and
here.
|
On July 7th, 2010, we received an e-mail from a former Mount
Bachelor Academy staffer, identifying information has been removed per the
request of the author:
On April 6th, 2010, we received an e-mail from a former MBA
staffer, indentifying information has been removed per the request of the
author:
External Link:
http://healthland.time.com/2011/07/12/former-students-of-a-school-for-troubled-teens-sue-for-emotional-sexual-abuse/
|
External Link:
http://online.wsj.com/article/AP16c969450d924f65bf8ba47fd8c0869a.html |
Lawsuit Against Mt. Bachelor Academy Expands
Now Totals 17 Playoffs; Damages Sought Top $25
Million
By Barney Lerten and Shanna Mendiola,
KTVZ.COM
POSTED: 1:42 pm PDT July 6, 2011
UPDATED: 11:35 am PDT August 24, 2011
PRINEVILLE, Ore. -- Eight more former
students of the now-closed Mt. Bachelor Academy near Prineville, one of
Oregon’s best-known “tough love” boarding schools, joined a previously
filed lawsuit Wednesday alleging emotional, physical and sexual abuse,
their attorneys announced.The lawsuit, which is pending in Multnomah
County Circuit Court, now includes 17 plaintiffs who allege they were
abused as children at Mt. Bachelor Academy, their lawyers said.The suit
seeks $25.5 million in compensatory damages, and states that punitive
damages will be sought as well. The suit is being brought by attorneys
Kelly Clark and the Portland law firm O’Donnell Clark and Crew, who
often bring child abuse cases in Oregon and around the nation.In a news
release, Clark said of the latest filing, “Sadly, we now know of dozens
of kids who were subject to the kind of systematic humiliation,
degradation and outright abuse that was inherent in the Mount Bachelor
program, and eight of these have now joined this lawsuit, which seeks to
achieve justice for these plaintiffs and to prevent future abuse in
other similar programs in Oregon and around the country." We contend
there simply is no excuse or justification for abusing children,
even—especially—under the guise of ‘tough love.’”The lawsuit was
originally filed in July and alleges claims of battery, negligence, and
infliction of emotional distress against Mt. Bachelor Academy and its
parent companies as defendants.Those include Aspen Education Group – a
national conglomerate of therapeutic boarding schools which, at its peak
had nearly 40 youth programs throughout the United States – as well as
Aspen’s parent company, CRC Health Group. CRC Health Group is a large
national healthcare corporation controlled by Bain Capital, a private
equity firm with $65 billion in assets.The attorneys said Mt. Bachelor
Academy was closed by the state of Oregon in November of 2009 based on
the findings of a state investigation related to charges of systemic
abuse and neglect.They quoted a report by the Oregon Department of Human
Services that said Mt. Bachelor Academy used “punitive, humiliating,
degrading and traumatizing” tactics as “treatment.”At the time of its
closure in 2009, Mt. Bachelor Academy reportedly had more than 75 staff
supervising about 90 students who were being charged $6,400 per month in
tuition, the lawyers said.The largest defendant -- CRC Health Group –
has been the subject of increasing scrutiny regarding the safety
children in its facilities, the attorneys said.In late July, the state
of Tennessee reportedly decided to stop placing children at a large CRC
Health facility following the deaths of several patients at that
facility, citing concerns for the well-being of children in its
care.--Earlier story:Nine former students of Mount Bachelor Academy, a
now-closed program for troubled teens east of Prineville have filed a
$14 million lawsuit against the school and its parent companies,
alleging serious abuse -- something its operators and supporters are
strongly denying.Their attorney, Kelly Clark of the Portland law firm
O'Donnell Clark & Crew LLP, said Thursday this is only the first step
toward closure and justice for what they claim happened."My folks have
two reasons for doing this," said Clark. "No. 1 is to get this behind
them, to have closure and healing and justice for themselves. But
secondly and equally important to them is they want to get the word out
that some of these 'Tough love' schools are not good places -- and there
are hundreds of them all over the country."People living near the closed
school about 35 miles east of Prineville, had a different impression of
the private boarding school."I thought it was a great school," said
Jarrod Warren of Prineville."Every time when I was in middle school, I'd
drive by there with my parents and I'd see a whole bunch of kids down
there. And now I drive by and there's nothing now. ""Not exactly what
has happened at the school, but what happened in their past and how the
school has changed them, but this is definitely different," said Tasha
Asbow, also of Prineville.The school was shut down by the state in 2009
after finding evidence to back allegations of repeated neglect and
abuse.The 52-page lawsuit filed by the nine former students who have
chosen not to be named claim physical and psychological child abuse.They
say parents were instructed not to believe anything they say, and they
were denied basic medical care. The claim also states they were sexually
abused.The attorney for Mount Bachelor Academy, Greg Chaimov Davis
Wright Tremaine LLP said in a written statement Thursday afternoon, that
these alleged incidents took place before the school was purchased by a
"nationally recognized network of therapeutic schools and programs that
espouse comprehensive best practices and safety protocols."Chaimov
closed his statement by saying, "Following review of this complaint, we
firmly stand by our original statement and vigorously deny any and all
charges of mistreatment."The case now goes into civil litigation, where
it could be thrown out, settled or eventuallyr heard by a jury.
NewsChannel 21 looked into claims that the school might reopen, but
lawyers for the school say they have no plans to do that at this
time.----Our earlier story on the two sides' news releases:Nine former
students of one of Oregon’s best known “tough love” boarding schools, a
facility east of Prineville that was shut by the state two years ago,
filed a lawsuit Wednesday alleging emotional, physical and sexual
abuse.The suit is being brought by attorneys Kelly Clark, Steve Crew,
Gilion Dumas, Kristian Roggendorf, Peter Janci and the Portland law firm
O’Donnell Clark and Crew, who often bring child abuse cases in Oregon
and around the nation.The suit alleges claims of battery, negligence,
and infliction of emotional distress against Mount Bachelor Academy and
its parent companies, Aspen Education Group and CRC Health. The suit
seeks more than $14 million in compensatory damages, and punitive
damages will be sought as well.An attorney for the school's operator,
Greg Chaimov, later issued a statement denying the charges, and issued a
stronger denial of the allegations Thursday. It reads:"We have reviewed
the complaint and are confident that the allegations will be proven to
be untrue. The events that Mr. Clark and his clients allege happened at
Mount Bachelor Academy simply did not. We regret that, of the many
hundreds of students who attended the program, there are these nine who
consider themselves to have been mistreated. ""Mount Bachelor Academy
(MBA) was a licensed and accredited program that helped troubled teens
with serious behavioral issues who could not otherwise be successful at
home, in school or in life. The truth is that MBA provided a nurturing
and caring environment for over 1,000 young people over the course of
its history, one that leading mental health professionals trusted enough
for their own children. The strongest refutation of the claims comes
from the many hundreds of families who have thanked MBA for saving their
children when all else had failed. ""All dates of alleged incidents
occurred prior to the school’s acquisition by a nationally recognized
network of therapeutic schools and programs that espouse comprehensive
best practices and safety protocols. Following review of this complaint,
we firmly stand by our original statement and vigorously deny any and
all charges of mistreatment. "The rest of the release about the
lawsuit's allegations:Located 26 miles east of Prineville, the
controversial “therapeutic boarding school” known as Mount Bachelor
Academy was closed by the state of Oregon in November of 2009 based on
the findings of an investigation related to charges of systemic abuse
and neglect.According to a report by the Oregon Department of Human
Services, Mount Bachelor Academy reportedly used “punitive, humiliating,
degrading and traumatizing” tactics as “treatment” 00– an approach some
say stems from the Synanon self-help group of the 1960's, which was
rejected as a cult by mainstream mental health community by the late
1970s. At the time of its closure in 2009, Mt. Bachelor Academy
reportedly had more than 75 staff supervising approximately 90 students
who were being charged a tuition of $6,400 per month.“The so-called
‘treatment’ that these children were forced to endure on a daily basis
at Mt. Bachelor Academy is obscene. Not only did the program ‘break kids
down’, it did nothing to build them back up,” said Kelly Clark, an
attorney for the plaintiffs. “We intend to prove that this wasn’t
education, it wasn’t treatment and it wasn’t ‘tough love’ – this was
abuse.”The plaintiffs in Wednesday’s suit, who all attended Mount
Bachelor Academy in the late 1990s, allege: that they were subjected to
regular psychological abuse and shaming, including being required to
reenact traumatic experiences (such as prior instances of child sexual
abuse) in front of their peers; that they were subjected to extreme
isolation and prolonged deprivations of food, water, shelter, and basic
medical care; that students were required to go days with little or no
sleep and were also regularly forced into “chain gang” style labor; that
phone calls to their families were limited and were monitored by Mt.
Bachelor Academy staff; and that parents were instructed by staff not to
believe their children if they claimed malfeasance or abuse – i.e., the
children will lie, it is all part of the treatment process, parents were
told.The allegations in the lawsuit are consistent with the findings by
the Oregon Department of Human Services. In late 2009, following a seven
month investigation, DHS found multiple incidences of “abuse and
neglect” and “serious violations of Oregon’s licensing standards.”The
DHS report cited nine substantiated claims of abusive practices,
including “punitive, humiliating, degrading and traumatizing” activities
such as “sexualized role pay and reenactment of traumatic events, such
as prior physical or sexual abuse.” The state also found that these were
not isolated incidents; instead, “many of [the abusive] behaviors fell
within the range of behavior expected, encouraged or condoned by the
Mount Bachelor Academy program itself . . . .”DHS determined that “MBA
poses a serious danger to public health or safety of children . . .
[and] should not be permitted to continue operating as a therapeutic
boarding school for children.” Thereafter, in November of 2009, the
state gave Mt. Bachelor Academy 72 hours to shut down its program and
remove students from its facility. The facility closed on November 3,
2009. Later, in October 2010, as part of a settlement of a suit by Mt.
Bachelor against the state contesting the DHS findings of abuse, Aspen
Education Group and CRC Health Group (the parent company’s of Mount
Bachelor Academy) agreed that DHS had reasonable cause to believe that
abuse or neglect had occurred at the school, and that DHS had a
reasonable basis to investigate and to seek corrective actions.The
lawsuit names Mount Bachelor Academy and its parent companies as
defendants. Those include Aspen Education Group – a national
conglomerate of therapeutic boarding schools which, at its peak had
nearly 40 youth programs throughout the United States – as well as
Aspen’s parent company, CRC Health Group. CRC Health Group is a large
national healthcare corporation owned by Bain Capital, a private equity
firm with $65 billion in assets.4Wednesday’s lawsuit is part of a larger
response to decades of abuse and mistreatment in so-called “tough love”
facilities – both inside and outside of the Aspen Education
Group.According to previous news reports, at least four children have
died in Aspen-owned facilities since 2004. One of those incidences
occurred in Oregon in 2009 – the death of student Sergey Blashchishen
during a wilderness hike in the Redmond-based Sagewalk Wilderness
School.Blashchishen, a minor at the Sagewalk facility, collapsed in
August of 2009 while hiking on his second day Aspen’s Sagewalk program.
Staff had reportedly ignored repeated signs of a serious medical
problem, and the boy died at the scene. The lead sherif’s investigator
on the Sagewalk case recommended that the Lake County district attorney
file homicide charges. Sagewalk had previously been the subject of the
nationally broadcast ABC television series “Brat Camp” in 2005.As Peter
Janci, one of the Plaintiffs’ attorneys explained,“Many ‘tough love’
schools have been a breeding ground for abuse – isolating vulnerable
kids and subjecting them to debunked so-called ‘treatments’ by
unqualified staff, while their parents are kept in the dark and bilked
out of tens of thousands of dollars.”Problems of abuse, injury and even
death are present throughout the “tough love” industry. Some reports
indicate that more than two dozen teenagers died in such facilities
between 1990 and 2001.The lawsuit is one in a growing number of actions
by individuals who survived these facilities, only to be left with
serious, long-term psychological injuries. Several weeks ago, a civil
suit was filed against Silverado Academy in Utah for claims related to a
staff member’s sexual abuse of at least 10 boys.Previously, in 2006,
attorneys for another group of individuals filed a major lawsuit
alleging neglect, fraud and abuse against the World Wide Association of
Specialty Programs and Schools and related entities. That suit is still
pending in federal court in Utah, and now includes 353 plaintiffs who
allege they were wronged by therapeutic boarding schools and their
related entities.“This is a watershed moment in exposing organizations
that have profited from broken promises to desperate families,” said
Clark. “We believe that institutions like Mount Bachelor Academy need to
be exposed for what they are and held accountable for the permanent
damage they have done to the lives of vulnerable teenagers entrusted to
their care.”Clark and his firm are among the most prominent child sexual
abuse attorneys in the nation, having brought over 300 claims against
such organizations as the Catholic Church, the Mormon Church, the Boy
Scouts of America and dozens of other youth-serving organizations.Clark
has twice won landmark child abuse cases at the Oregon Supreme Court,
and last year was lead counsel in a six week sex abuse trial against the
Boy Scouts of America resulting in a jury verdict of nearly $20
million.---The initial response from Greg Chaimov, a lawyer with Davis
Wright Tremaine LLP, on behalf of client Mount Bachelor AcademyWhile we
have not yet had the opportunity to evaluate the allegations in the
complaint filed today, we would like to go on record that Mount Bachelor
Academy was successful in resolving the dispute with the Oregon
Department of Human Services last fall after abundant evidence was
collected that showed the allegations of abuse made to the Department
were unfounded.DHS initially took action based on students’ allegations,
but withdrew its orders, including the suspension of Mount Bachelor
Academy’s license, after further information became available. Given the
favorable terms of the settlement agreement, we agreed to dismiss our
various legal proceedings against the state. We also independently
decided to leave Mount Bachelor Academy closed due to the fact that the
sudden and erroneous closure of the campus effectively shut the program
down the year prior.For over two decades, Mount Bachelor Academy (MBA)
positively changed the lives of over 1,000 troubled young people. MBA
was a program specifically designed for troubled students who had failed
to progress in other settings. It was designed to help kids confront the
worst of their behaviors and take ownership of them, whether that be
substance abuse, sexual acting out or other issues. This approach proved
successful at producing positive, life-changing – and, in some cases,
life-saving – results. The numerous positive testimonials provided by
families and students over the years further attest to the success of
MBA.MBA and its parent companies never condoned or participated in the
mistreatment or deprivation of any students. As we understand, the
plaintiffs in this lawsuit attended MBA prior to its acquisition by a
nationally recognized network of therapeutic schools and programs that
espouse comprehensive best practices and safety protocols. While we
cannot comment on specific allegations from individual students due to
HIPAA privacy regulations, we vigorously deny any and all charges of
mistreatment.
Full Text of Suit Against Mount Bachelor Academy (Adobe Acrobat Reader
required)
Source:
http://www.ktvz.com/news/28465410/detail.html |
Lawsuit against boarding
school to be tried in Prineville
By Sheila G. Miller / The
Bulletin
Last
modified: November 10. 2011 2:57PM PST
A lawsuit against a
now-shuttered school for troubled teens that operated for more than 20
years in Crook County will be tried in Prineville.
Mount Bachelor Academy,
located 26 miles east of Prineville, closed in 2009 after a state
investigation revealed students were subjected to sexual harassment and
emotional abuse. The complaint seeks $25.5 million.
The original complaint,
brought by nine former students, was filed in July in Multnomah County
Circuit Court. In August, eight more former students were added to the
lawsuit, which alleges that students were subjected to systematic
physical and psychological abuse while in the school's care.
“We were trying to keep the
case in Portland for convenience,” said Kelly Clark, the attorney
representing the former students. “But the judge said this is a Central
Oregon case, and it needs to be litigated there. And we're glad to to do
that.”
The lawsuit targets Mount
Bachelor Educational Center as well as Aspen Education Group, a defunct
company that owned the academy, and CRC Health Group and CRC Health
Oregon, which served as controlling entities of the school and still
operate several schools around the country.
It contends counselors often
had only high school educations and subjected students to physical
punishments and emotional abuse like sexual role-playing and forced
isolation. Many of the abuses allegedly took place during a therapeutic
workshop called Lifesteps, which was designed to help students go
through stages they may have missed due to trauma. One step featured
role-play, and some students allegedly were required to do exotic dances
and called “whore” and “slut.”
On Wednesday afternoon,
Clark brought a second lawsuit against the school, this time
representing an additional 14 former students and seeking $23 million in
damages. Many of the details in the two lawsuits are similar.
Among the new allegations:
Staff forced a female student to clean up after her roommate's
miscarriage; a student who inhaled a tack was denied medical care; and
students were routinely strip-searched.
“They're very similar
allegations,” Clark said. “I think the significance of it is, if you
think back to when we first filed ... the reaction of the Mount Bachelor
Academy people was ‘None of this happened, it just didn't happen.' And I
think it's harder to argue that 31 people, many of whom don't know each
other because they went to the school years or decades apart, are
somehow conspiring to come forward with the same fictitious story.”
Clark said he brought the
second lawsuit because he worried the judge would frown on adding more
people to a suit that was filed five months ago. He expects that motions
will be filed in the next few months.
- Reporter: 541-617-7831
[email protected]
Source:
http://www.bendbulletin.com/article/20111110/NEWS0107/111100415/
For more on this story, visit:
http://www.ktvz.com/news/29738452/detail.html |
Filed Jan. 5, 2012 12CV0008: Doe 210 - Doe 224,
individuals proceeding under pseudonyms v. Mount
Bachelor Educational Center Inc., Aspen Education Group
Inc., CRC Health Group Inc., Barry J. Weiss, Morris
Weiss, Barry Weiss Trust, Morris Weiss Trust, College
Health Enterprises, Sharon Bitz and Alex Bitz,
complaint, $22,850,000.00
Source:
http://www.bendbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120116/NEWS0107/201160338/1006/NEWS01&nav_category=NEWS01 |
State conducts two investigations of Mount Bachelor Academy near
Prineville--April 6th, 2009--SALEM -- The state is investigating
reports of child abuse at a private school for troubled teens in
central Oregon. Mount Bachelor Academy near Prineville takes in
students from around the country. The academy is licensed by the
Oregon Department of Human Services, which confirmed it has launched
two concurrent investigations. The first investigation centers on
reported abuse and the second on possible licensing violations.
State officials would not discuss details of either investigation
Monday. "We cannot comment on the details or timeline of the
assessments while they are ongoing. When they are concluded, there
may be information that can be shared," Gene Evans, a department
spokesman, said in a written statement. Former students have posted
on MySpace and Facebook numerous complaints about the school,
ranging from what they characterized as humiliating group therapy
sessions to sleep deprivation. Judson DeVries, who left the school
in 2007, told The Oregonian he was forced into "very embarrassing"
role-playing games. For complete story,
click here. |
An Oregon School for Troubled Teens Is Under Scrutiny--April
17th, 2009--...A spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Human
Services (DHS) declined to discuss the details of the ongoing
investigations, which include a second inquiry based on possible
licensing violations. But according to 10 students, two separate
parents and a part-time employee interviewed by TIME — some of whom
are involved in the inquiry — Mount Bachelor Academy regularly uses
intensely humiliating tactics as treatment. For instance, in
required seminars that the school calls Lifesteps, students say
staff members of the residential program have instructed girls, some
of whom say they have been victims of rape or sexual abuse, to dress
in provocative clothing — fishnet stockings, high heels and
miniskirts — and perform lap dances for male students as therapy.
For complete story,
click here. |
State suspends license from central Oregon school for troubled teens--November
4th, 2009--State officials have told parents to remove their
children from a central Oregon boarding school after investigators
found students were subject to inappropriate sexual role-play,
public humiliation and physical deprivation. Following a seven-month
investigation, the Oregon Department of Human Services has
temporarily suspended Mount Bachelor
Academy's license. Investigators found nine substantiated
allegations of child abuse and neglect as well as numerous licensing
violations. For complete story,
click here.
For more on this story,
click here
and here. |
State finds child abuse and neglect at school--November 4th,
2009--The state of Oregon has shut down a boarding school for
troubled teens in Central Oregon after allegedly finding a pattern
of child abuse and neglect of its students, forcing parents around
the country to scramble to bring home their children. "Our first
priority is to ensure the safety of the students at Mt. Bachelor
Academy," Erinn Kelley-Siel, Director of the Children, Adults and
Families division of the Department of Human Services, said
Wednesday in a statement. "Ultimately, the investigations revealed
such serious abuse and widespread violations of Oregon's licensing
rules that we decided we needed to take immediate action." The
results of the Oregon Department of Human Services seven-month
investigation of the Mount Bachelor Academy outside Prineville,
Ore., were given to Crook County authorities to decide whether to
pursue criminal charges. Triggered by a complaint, the investigation
found nine cases of alleged abuse and neglect involving five
students since 2007. Most came out of a mandatory treatment program
called Lifesteps. At least two students were forced to act out
sexual roles in front of staff and other kids during treatment
sessions, one had to act out past physical abuse, one was not
properly supervised on a trip to Europe, and others were subjected
to obscene and degrading comments from staff, the investigators
alleged. For complete story,
click here.
For more on this story,
click here ,
here,
here,
here, and
here. |
DHS, Mount
Bachelor Academy Settle Case--October 2nd, 2010--(source:
ktvz.com)--PRINEVILLE, Ore. -- Nearly a year after the state
Department of Human Services ordered closure of the Mount Bachelor
Academy, a therapeutic boarding school for teens east of Prineville,
a settlement has been reached that the shuttered school’s owners say
should clear the way for them to open a new school at the location.
Early last November, the state gave Aspen Education Group,
operators of the private boarding school 26 miles east of
Prineville, 72 hours to remove students, claiming its seven-month
investigation into the programs found several incidents of “abuse
and neglect,” and “serious violations of Oregon’s licensing
standards.” For complete story,
click here.
For more on this story,
click here. |
Nine ex-students sue, say they were mistreated at central Oregon
school for troubled teens-- July 6th, 2011 (source:
oregonlive.com) Nine former students of a Prineville-area school
for troubled teens are suing the now-defunct school's parent
company, saying teachers and staff humiliated, isolated and abused
them as part of its curriculum. The complaint, which was filed
today in Multnomah County Circuit Court, detailed students'
accusations: One teen, a girl who had suffered sexual abuse as a
child, was forced to repeatedly engage in provocative
role-playing with older males, the complaint states. Another
student, who suffered from asthma, was forced to sleep outdoors in
below-freezing temperatures. Staff members also denied him food,
sleep and use of a restroom and withheld his asthma inhaler despite
asthma attacks that were brought on by their tactics. The suit
seeks nearly $14.3 million from
the Mount Bachelor Academy, its parent company Aspen Education
Group, and Aspen's parent company, CDC Health Group Inc. For
complete story,
click here. For more on this story,
click here. |
Lawsuit against boarding school to be tried in Prineville By
Sheila G. Miller / The Bulletin Last modified: November 10. 2011
2:57PM PST A lawsuit against a now-shuttered school for troubled
teens that operated for more than 20 years in Crook County will be
tried in Prineville. Mount Bachelor Academy, located 26 miles east
of Prineville, closed in 2009 after a state investigation revealed
students were subjected to sexual harassment and emotional abuse.
The complaint seeks $25.5 million. The original complaint, brought
by nine former students, was filed in July in Multnomah County
Circuit Court. In August, eight more former students were added to
the lawsuit, which alleges that students were subjected to
systematic physical and psychological abuse while in the school's
care. “We were trying to keep the case in Portland for convenience,”
said Kelly Clark, the attorney representing the former students.
“But the judge said this is a Central Oregon case, and it needs to
be litigated there. And we're glad to to do that.” The lawsuit
targets Mount Bachelor Educational Center as well as Aspen Education
Group, a defunct company that owned the academy, and CRC Health
Group and CRC Health Oregon, which served as controlling entities of
the school and still operate several schools around the country. It
contends counselors often had only high school educations and
subjected students to physical punishments and emotional abuse like
sexual role-playing and forced isolation. Many of the abuses
allegedly took place during a therapeutic workshop called Lifesteps,
which was designed to help students go through stages they may have
missed due to trauma. One step featured role-play, and some students
allegedly were required to do exotic dances and called “whore” and
“slut.” On Wednesday afternoon, Clark brought a second lawsuit
against the school, this time representing an additional 14 former
students and seeking $23 million in damages. Many of the details in
the two lawsuits are similar. Among the new allegations: Staff
forced a female student to clean up after her roommate's
miscarriage; a student who inhaled a tack was denied medical care;
and students were routinely strip-searched. “They're very similar
allegations,” Clark said. “I think the significance of it is, if you
think back to when we first filed ... the reaction of the Mount
Bachelor Academy people was ‘None of this happened, it just didn't
happen.' And I think it's harder to argue that 31 people, many of
whom don't know each other because they went to the school years or
decades apart, are somehow conspiring to come forward with the same
fictitious story.” Clark said he brought the second lawsuit because
he worried the judge would frown on adding more people to a suit
that was filed five months ago. He expects that motions will be
filed in the next few months. - Reporter: 541-617-7831
[email protected] Source:
http://www.bendbulletin.com/article/20111110/NEWS0107/111100415/
For more on this story, see:
http://www.ktvz.com/news/29738452/detail.html |