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Offline Anonymous

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Hopefully TB will be raided and Jay Kay will remain in jail until the investigation is over.

NY TIMES

Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
By TIM WEINER


T. ELIZABETH, Jamaica ? Tranquility Bay is a troubled paradise.

A tightly guarded compound in a lovely Caribbean hamlet, it is the oldest foreign outpost in a booming network of behavior-modification programs for American teenagers. Tranquility Bay has a reputation as the harshest of them all.

Many who have been there describe a life of pain and fear. They say they spent 13 hours a day, for weeks or months on end, lying on their stomachs in an isolation room, their arms repeatedly twisted to the breaking point. Others say the program took them off a road to hell and saved their lives.

Tranquility Bay's methods have spawned fierce supporters and critics, none more passionate than the children who have been through the program and the parents who sent them there.

The children say their parents have no idea what goes on behind the walls. The parents say program directors tell them to ignore all accusations of abuse.

"They tell your parents, `Your son may say he's been beaten, but he's lying,' and that, to me, is the greatest manipulation they pull," said Andrew Emmett, 16, of Washington, Pa.

Enrollment at Tranquility Bay, founded in 1996, has grown in the past two years from 140 to 300 youths, most of them 12 to 19 years old. It is becoming a battleground for the warring camps of parents and children, a growing number of whom oppose the program.

That fight may shape the future of Tranquility Bay's parent organization, the Utah-based World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools, known as Wwasps, one of the biggest and most lucrative businesses of its kind.

In a statement sent to parents last month, Ken Kay, Wwasps' president, wrote: "The accusations are from students. The parents may believe them, but the parents weren't there." He continued: "The teens making the allegations generally have a long history of lying, exaggerating and dishonesty."

By telephone, he said that he did not welcome new requests for comment, as Wwasps had signed a television contract to tell its story in its own words.

Mr. Kay's son, Jay Kay, director of Tranquility Bay, said in an e-mail message declining a face-to-face interview that criticisms come from "one-tenth of one percent" of past clients ? a few people with "axes to grind."

There is little question that Wwasps programs ? including two in Mexico and at least eight in the United States, with a total of roughly 2,300 children ? fill a crying need for parents unable to cope with their children.

Many parents who strongly support Tranquility Bay, which costs more than $33,000 a year, see it as a near-miraculous crucible for changing defiant and delinquent teenagers. But others who sent their children say the program damaged their sons and daughters. A striking number of youths say that, while the program's goals may be noble, its methods are not.

In all, 32 children and parents spoke by telephone for this article, 23 others communicated by e-mail, and five face-to-face interviews took place in Jamaica.

"I got some good out of it," said Colin Johnstone, 15, of Louisville, Ky., who came to Tranquility Bay at 13. "But it is kind of like torture. It did me more damage than good."

He was not drinking or taking drugs, said his mother, Lisa Todd. He was "just immature." She said Colin had two teeth knocked loose by a staff member's fist and spent at least eight months in the isolation room. "They are very physically severe in Jamaica," she said. "For sure, they did things they couldn't do in America." But, she added, "I do think the program helps a lot of families that are desperate and don't know where to turn."

Oliver Bucolo, 18, of St. Petersburg, Fla., spent more than two years at Tranquility Bay. "You can't go there and not be changed," he said. "The program's intentions are good. They do help some people."

But, he added: "The staff has no training. They know how to restrain kids."

Restraint, as practiced at Tranquility Bay, can be punishing. Many children, mostly boys, say staff members twist their arms behind their backs until their hands touch their heads, inflicting intense pain without bruises.

"You could hear kids screaming when they were getting restrained," Mr. Bucolo said. "It was horrible. They would do it behind closed doors. And say the kids were lying if they complained."

----------------------------

Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
(Page 2 of 3)



Jill Himmelfarb, 18, of Coral Springs, Fla., spent two years at Tranquility Bay. At Christmas, she graduated, as have one in every five enrollees. She grew to love the program. "The place saved my life," she said. But soon after leaving, she said, she was taking heroin and trying to kill herself with pills.

Deborah Stilwell, 49, of Lake Forest Park, Wash., one of the parents who supports the program, said it was "nothing short of miraculous."

"It was the best thing we've ever done," said Mrs. Stilwell, whose 16-year-old daughter is at Tranquility Bay, on Prozac, but off drink and other drugs. "Tranquility Bay is not cushy," she said. "It's harsh. But it saved her life."

Kristin Smith, 46, of Bradenton, Fla., said her son Zack, 18, had benefited greatly from Tranquility Bay. She said the program was not suitable for children with emotional or psychological problems ? although many youths with such problems are there ? but for those who had abused drugs and alcohol, like her son did.

"It was the hardest thing we ever did," she said. "It's tough. It's hard. And that's what he needed ? absolute strict rules."

Other parents call Tranquility Bay a Caribbean gulag. "It's like a communist regime," said Julie Wilkinson, 47, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., whose son, Winston, just returned home from Tranquility Bay. "The tragedy is that there is such a desperate outcry for help for kids, from parents who are at their wits' end and will do anything."

Christine Smith, 42, of Flemington, N.J., said she sold her home to pay tuition for her son, Thomas Owens, 16. "I was doing research on the Internet, and World Wide popped up everywhere. It looked good, it really did."

She said program officials led her to believe that her son would receive counseling and therapy, but instead, she said, he spent two-thirds of his time at Tranquility Bay in isolation. "They hurt my son," she said. "Dramatically."

"They say the kids manipulate, they lie, they embellish," she said. But so do the program's officials, she said.

"You're paying Harvard prices, and that's O.K. if it helps the child," she said. "But to beat the child, just beat them into submission? If you did this to your child, you would be arrested for child abuse."

Wwasps has sued some of its critics and threatened others. But it is braced for new suits from parents and children alike. One basis for those challenges was expressed by Alex Wolland, 18, of Miami, who spent a year at Tranquility Bay, "The parents have absolutely no clue what is going on."

In his statement to parents last month, Ken Kay, the Wwasps' president, wrote, "We run a tight ship and a tough program where inappropriate attitudes and choices are confronted and redirected and the living conditions are not as nice as the homes the parents had so kindly provided the teen before the teen sabotaged it.

"If these are the accusations, then we have no problem with the accusations. If the accusations are more than that, then there is no basis for the accusations."

In a 1999 interview with The Rocky Mountain News, however, Mr. Kay, who at that time had left the Wwasps organization, criticized its programs and staff.

The staff was "a bunch of untrained people," he said, according to the newspaper. "They don't have credentials of any kind."

"We could be leading these kids to long-term problems that we don't have a clue about because we're not going about it in the proper way," he said. "How in the hell can you call yourself a behavior-modification program ? and that's one of the ways it's marketed ? when nobody has the experience to determine: Is this good, is this bad?"

That question remains unanswered. No long-term studies of the 1,500 youths who have been to Tranquility Bay, or the 300 who have graduated, have been done. Outside experts say the test will come after Tranquility Bay's youths become adults.

Patrick Quinn, 18, now a student at Millersville University in Pennsylvania, said: "There were kids there who needed psychiatric help. Professional help. And there are no professionals there."

--------------------

Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
(Page 3 of 3)



Instead, he said, the staff inflicted pain on the children, mostly on the boys. Among those youths, he said, was Colin Johnstone. "Every night you heard him there, screaming at the top of his lungs," Mr. Quinn said. "There are a lot of kids there who will never be the same."

Some of the youths at Tranquility Bay have histories of drug and alcohol abuse; 15 percent to 20 percent have had a brush with the law, according to program officials.

Many others have never had encounters with the police, or with drugs. They are there, in large part, because of family crises, including the divorce or the death of a parent.

One such child was Tyler Marshall of Tazewell, Va. "Tyler was 12 when he went to Tranquility Bay," said his cousin, Gini Farmer Remines, "and he had never been in trouble with the law. Basically, he did not get along with the woman his dad was going to marry."

Ms. Remines won custody of her cousin and obtained a judge's order releasing Tyler from Tranquility Bay last year.

Tranquility Bay is the oldest of Wwasps' surviving overseas operations. Wwasps affiliates in Mexico and the Czech Republic have shut down under government pressure; its Costa Rica program closed after a revolt by students last month. In the United States, the organization has affiliated programs, some of which are brand-new, in Utah, Montana, New York, California, Iowa and South Carolina, according to public records.

With a payroll estimated at $1 million a year, and gross annual revenues approaching $10 million, Tranquility Bay is by far the leading economic power in St. Elizabeth, a poor parish on Jamaica's southern shore, where farms are failing and the sea is fished out.

It employs more than 150 Jamaicans, some of whom wear crisp white shirts emblazoned with a patch reading, "Tranquility Bay ? Working for the Future of the World." Several have been dismissed recently after being accused of assault or selling drugs, according to two parents and one government official.

Throughout the Wwasps network in the United States and Mexico, many youths say, Tranquility Bay is held out as a warning.

"They threaten you with Tranquility Bay," said Andrew Emmett, who said he was briefly transferred here after attending Carolina Springs Academy, a Wwasps program in South Carolina. "They tell you they can twist up and grind your body and never leave a mark."
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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #1 on: June 17, 2003, 02:02:00 AM »
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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #2 on: June 17, 2003, 02:05:00 AM »
The article has a photo of the facility showing the Jamaica flag flying above the American flag.  Guess that kind of says it all.
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Offline FaceKhan

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #3 on: June 17, 2003, 02:59:00 PM »
I like how finally the media is taking this seriously. There is a way to balanced and there is a way to be true and often times the program abuses were often downplayed in the name of balance. Finally the major media is not holding back on the gory details. Not one person reading this article will come away with the impression that these abuses are not in fact child abuse and torture. They may think that the kids are lying but the majority of people that will not dismiss the abuse as a lie will no longer be able to say it does not sound that bad.
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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #4 on: June 18, 2003, 08:48:00 AM »
uhhh, like I think Jamaica is, uh, like a separate country, man.  in other countries,  they probably think they can fly their flags whereever they want.
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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #5 on: June 18, 2003, 09:55:00 AM »
I think the media is still going a little soft on these stories. I have spoken with or exchanged email with most everyone quoted, and the things they've related to me have been a good deal more brutal than anything I've seen printed yet.
But that doesn?t mean I'm not extremely happy with the coverage the issue is getting!
As for the Flag thing - I think in a situation where you have a facility from one country operating in another - the proper way to display the flags is side by side. Maybe we have a US marine who can verify this, or explain what is considered proper?
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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #6 on: June 18, 2003, 04:27:00 PM »
For parents who send their kids to programs out of the U.S. for treatment, they should take a good hard look at which flag is flying over their kid's head because that's the country whose rules and regulations matter when it comes to the quality of their kids care and treatment.
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Offline Antigen

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #7 on: June 18, 2003, 06:18:00 PM »
I think the media has to be careful about their credibility. Not that the individual journalist who's writing the story doesn't believe the story. I think a lot of them who have done a little investigation really do. But that doesn't matter to the editor who has the final say. What matters to them is that they don't want any readers snickering and wondering if they've accidentally picked up a copy of the National Enquirer while reading the news.

Put yourself in their shoes. Actually, we're already in their shoes only without the deadline and millions in ad revenue at stake. People generally just plain out don't believe what we're saying because what we're saying is pretty god damned unbelievable. It's like when someone tells me a ghost story. Ok, I'll sincerely entertain the idea that it might be true and I won't call them a liar. But, when I retell the story, I'm not about to swear to it that this actually happened. I'll say a good and reliable friend told me this happened, he really wasn't kidding and I think it might actually be true, so here goes....

Give it time. For years and years, all these different people who've never met eachother are telling the same stories about the same people. It'll take the general public a little getting used to. But I think the cat is really out of the bag now. Journalists are descending like hungry flies on this one now. And those slow summer months are all before us. This is going to be a good year in a lot of ways.

Wicked men obey from fear, good men from love.
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Offline FaceKhan

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #8 on: June 18, 2003, 11:09:00 PM »
I noticed that there are actually a few movies that relate to this issue a lot. I was channel surfing and I saw this weird movie called Lost Angels (1989)

Basically it dealt with the teen hospitalization craze that occured in the 70's and 80's where  overbuilt psychiatric hospitals became holding pens for teenagers in order to make money. Had Donald Sutherland in it. Can't say much for it as a movie, it was pretty bad but I definitely recognized some common cult program elements that were in there. Weird terms and levels and humiliating punishments, "feedback", and upper level enforcers. Almost seemed like it was made to be about the programs but ended up being about a hospital to tone it down a bit.

Basically perfectly sane kid has scrape with cops, stepfather gets him committed. Kids with no problems crammed in with those who can't function at all and even the head doctor (Sutherland) admits that they make a pretty good living off the kids and when their insurance runs out they are cured.  


The other thing that I think struck me recently is just how damaging all these programs are even when there is nothing that could be considered outright abuse. Just being held prisoner is damaging enough and thats why except for kids its only done when its been proven necesary to protect society from physical harm from that person.

Even when I spoke to people from wildnerness programs which are far shorter and less abusive overall than boot camps and gulag schools, there is definitely a feeling that it was wrong for them to be there. They often can't really put their finger on anything terrible but mostly that they were lied to and manipulated and held against their will and put in with kids with all kinds of problems worse than theirs.

I guess its just what price can you put on a a month or two or three of your life much less six months or two years. I mean some of these kids spend 3 or 4 years in these programs or going from one to another and hell that is more time than a lot of rapists ever actually serve in prison.

The whole thing is just such a mindblowing fraud.
I hate even having to try to help people find one that is not dangerous or abusive because it just makes me an accomplice in this fraud.

Are these parents so insane or stupid or desperate or selfish? Would they send their kid to a self-appointed surgeon? Of course not, than how to they send them to unproven and unlicensed therapy or treatment.

The reason, laziness and selfishness. They can't imagine any reason other than a disease that would cause their kid to act out or disagree with them or get bad grades. The shrinks tell them they are just unhappy or "thats what happens when you get a divorce" and that things take time to work themselves out. That answer is not good enough so they look for someone who not only claims to fix the problem but can diagnose the problem as well.  

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[ This Message was edited by: FaceKhan on 2003-06-18 20:20 ]
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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #9 on: June 19, 2003, 09:06:00 AM »
facekhan, i dont feel i was lazy or selfish,that was the hardest decision i ever had to make,  i feel i was a mother trying to do her best in raising my daughter, when she started refusing to go to school, i started searching boarding schools(and guess who popped up time and time again) she was going to have to be held back, it was out of desperation i sent her to costa rica,they advertise 2yr of education to 1 U.S. year, i thought it was the perfect answer, i will now live with guilt over all this, my daughter was only in 2 months, and that was enough, i realized what was happening there when the chaos broke out and she left, the U.S embassy helped get me in touch with her.im thankful she is home, and my eyes are now open,  shannon :eek:
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Offline anon

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #10 on: June 19, 2003, 10:48:00 AM »
[ This Message was edited by: KarenZ on 2003-10-16 19:49 ]
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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #11 on: June 19, 2003, 10:49:00 AM »
It's the same article pasted on this thread & written by Tim Weiner for the New York Times, only now reported in the Salt Lake Tribune. Hey, I'm just glad it's circulating right back to Utah where these WWASP mind rapists are headquartered.


http://www.sltrib.com/2003/Jun/06192003 ... /67510.asp
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Offline Antigen

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #12 on: June 19, 2003, 10:51:00 AM »
Hey Shannon,
  Thanks for posting. Thanks more for waking up. I hope you won't take offense to this. But I'm really trying to understand this and I hope you'll answer.

It would not occure to me, as a parent, to think of a kid who just hates school or would rather go play as a desperate situation. And you're not unusual in thinking like this. There was a pretty well known case of some millionaire who sent his son off to TB because, in a fit of anger, the kid broke a window on his car. Over and over again, we hear from Program parents with the same fairly trivial complaints. Kid said he hated me, didn't obey me, yelled at me, skipped school.

And you seem to imply, like a lot of parents, that WWASP didn't do a whole lot of direct recruiting to reel you in. You went looking for them and found them. So my question is how have we come to this?

My own daughter is 19 now. She hasn't exactly taken a course in life that I would have chosen for her. In fact, there have been moments when I understood with pure clarity what made my parents believe it was time for desperate measures. Of course, I was 14 and hitchhiking around the country at the time. The irony is that the only reason I did this was that I thought they were about to put me in a program for being depressed and I'd learned from years of open meetings that that's just what teenagers who don't go along with the program do.

I understand what happened in my family. My mom got recruited into an obvious cult. It was so obvious to nearly everyone that, by the time I was around 8 years old, the other kids in the neighborhood weren't allowed to play with me because their parents were just freaked out by my mother. Now, it seems, it's become a normal, accepted part of our culture to send kids off to reform school if they put a toe out of line. And I don't really understand why or how the generation that shut down universities to protest a war and ran naked at Woodstock can now be so quick to give up on their own kids.
 

Quote
On 2003-06-19 06:06:00, Anonymous wrote:

"facekhan, i dont feel i was lazy or selfish,that was the hardest decision i ever had to make,  i feel i was a mother trying to do her best in raising my daughter, when she started refusing to go to school, i started searching boarding schools(and guess who popped up time and time again) she was going to have to be held back, it was out of desperation i sent her to costa rica,they advertise 2yr of education to 1 U.S. year, i thought it was the perfect answer, i will now live with guilt over all this, my daughter was only in 2 months, and that was enough, i realized what was happening there when the chaos broke out and she left, the U.S embassy helped get me in touch with her.im thankful she is home, and my eyes are now open,  shannon :eek:   "

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Offline Antigen

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #13 on: June 19, 2003, 11:02:00 AM »
Quote
On 2003-06-18 20:09:00, FaceKhan wrote:

 I noticed that there are actually a few movies that relate to this issue a lot. I was channel surfing and I saw this weird movie called Lost Angels (1989)


Oh, I find these things every now and again. SciFi channel has a couple of B movies they run every once in awhile. One is a family who moves into a very cliquish, exclusive gated community where, it turns out, they do some surgery on the kids and make them join a group. If the kids don't go along in lock step, they kill them. If the parents won't go along, they get kicked out of the club.

There's another one about a kid in a boarding school who's resistant to the brainwashing because of some acne medication he's taking. Turns out, there's a real life premis to it.

There are a good many songs hitting the radio that might well have been written by program vets, too. I think it's out there. And I think that's why Scary John has such a hard on for the RAVE scene. Reminds me of wounded knee. Can't quite put a finger on the precise dogma or philosophy of totalists. But one thing's for sure, they do NOT like dancing!

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Offline Anonymous

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NY TIMES: Charges of Cruelty at a Jamaica Discipline Academy
« Reply #14 on: June 19, 2003, 11:15:00 AM »
As a two year survivor of Straight, I whole heartily agree with you two parents. I believe you both were taken advantage of, that is, the desperation you had for your kids were preyed upon. Trouble is, it really hasn't been until recently that both survivors and parents alike of these ugly places whether in existence, or no longer in existence, are finally coming together and saying that WE are no longer going to put up with this kind of crap. We are going to hold accountable these people who would dare profit off of ourselves or our loved ones by putting them in horrible prisons with no regard for their well-being whatsoever.  We are going to hold our government, more specifically, the leaders that make up our government accountable to see that young people are protected under the constitution they are obligated to enforce.

I have to agree that there are still parents out there that some 20, 30 years later say that Straight Inc. and The Seed (even though they are both now closed up (in those names) ) are/were still the greatest concepts since sliced bread. Some of these parents still go around 'guiltless' or if they knew there was a problem with a decision they made, would not look at that guilt at all. Mistakes are some of the most difficult things a parent from time to time must deal with. Those that do only come out stronger for it in my opinion.
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