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Messages - karmakommando

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The Troubled Teen Industry / KIDS of N.J. to pay $3.75M in patient's suit
« on: February 03, 2007, 10:47:17 PM »
KIDS of N.J. to pay $3.75M in patient's suit    
 

Saturday, February 3, 2007

By KIBRET MARKOS
STAFF WRITER

 

A Clifton man has won a $3.75 million settlement against a now-defunct clinic that became synonymous with abuse and neglect, his attorney said Friday.

"It's strange to be in a situation where you actually confront evil," attorney Philip Elberg said Friday. "And this is what it was: a noxious program run by a fraud."

 
Antonio Carrera had sued KIDS of New Jersey, a mental-health clinic for troubled teens that was shuttered in 1998 by the state after a series of beatings, sleep deprivations and other abuses came to light.

Carrera, who was 14 when he began treatment in 1994, said he was physically and emotionally abused during his five years at the center, which operated in Secaucus and Hackensack.

Attorneys for the clinic and its owner settled the case shortly after the trial began in Jersey City two weeks ago, making Carrera the last of five North Jersey residents who have obtained more than $16 million in damages, Elberg said.

Three others -- from Wanaque, Wayne and Jersey City -- as well as a former Garden State resident now living in Kansas City, Mo., were able to collect close to $12 million since 1999.

Carrera's treatment was the product of a cult-like boot camp where hundreds of extremely vulnerable children were brutalized in the name of treatment, Elberg said.

An investigation by The Record in 2000 found that KIDS of New Jersey, owned by a former Methodist minister, Miller Newton, prevented patients from going to school, reading books, receiving mail or making phone calls. Only limited contact was allowed with parents.

Rebecca Ehrlich, the Wayne resident who won a $4.5 million settlement, had told The Record that the so-called treatment actually made her mental condition worse. Newcomers had no privacy and were constantly followed around, even in the bathroom, she said.

More recently, another former patient, Nick Gaglia, made an independent film of his experience at the clinic, where he said he was physically abused and alienated from his parents until he carried out a daring escape on the George Washington Bridge.

"[Newton] was, in fact, a real-deal cult leader," Elberg said.

Stephen Ryan, the attorney for Newton and KIDS of New Jersey, didn't return a phone call Friday.

Newton, who lives in Florida and goes by the name "Father Cassian Newton," couldn't be reached.

Craig Combs, the attorney for former medical director Zisalo Wancier of Closter, a co-defendant in the case, did not return a phone call.

No one answered the phone at Carrera's home.

Licensed as a "partial-care provider," KIDS of New Jersey came under the scrutiny of the state Department of Health and Human Services in the late 1990s, amid a push for more supervision and stricter licensing of such facilities.

Allegations had surfaced that some of these clinics, among other things, lured clients from boarding houses by offering them cigarettes and candy.

An inspection later revealed abuses at the program. The clinic's license was subsequently revoked.

"We had never come across anything like this before," a human services official said at the time. "We were pretty repulsed by it."

Elberg said he was disappointed that only a small number of clients were able to collect damages. The rest went to psychiatric hospitals and rehab centers as soon as they left Newton's clinic and didn't tell law enforcement authorities until the statute of limitations had elapsed, the attorney said.

The settlement amount will be paid by insurance companies. Newton was covered by malpractice insurance the entire time that he ran the clinic, Elberg said.

E-mail: markos@northjersey.com

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The Troubled Teen Industry / Mentoring programs work
« on: November 19, 2006, 10:54:59 PM »
In the program that I help direct, we recruit and train people to be mentors to children referred by guidance counselors, CPS, and other agencies.   Our mentors outshine the social workers by far.   Kids often grow to trust the mentors and get a chance to vent, without the mentor being judgemental or diagnostic.   ADHD symptoms nearly always disappear during outings with the mentors.  Unfortunately, it is difficult recruiting people to do this, especially men.   99.9% of the problems with these kids are due to the behavior of their parents or legal guardians.

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Will do.   People were posting there looking for help about a 1-1/2 yrs ago, but the forum really took off over the last year.   Has anyone contacted Phil Elberg, who presented at the recent ICSA conference?   He is an attorney who represented survivors of Kids of Bergen County, an abusive "mental health" residential program in NJ.

I'm just amazed at all I've learned in the last day about this - and it is so similar to LGATS, which I have experience with.

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The Troubled Teen Industry / He really sucks
« on: November 12, 2006, 11:37:47 PM »
I've been reading and reading a lot of the posts here and on rickross, especially one here where a person asks why there are so many programs in Utah, and it's making me sick.   Dr. Phil sends a troubled girl to a potentially and probably dangerous wilderness camp in Utah, while allegedly helping another guest on another show get her daughter out of a polygamous cult in Utah.   That woman has put all her faith in Dr. Phil.  He had the Utah Attorney General on, a guy who doesn't do anything against these cults, yet by his appearance on the Dr. Phil shows, he tries to come off as looking at a guy who is fighting the good fight against child abuse in polygamous cults.   I hope Kim's parents sue the pants off Dr. Phil.

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which is est repackaged.   A lot of the stuff you all have written on these forums is very similar to the whole large group awareness training  industry, where there is no regulation and a lot of abuse, in the name of helping.  

There is a lot of info about the you tube video exposing landmark forum on the Rick Ross website.   The rickross.com  message board would welcome all the info,  pro and con, anyone has about these boot camps and wilderness academies.  That forum just registered it's 20,000th post, not to mention the thousands and thousands of views it  has received.

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Dr. Phil supposedly provides excellent follow-up for the guests that appear on his show.  Yet, this poor Kim ended up at one of these wilderness boot camps.   I've spent a couple hours reading up on these and am appalled that he would do such a thing, but am  not surprised.

Does anyone know if any o f these teen "therapeutic" camps or academies, have any connection to the polygamous groups in the same areas.   I read someone's post here about Gov. Romney, who is a mormon, who thinks polygmay is just the best.  

Dr. Phil recently did a show where his son, Jay, exposed a polygamous cult, and I've read little snippets on the web where the claim is being made by the Dr. Phil show that because of Jay (and the s how) that the  leader, Warren Jeffs, was caught.  Someone wrote here that Aspen Education Group was purchased by a man who has his roots in Brigham Young and mormonism, and since child abuse and polygamy is so widespread in Utah and elsewhere, I'me wondering if there is any more of a connection to Dr. Phil and these teen help corporations.   His recent Shape Up Diet pills were made by AmwayQuixtar, a fact that only is in the  legal documents, so I put nothing past him.

Also, if anyone needs another outlet to get the word out on these monsters, there is a message board on RickRoss.com with a forum for abusive therapists and other "professionals."

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