Boonville police urge caution on Kemper
By JOHN SULLIVAN of the Tribune?s staff
Published Friday, April 8, 2005
Boonville police officials are recommending that the Boonville City Council hold off any decision to sell the Kemper Military School property until a more thorough background check can be conducted on a controversial potential buyer.
Robert Lichfield, founder of Utah-based World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools, wants to buy the city-owned Kemper property and turn it once again into a military-style academy.
In a study released yesterday to the public, however, police officials cite news reports and other records that indicate World Wide Association-affiliated schools "regularly engage in physical restraint of children including the use of pepper spray, handcuffs, duct tape and wooden boxes to isolate the children."
The study is dated March 25 and was given the next day to Ned Beach, head of the Industrial Development Authority, and Sarah Gallagher, the city?s director of economic development. Beach and Gallagher requested the report. The development authority is overseeing the sale of the property.
World Wide operates behavior-modification schools for problem children. At least eight World Wide-affiliated schools and organizations in two states and four countries have closed or been shut down amid allegations of child abuse.
The Boonville police report mentions Lichfield associate Randall Hinton, who has moved to the city to operate the school. "Mr. Hinton himself is on videotape freely admitting he used pepper spray on one student and more than once per day. He states he has picked up children and had them" taken "to the institution within five hours," the report said.
In an interview with the Tribune, Hinton described the pepper spray episode as a failed two-month experiment to safely subdue students. Lichfield has not returned calls seeking comment.
The police report, signed by Capt. Donald Smith and Lt. Bobby Welliver, recommends conducting a thorough investigation, including "speaking to people who have made accusations and verifying information, which has been provided to us." The report also recommends interviewing Hinton, his brother Russell Hinton and any other principal or partner in the proposed venture.
The police report also looked into a program called the Thayer Learning Center, a behavior-modification school in the Caldwell County community of Kidder. The school, which was incorrectly identified in the report as "Fair Learning Institute," is facing a lawsuit from parents of a child who the county medical examiner ruled died from a spider bite. The lawsuit alleges medical neglect.
Welliver said this morning that his department heard a possible connection exists between Thayer and World Wide Association, although details of that connection remain unknown.
An interview with Caldwell County Sheriff Kirby Brelsford found no serious problems at the facility, apart from "occasional runaways who steal cars in an effort to leave the area," the report said.
Police officials also expressed concerns about placing troubled teens, some of them potentially violent offenders, within close proximity to parks and recreational facilities where children play. The report notes that the YMCA is located on the Kemper property.
Beach defended Lichfield and his organization. A review two days ago of financial records provided by Utah?s Golden Pond Investments Ltd., the investment company offering to buy Kemper, proved credible, Beach said. Criminal background checks of Lichfield and Hinton also came up clean, he said.
City Administrator Selby Myers said he provided city council members with a copy of the report last night.
Reach John Sullivan at (573) 815-1731 or
jsullivan@tribmail.com.