It's struck me that this recent buy-out of old CEDU schools and other programs owned by large venture-capitalist conglomerates represents not a strength but a serious vulnerability.
The reason for this is that the bigwigs don't care one way or another about what it is they own; they're just interested in money and empire. They're not programmies and they don't have a vested interest in child abuse.
Therefore, the way to cause them to abandon their acquisitions is simply to make them undesirable to keep.
This can either be done on a personal level (conversations, well-written letters, picketing their houses) or financial (remember, malpractice lawyers love deep pockets!). If the scandal or the cash-bleed gets too large, they'll shut it down. Who wants to keep something if it's causing you endless personal grief, you're repeatedly being portrayed as a child abuser (which, if you're keeping these places open, you are) and lawyers are suing your ass off for having it?
Rich capitalists won't be nearly as tenacious to hold on to it as, say, Len Buccellato.