Current:Home > InvestBy the dozen, accusers tell of rampant sexual abuse at Pennsylvania juvenile detention facilities -Mastery Money Tools
By the dozen, accusers tell of rampant sexual abuse at Pennsylvania juvenile detention facilities
View
Date:2025-04-14 14:40:24
A group of nearly 70 people alleged Wednesday they were sexually abused as children while housed in detention centers in Pennsylvania, adding to earlier lawsuits targeting what the accusers’ lawyers say is the state’s broken juvenile justice system.
The latest group of plaintiffs filed suit in state or federal court against 10 different juvenile facilities across Pennsylvania, three of them state-operated. Some of the plaintiffs said they were repeatedly raped by staff members and threatened with harm if they reported it. Others said their reports of sexual abuse were ignored. None of the facilities protected the children in their care, lawyers said.
The facilities’ operators “put profit ahead of the safety of children,” attorney Jerome Block told The Associated Press. “Many of these juvenile facilities where the sexual abuse occurred remain open, and we have seen no evidence that the inadequate procedures and policies that enabled the sexual abuse have been fixed.”
Twenty-two of the accusers were housed at Merakey USA’s Northwestern Academy outside Shamokin, which closed in 2016. One man says he was raped by two male staff members at Northwestern in 2004, when he was 13 years old, and he was told he wouldn’t be able to go home if he reported it.
Merakey, a large provider of developmental, behavioral health and education services with more than 8,000 employees in a dozen states, “allowed Northwestern Academy’s culture of sexual abuse and brutality to continue unabated until the facility’s closure in 2016,” lawyers wrote.
The Lafayette Hills, Pennsylvania-based company said Wednesday that it couldn’t comment on the lawsuit’s allegations until it had a chance to review them. “Merakey closed Northwestern Academy ... as part of our organization’s strong belief that children do better in family and community-based settings than in institutional settings,” the company said in a statement.
Twenty of the accusers were housed at the state-run Loysville Youth Development Center, South Mountain Secure Treatment Unit near Gettysburg and North Central Secure Treatment Unit in Danville. A message seeking comment was sent to the state Department of Human Services.
Other lawsuits named a facility run by Villanova-based Devereux Advanced Behavioral Health; the Delaware County Juvenile Detention Center; the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s Saint Gabriel’s Hall in Audubon, which closed in 2020; Carson Valley Children’s Aid in Flourtown, which shuttered its residential care program last month; Presbyterian Children’s Village in Rosemont, which closed after a 2019 merger; and a now-shuttered facility in Franklin, Pennsylvania, operated by VisionQuest National Ltd. of Tucson, Arizona.
Gemma Services, the successor organization of Presbyterian Children’s Village, is facing accusations over what lawyers called “the abusive and predatory behavior” of the Presbyterian staff.
Gemma said it has not seen the lawsuit but that it was committed to doing right by the children under its care.
“This organization exists to provide support for children and families who navigate hard things in life,” said Joan Plump, Gemma’s chief of staff. “Our first priority has always been and always will be protecting the health, safety and well=being of all the youth and families we work with.”
The archdiocese, which is facing allegations from seven accusers who stayed at Saint Gabriel’s, declined to comment on pending litigation. Messages seeking comment were sent to the rest of the defendants.
The same New York firm, Levy Konigsberg, filed lawsuits in May on behalf of 66 people in Pennsylvania and has pursued similar litigation in Illinois,Maryland, New Jersey and Michigan.
All the Pennsylvania plaintiffs were born after Nov. 26, 1989, and meet the state’s standards for filing claims of sexual abuse when they were children, lawyers said.
“Due to Pennsylvania’s policy of locking up children for relatively minor violations or behavioral problems, many children who simply needed help went straight from difficult home lives into a traumatizing, carceral environment where they were regularly sexually abused,” lawyers wrote in one of the complaints filed Wednesday.
A task force set up to tackle Pennsylvania’s juvenile justice problems concluded in 2021 that too many first-time and lower-level juvenile offenders were being locked up, and Black offenders were disproportionately prosecuted as adults.
A Democratic-sponsored bill to adopt some of the task force recommendations is pending in the House after passing the Judiciary Committee in September on a party-line vote with all Republicans opposed.
___
Associated Press writer Mark Scolforo in Harrisburg contributed to this story.
veryGood! (771)
Related
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- In These U.S. Cities, Heat Waves Will Kill Hundreds More as Temperatures Rise
- WHO calls on China to share data on raccoon dog link to pandemic. Here's what we know
- Nicky Hilton Shares Advice She Gave Sister Paris Hilton On Her First Year of Motherhood
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Australian airline rolls out communal lounge for long-haul flights
- U.S. Venture Aims to Improve Wind Energy Forecasting and Save Billions
- 'Live free and die?' The sad state of U.S. life expectancy
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Tweeting directly from your brain (and what's next)
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Neurotech could connect our brains to computers. What could go wrong, right?
- Come on Barbie, Let's Go Shopping: Forever 21 Just Launched an Exclusive Barbie Collection
- Where there's gender equality, people tend to live longer
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- This Week in Clean Economy: Can Electric Cars Win Over Consumers in 2012?
- Walgreens won't sell abortion pills in red states that threatened legal action
- Michael Jordan plans to sell NBA team Charlotte Hornets
Recommendation
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Florida bans direct-to-consumer auto sales but leaves carve-out for Tesla
Global Warming Pushes Microbes into Damaging Climate Feedback Loops
Spills on Aging Enbridge Pipeline Have Topped 1 Million Gallons, Report Says
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
The Baller
Bob Huggins resigns as West Virginia men's basketball coach after DUI arrest in Pittsburgh
Climate Change Will Increase Risk of Violent Conflict, Researchers Warn