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Offline Deborah

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Lichfield: God is the Key to his success
« on: July 15, 2003, 02:11:00 PM »
http://www.latimes.com/la-na-toughbar13 ... 8018.story

Key to His Schools' Success? It's God, Founder Says
 Robert Lichfield founded one small facility and built it into a business empire. In an interview, he makes frequent reference to his Mormon faith.

 
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Doubting Their 'Tough Love'
July 13, 2003
           
By John-Thor Dahlburg, Times Staff Writer


ST. GEORGE, Utah -- Robert Browning Lichfield opened his first "tough-love" academy at a time when he was so financially strapped that he, his wife and four children lived crowded together in a one-room apartment.

In the ensuing 16 years, Lichfield had three more children, added 10 schools to his investment portfolio and founded a business empire whose holdings include everything from restaurants to radio stations.

At 49, Lichfield cuts an unmistakable swath through this fast-growing southwestern Utah city. In achieving material success, he has also become something of a civic and political figure ? and a major contributor to the state's Republican Party.

When asked about his success, and about the criticism surrounding the school network that he created, he makes reference to his fervent Mormon faith.

God is the key to his accomplishments, he says, and Satan is stirring up his foes.

"We're here getting kids off drugs and other evils," Lichfield said during a rare interview at the headquarters of the World Wide Assn. of Specialty Programs and Schools. "We're here connecting kids with their families. We're here getting kids in touch with their higher source.

"Do I believe, being a God-believing person, that the adversary to all good is going to sit back and let that happen without a major unleashing of dark forces? No, I don't."

Lichfield is a bearded man, with a burly physique and shy, congenial manner recalling John Candy, the late actor and comic. He wore an open-necked shirt and toyed with a business card during an interview with the Los Angeles Times ? a meeting he agreed to only after months of negotiation.

He requested his photograph not be published in The Times because "some kids are a little deranged.... You never know what they might do."

Lichfield says his role in the for-profit schools is that of an investor and advisor, but his adversaries say he has a key role in managing them. Whatever the case, he usually leaves Ken Kay, the association's white-haired president, to answer questions about the schools' policies.

Lichfield's role in politics is easier to pin down. According to Federal Elections Commission records, Lichfield and his wife gave the Republican Party $175,000 in a recent 12-month period, and he was named Republican of the Year this year by the Washington County GOP.

"As a person, he is great," said county GOP Chairman Naghi Zeenati. "He is community-minded and always available to help."

Lichfield got his first job with problem teens in 1977 when he was a "dorm parent" at a private boys' school on a wooded lot north of Provo. At the fenced-in compound known as Provo Canyon School for Boys, students were subjected to tough treatment, including long periods of solitary confinement and forced lie-detector tests.

It was "baptism by fire," said Lichfield, who has no formal qualifications in education or child psychology and didn't graduate from college. On the job, he said, "you learn real fast, just as a [physician's assistant] learns doctoring skills by working with doctors."

However, not all of his charges from those days recall the fledgling educator with fondness. David Doran, 34, of Tarzana spent time in his youth at Provo Canyon and said he remembers Lichfield as a humorless, dictatorial figure who seemed to delight in taunting students.

About the same time, Lichfield founded the Cross Creek school, his first. In 1987, Lichfield signed a contract to run Brightway Adolescent Hospital in St. George, which health officials said quickly became a pipeline for enrolling students in tough-love schools.

State inspectors investigated the private psychiatric institution after receiving complaints of children being admitted without consent from both parents and a failure to report a suspected case of child abuse, Utah Department of Health spokeswoman Debra Wynkoop said. The hospital shut down in 1998 after being informed by state health officials that they were going to order its closure, Wynkoop said.

By the time WWASPS was created in 1998, Lichfield said he had let other people assume ownership and management of the schools. Ken Kay, president of WWASPS, declined a request from The Times to provide a list of the owners. But some affiliates are family members.

Lichfield's younger brother Narvin owns Carolina Springs Academy near Abbeville, S.C., and the Academy at Dundee Ranch in Costa Rica. Kay's son, Jay, runs the WWASPS school in Jamaica, called Tranquility Bay.

What Lichfield does own, he said, are many of the buildings and grounds that house the WWASPS schools. Title formally belongs to a legal entity with a name intentionally so long newspapers won't print it, he joked. That entity, the Robert Browning Lichfield Limited Family Partnership, has Lichfield and his wife, Patricia, as sole partners, according to documents filed with the Utah secretary of state's office in 1995. Lichfield said he co-owns other properties with business associates.

As for his role in WWASPS, on paper Lichfield is simply a trustee. Some adversaries contend that the limited designation is the way he protects himself from legal liability.

A thicket of interrelated, for-profit companies has grown up around the nonprofit WWASPS. They include Teen Help, the association's marketing arm; Teen Escort Service, which convoys children to and from member schools; and R&B Billing, which sends the monthly bills to parents and processes their payments.

Thomas Burton, an attorney in Pleasanton, Calif., who has sued WWASPS, its member schools and associated businesses at least seven times ? though he has yet to win a case ? contends that all of these entities function as a huge, single commercial venture with Lichfield at the heart.

"The corporations keep shifting and being reconstituted with different people in different places," Burton said. "It seems they want to keep this a moving target."

In March, the Northern California lawyer filed suit in federal court in Salt Lake City on behalf of a former student at Tranquility Bay, claiming the WWASPS school in Jamaica was a "steaming squalid jungle camp, infested with flies, mosquitoes, scorpions and vermin."

After listening patiently during his interview with The Times to a recounting of these kinds of parent and student complaints, Lichfield spoke again of religious faith and his conviction that the methods he pioneered have aided many.

"God can't help everybody. I don't know how we're going to," he said. "But it [WWASPS] does provide an opportunity for thousands of kids to improve their lives. Those who choose not to, choose not to."


[ This Message was edited by: Deborah on 2006-05-28 11:47 ]
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Hidden Lake Academy, after operating 12 years unlicensed will now be monitored by the state. Access information on the Federal Class Action lawsuit against HLA here: http://www.fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?t=17700

Offline Anonymous

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Lichfield: God is the Key to his success
« Reply #1 on: July 15, 2003, 02:36:00 PM »
http://www.statesman.com/asection/conte ... 200fc.html

Troubled children, a troubling industry
Little is known about largely unregulated therapeutic programs or the perils they pose
   
     
Troubled children, a troubling industry
In the dark of night, escorts swoop in to take kids away
From fitness to food, firm has wide interests
Programs for troubled children and teenagers
Web exclusive: Houston school can be last hope for troubled teens
Photos: Desperate parents, dire measures
Photos: The Brown Schools in Houston
Related stories

Special report: When discipline turns fatal
04/03/03: Committee passes bill banning certain physical restraints
02/14/03: Centers for troubled teens sold
01/24/03: Investigators find multiple safety violations at wilderness camp
04/03/03: 01/04/03: Camp staff is accused of abuse in teen death
10/23/02: Teen died after banned restraint used
10/17/02: Days after teen camper's death, questions linger
On the Web

The Brown Schools
CEDU Schools

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
By Jonathan Osborne and Mike Ward

AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

Sunday, July 13, 2003


If you can't find the village it takes to raise a child, you can buy one.



For a price, parents are increasingly turning to corporate America to solve the most personal and, at times, irritating of family problems: the rebellious son or daughter. Home is being replaced by wilderness camps, therapeutic boarding schools, residential treatment facilities, drug rehabilitation clinics, emotional growth facilities and the occasional self-esteem enhancement program.



Whatever parents think they might need ? or can be convinced they need ? to turn their child into a model teenager is for sale. And for as much as $10,000 a month, someone will promise to try to make everything right.



Many times, they do. Children with serious emotional or psychological problems are treated, made whole and move on.



Sometimes, the child is raped, beaten or, in the worst cases, killed.



And there is little parents can do to determine which program is more likely to lead to which result.



The booming fix-your-kid industry ? a market estimated to be worth $60 billion a year ? had roots in Central Texas in the 1940s and has blossomed into a multitiered, intricately faceted web of choices.



The business is so big that it has spawned offshoots such as "escort" companies, which will send men and women to your home, often in the dead of night, to haul your child to a facility that could be thousands of miles away.



And some of the places that children are taken are so controversial that former clients have their own "survivors" groups on the Internet, where they share horror stories.



Meanwhile, virtually no one is watching over the industry as it continues to grow. Some experts estimate as many as three programs open each month across the country.



Some parents who rely on these businesses are undoubtedly just trying to shift a burden, but most feel they have done everything in their power, and now feel powerless.



"You're trying to be a good parent. . . . You're trying to do everything conceivable to address the issues of the kid that you love and, on the other hand, you know that they're self-destructing in front of your eyes," said David Richart, a professor and director of the National Institute on Children, Youth and Families at Spalding University in Louisville, Ky. "There's a tendency for parents to jump at any solution that seems halfway credible."



Industry supporters insist the problems are overblown, the criticisms too harsh.



"Obviously, working with troubled children is not without its challenges," said Howard Falkenberg of Austin, spokesman for the Brown Schools, a leader in the industry. "I think it's important to remember that this business exists because young people and families need our services."



There are no agreed-upon definitions for the many types of facilities, no uniform standards of care, no minimum requirements to start a program in many states, few inspections or investigations and even fewer examples of sanctions for malfeasance.



Given that many programs are used by state social workers, including in Texas, who are trying to find places to treat those in the government's care, the paucity of stringent government oversight does not surprise some who question that apparent conflict.



When publicity or regulators spotlight problems, some programs have moved to Mexico, Central America or the Caribbean, a trend that has prompted a U.S. State Department warning to parents.



Others simply close, such as the On Track wilderness program in Mason County, where 17-year-old Chase Moody died in October while being restrained by counselors.



On Track was a part of the Brown Schools, a corporation that perhaps more than any other company, is emblematic of the industry, both good and bad.



The birth of a trend






In 1933, when Bert Brown stepped off the train in Austin with his wife and two children, he had two ragged suitcases and 60 cents in his pockets. Brown soon opened one of Austin's first rest homes, caring for the mentally disturbed. It quickly became a home for children who were waiting, often in a jail cell, for a bed to open up at a state school.



Then he took in a lonely 10-year-old red-haired girl.



"She had been in a home for forsaken and neglected normal children," Brown later recalled. "She was so defeated and unhappy. We made her feel, I believe, for the first time in her life that someone cared for her."



But a few months later, government officials came and took the little girl away to a home for delinquents. The Browns were devastated. And that evening, they decided to open a school for troubled children.



A few years later, Brown leased the old Spring Lake Hotel in San Marcos for $400 a month. A concept was born.



In the 60 years since, the Brown Schools has expanded, contracted, gone public, then private again, changed names, turned over ownership nearly a half-dozen times and leapfrogged corporate headquarters from Austin to Boston to Nashville, Tenn. The company doesn't currently have a corporate headquarters, but its operational offices, including the human resources department, remain in Austin.



In 1999, the Brown Schools ? which is owned by a California investment firm ? bought the California-based CEDU programs for about $72 million to expand its rapidly growing business.



It eventually grew to 19 schools and residential centers in eight states and Puerto Rico, including three in Austin, serving 25,000 youth a year with 2,000 employees ? 1,000 of them in Texas.



The Brown Schools was a model for success and a training ground for executives who moved on to run or start other similar companies.



Now, in the wake of Moody's death, the company is downsizing and recently sold six of its facilities ? a move they say was unrelated to the Moody tragedy.



"They got into being all things to all people," said Marguerite Sallee, who until April was president and chief executive of the Brown Schools.



'Therapeutic' programs






As a school of socially acceptable behavior, the Ascent wilderness camp's location might seem a bit odd.



Nestled in an Idaho mountain clearing, enveloped by the peaceful whisper of the wind blowing through towering pines and firs, Ascent is in the uppermost tip of the Idaho Panhandle, for years a nesting place for folks with anti-government, nonconformist tendencies. It is not far from Ruby Ridge, where federal agents confronted survivalist Randy Weaver and his family on a bloody day in 1992.



Billed as a "therapeutic wilderness program," Ascent is much like dozens of other such boarding schools across the United States. It offers a regimented outdoor experience designed to curb teenagers' errant behavior by jerking them from their normal world and turning their focus to positive, self-help patterns of behavior.



It is also one of four Brown Schools programs in northern Idaho ? part of the CEDU family of services ? each offering specialized treatment that mirrors the growing behavior-modification industry across the United States.



At Ascent, the focus is on six to eight weeks of intervention and adventure therapy for 13- to 17-year-olds. At Northwest Academy, it's up to two years of academics and life skills for 17- and 18-year-olds. At the Rocky Mountain Academy outside nearby Bonners Ferry, the program focuses on leadership and emotional growth for college-bound 16- to 18-year-olds. And at the adjacent Boulder Creek Academy, 12- to 16-year-olds with special needs and learning disabilities can stay up to two years. "By the time they come here, these kids are enough to drive the Pope into Al-Anon," said Roger Rinn, director of the Ascent program. "We don't fix them. We give them an opportunity to fix themselves."



For parents, that opportunity can be pricey.



At Northwest Academy, for example, it's $5,600 a month. At Ascent, the price is about $16,500 for an average 46-day stay.



For that, Ascent students get a dawn-to-dusk regimen of activities, counseling and physical-endurance exercises ? all designed to build self-esteem and self-perspective ? that begin before breakfast and end with lights out at night. Wood is chopped to build fires, meals are cooked and cleaned up, mountain camps are staked and packed up, tall wooden towers are scaled, friendships are built.



For most of the students, that regimen is an abrupt change from lives of anger, abuse, depression or drug addiction.



"Most are like a 4-year-old in the frequency they conflict with their parents," Rinn said. "They're real sweet. You want to reach out and hug them. But you just have to learn they will reach in your back pocket and steal your wallet if you do."



Changed children






"I'm a rich kid gone bad. I'm a rich kid gone bad."



The sarcasm is coming from a scraggly T-shirt-clad teenager lounging on a well-worn sofa in the main hall of CEDU High School, home to one of the Brown Schools' emotional growth programs in California.



The "rich kid gone bad" is among several dozen who have filed into the hall for the day's next activities.



The teenagers here, whose problems can include Internet addiction, drugs and promiscuity, often come from wealthy Hollywood parents, chief executives and real estate moguls from across the country. Most are white.



They're also savvy: Forbes magazine featured the CEDU (pronounced "see-do") programs in an article last year titled "When Rich Kids Go Bad."



The school sits on a cliffside in the San Bernardino Mountains in Running Springs, Calif., about two hours east of Los Angeles. Much of the school's activities take place in a mansion that served as the former vacation home to actor Walter Huston.



Therapy here focuses on holding one another accountable, admitting guilt and moving on, and expressing emotions. The program is designed to help the students learn self-control.



"I was a pretty wild kid. I was going 60 mph," said Bill Valentine, CEDU's director. "These kids are going 160 mph, and the highway's a lot more dangerous than when I was growing up."



It's difficult to gauge the sincerity level of many of the students enrolled here. Some can rattle off their personal stories, including every sordid detail, as if reciting a well-practiced monologue.



"I would go in and out of being suicidal," said one 18-year-old. He said he was angry and anti-social, dressed in black and preferred his computer and delivery pizza to human interaction or his family.



"I hated being alive."



His experience at CEDU, he said, has saved his life and allowed him to open up to others. Brown Schools officials cite him as one of their success stories, one of the many they've served.



Another is a thin, 17-year-old brunette from New York. She says she had slipped from making straight A's to abusing drugs and having sex promiscuously. Her grandparents mortgaged their home so she could attend CEDU, something she said she is grateful for.



"I know how I got myself here," she said. "And I know in some ways, it probably saved my life. I didn't care about myself. I bet I probably would've run away by now. I could probably be, like, prostituting myself."



The rocky road






Much like its clientele, the Brown Schools' road to success was not trouble-free.



As a private company, much of its financial and operational information is unavailable to the public.



However, in courthouses and file cabinets in regulatory agencies around the country, the company has left a paper trail that at the very least offers a glimpse into the unpleasantries of the business.



During the past decade, Brown has been sued for such things as wrongful death and injury to allegations of fraud. Its facilities have weathered hundreds of citations for human rights and licensing violations, as well as at least five deaths that came after children were physically restrained in a manner widely considered dangerous.



Falkenberg said, "It is very easy for an allegation to be made and for something to be reported and for that not to be the facts of the matter when everything's said and done."



In Virginia, a Brown Schools residential treatment center was written up for more than 100 licensing and civil rights violations over a two-year span beginning in January 2001. The citations included using improper physical restraints, withholding mail as punishment, forbidding teenagers from using the toilets, denying them meals, physically abusing them, injecting residents with drugs to control them, allowing rampant sexual activity and having many clients run away.



"It was being heavily ignored," Sallee said. During her tenure, Sallee replaced the center's management and re-evaluated the staff; eventually, the citations began to taper off.



The Brown Schools' Texas facilities have been cited dozens of times for similar violations. Most recently, On Track was cited 28 times in connection with Moody's death. The company appealed. A criminal investigation is ongoing.



Laurel Ridge, a former Brown Schools residential treatment center in San Antonio, was nearly closed after a 17-year-old died after a brutal restraint in 1997. It remained open, even after Rochelle Clayborn's death garnered nationwide publicity. Randy Steele, a 9-year-old from Nevada, died at Laurel Ridge three years later.



Allegations in court filings include:



? At a West Florida psychiatric treatment center, a 13-year-old girl said she was raped by a staff member. Brown denied the claim and, earlier this year, closed the center, citing funding issues.



? At a Tulsa, Okla., treatment program for young sex offenders, police investigated claims that a 17-year-old boy was sexually assaulting other male students. The boy was later charged in eight attacks and was sent to prison.



? In northern Idaho, the parents of two students involved in a riot ? including 17-year-old Kevin Accomazzo, who suffered a broken arm ? alleged fraud and misrepresentation by CEDU in their programs. CEDU officials denied the claims but later settled at least one of the cases ? after the company was acquired by Brown.



But most parents trying to place a child know little about a program's past other than what its promoters tell them.



"Parents are scared and freaked out when they make the decisions on a school. They are looking for a solution, any solution," said Todd Reed, a Sandpoint, Idaho, attorney who represented Accomazzo's family in the lawsuit. "The desired solution doesn't always work out."



A troubled industry






Brown's past problems are in part representative of the industry as a whole.



A year ago today, 14-year-old Ian August of Dripping Springs died during a hike at a Utah wilderness program. Another youth died this year at a treatment center in South Carolina.



Abroad, programs in Mexico and Jamaica have faced allegations of abuse and neglect.



And a therapeutic boarding school in Costa Rica was closed after its teenage students rioted over conditions.



The director of that school is the subject of a criminal investigation, but in this business, penalties for disobeying the rules are rare. In the past five years, few wilderness camps or residential treatment centers in Texas have had their licenses revoked, even though they have been cited for hundreds of violations ? many of them serious, some repeatedly.



When Moody died in October after struggling with three counselors while being restrained at the Brown Schools' On Track facility, there were no fines levied, although On Track was cited 28 times. And regardless, the maximum fine would have been just $100.



"We have a lot of kids in our care who are a challenge to care for, and it's our philosophy to work with these facilities to try to bring them up to the standards," said Geoffrey Wool, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services. "We'd rather work with them . . . and know that there are places for these children instead of punish these facilities and force them out of business."



But some advocates suspect the system in Texas is bogged down by what amounts to a conflict of interest: The Department of Protective and Regulatory Services also oversees Child Protective Services, which depends on these facilities to house troubled children who are either removed from their homes or orphaned.



At any given time, of the 6,000 beds available in Texas facilities, about 1,500 are filled with Child Protective Service placements, Wool said.



"The state has a conflict of interest because it both licenses and relies on the care in the residential treatment centers," said former state District Judge Scott McCown, who in his time as a judge became familiar with residential treatment centers and other youth-oriented programs and is now executive director of the Center for Public Policy Priorities.



Wool said his bosses see it differently: "Who better to regulate these facilities than the people who are actually placing children there?" he said. "We have a vested interest in making sure that these facilities provide a minimum standard of quality and that the children who are in these facilities are getting the care and treatment that they need."



Still, some treatment providers have said for years that the state does not pay enough to provide the necessary care for troubled youth. The rates run to more than $100 a day for the most challenging cases, a fraction of the cost of many private facilities.



McCown acknowledges that may be the case.



"What do you do if you don't want to pay a reasonable rate?" McCown said. "You ease up on regulations."



The alternative, he said, is to "pay decent rates to take care of the kids, then you hold people accountable."



A need to regulate






For decades, parents have been looking to outsiders to fix their troubled teens ? from traditional military academies in the east, popular for decades, to wilderness-experience camps that began springing up in the 1960s, to boarding schools that were popular in the 1970s, to psychiatric-therapy centers that were popular in the 1980s, to emotional-growth and behavior-modification programs that replaced them in the 1990s ? as insurance stopped paying for residential care.



Perhaps the greatest problem for parents contemplating such a desperate move as sending a child away: There is no foolproof way to compare the various programs' track records.



"Parents have too little information available to them before they place their children in these facilities," said Jerry Boswell, president of the Citizens Commission on Human Rights of Texas. "That should change."



Independently verifying the claims, or even checking the schools' credentials, can be a catch-as-catch-can exercise for parents, thanks to spotty and conflicting oversight and regulation by different states ? something that even some of the larger companies complain about.



The Brown Schools for years pushed Idaho lawmakers to establish regulations for wilderness programs and this year succeeded. Ascent will be one of the first wilderness camps licensed in the state.



"We'd prefer they'd be the same standards nationwide. It generally upgrades the industry to have regulations," Falkenberg said. "It does the industry no good to allow operators who aren't interested in adhering to regulations to provide quality care. It's too easy in an unregulated environment for that care to be subpar."



Few initiatives have been launched to strengthen or standardize regulation ? or even categorize programs the same from state to state, so parents can compare programs more easily.



"It's extremely confusing to categorize programs because there really are no clear written, explicit standards about what constitutes a certain program and what kind of services you will get," said Michael Conner, an Oregon-based licensed psychologist and educational consultant who is one of the foremost experts on treatment options available for troubled youth. "The right program with the right child can be miraculous. The wrong child and the wrong program is a very dangerous mix."



Andy Anderson, executive director of the National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs, a trade group with 113 members in 26 states, admits the business can be confusing, regulations aside: "There's as many different types of wilderness programs as I have fingers and toes."



Anderson said his organization, which includes many of the Brown Schools' programs, is designed to encourage the industry to adopt a code of ethics and then live by it.



But Conner said there are some programs that operate outside of what anybody would consider best practices, charging very little money for and providing slipshod care.



"The problem is there's no standards for a lot of these programs ? that's what make its most difficult," he said.



"Acceptable window of loss ? I find that term very offensive ? but there's a few programs that look at students in terms of acceptable windows of loss," Conner said. "Free market solutions to protect children are inherently dangerous. "The State Department has warnings on programs outside the country," Conner said. "What we don't have are warnings about programs inside this country."



[email protected]; 445-1712



Programs for troubled children and teenagers

Most programs fall into four categories:

* Residential treatment centers, which often are locked institutional settings that focus on behavioral support and medication management.

* Emotional growth programs, which focus on character development, accountability, self-esteem and social awareness. They are designed to help children become more responsible.

* Therapeutic boarding schools, which are much like emotional growth programs except they typically employ licensed therapists and focus on children with histories of substance abuse, behavioral problems and poor communication skills related to family issues.

* Wilderness programs, which is often a catch-all term for short-term behavioral intervention programs with a heavy outdoor component.


Source: American-Statesman research
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Offline anon

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Lichfield: God is the Key to his success
« Reply #2 on: July 15, 2003, 02:42:00 PM »
[ This Message was edited by: KarenZ on 2003-10-17 08:48 ]
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Offline FaceKhan

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Lichfield: God is the Key to his success
« Reply #3 on: July 17, 2003, 07:48:00 PM »
Actually I think people who abuse the weak are supposed to be whipped or stoned or something according to Christianity. Of course he could also be considered a witch of some kind because he has undue influence (legal term for brainwashing) over others. Or since he essentially has created his own cult/religion in which WWASP is what people are supposed to believe in then he could be considered an idolator and should be annihilated.

Too bad the UN war crimes court does not have a death penalty. If that UN torture investigation goes forward in Costa Rica the WWASP leadership could face long prison terms in exotic Western Europe. Its a long shot but there is hope.
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All of the darkness of the world cannot put out the light of one small candle.\"

Offline Anonymous

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Lichfield: God is the Key to his success
« Reply #4 on: April 24, 2005, 06:24:00 PM »
Quote
On 2003-07-15 11:11:00, Deborah wrote:

"God is the key to his accomplishments, he says, and Satan is stirring up his foes.



He requested his photograph not be published in The Times because "some kids are a little deranged.... You never know what they might do."



Lichfield as a humorless, dictatorial figure who seemed to delight in taunting students.



"God can't help everybody. I don't know how we're going to," he said."


This guy is totally insane. Yeah.. and just in case any of those 'deranged ex-students' stop by here, here's a picture of his fatass. :rofl:

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Offline Anonymous

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Lichfield: God is the Key to his success
« Reply #5 on: April 24, 2005, 07:35:00 PM »
It's hard to believe that he thinks Satan is waging a war against his programs that get kids off of drugs and other evils.  He's truly deranged himself.  His programs are not equipped to medically and psychologically detox those addicted to drugs.
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Offline Anonymous

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Lichfield: God is the Key to his success
« Reply #6 on: April 25, 2006, 12:43:00 PM »
Thomas M Burton, a most honorable and good man, was once my attorney.  These "schools" drain life from children for profit while violating state and federal law; in one case I was witness to staff from an Idaho "school"  harassing, following, and arranging for false charges to be filed against those able to try to bring justice and healing to their victims. In said case, many years after a vocal victim had given up hope, persons came forward to ask for forgiveness after confessing exactly what they had done; God had  shown them his glory.  

Sir, I am one such victim.  Every year around Christmas I have horrible nightmares over the great injustice I was dealt.  Nightmares that have gone on for over a decade; I am not the only person suffering the same torture.  

I so loved law and the principles behind it in my youth, to such a point I spent hours reading books at the local court sometimes skipping P.E. as it was my last class and felt it not as intriguing.  After my kidnapping to Idaho the beautiful lady justice that once in my mind shined like the sun atop a mountain of truth and integrity with even scales now appeared as a whore with the sins of injustice on her back.  No child should be treated as we were without having guilt of a serious crime; much less when our physical (sexual in 2 cases I know of and witnessed) abuse was carefully masked as "tough love" at the rate of 250 U.S.D.  per day.  

Burton restored my, and my fellow victims, faith.  I may have not completed my goal, however one "school" had to change names and hide for some years.  (While doing their best to silence us)  We are adults now, not the boys they tortured for their own sick entertainment.  We, yes WE,  will stop this most vile and unjust abuse to ensure the fear, nightmares, pain, and emotional scars WE face will never be placed on another human child again;  it must die with us and never return.

Children have died Sir; look at the photos of the dead and read their words.  You have no idea now horrible the persons Burton goes after are nor have you earned the right to comment on this subject.  Friends of mine tried to take their own life in front of me, one throwing himself off a cliff.  Have you ever seen a 15Yo boy hit a cliff from several hundred feet off the ground?  The human body bounces with a sound and wail.  Said boy was not mentally ill nor lacking standard mental capacity.

 "...send our boys to dark and bloody battlefields only to return physically handicapped  and psychologically deranged ...  I dont know about you but I dont want to study war no more." M.L. King

We returned from hell and few listened; what happens in these dark places is considered unacceptable for  convicted murderers and enemy soldiers during conventional war.  But we were children; all held w/o trial or a phone call.

Damn you sir, you have not earned the right to discuss such matters.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #7 on: April 25, 2006, 12:50:00 PM »
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John C. D'Abreo
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #8 on: April 25, 2006, 01:07:00 PM »
John, what program were you in?  Rocky Mountain Academy?
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline 001010

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« Reply #9 on: April 25, 2006, 01:08:00 PM »
God calls Litchfield's kind, "Wolves in sheep?s clothing."

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Offline ConstentGardener

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« Reply #10 on: April 30, 2006, 10:42:00 AM »
Quote
On 2006-04-25 09:43:00, Anonymous wrote:

"Thomas M Burton, a most honorable and good man, was once my attorney.  These "schools" drain life from children for profit while violating state and federal law; in one case I was witness to staff from an Idaho "school"  harassing, following, and arranging for false charges to be filed against those able to try to bring justice and healing to their victims. In said case, many years after a vocal victim had given up hope, persons came forward to ask for forgiveness after confessing exactly what they had done; God had  shown them his glory.  



Sir, I am one such victim.  Every year around Christmas I have horrible nightmares over the great injustice I was dealt.  Nightmares that have gone on for over a decade; I am not the only person suffering the same torture.  



I so loved law and the principles behind it in my youth, to such a point I spent hours reading books at the local court sometimes skipping P.E. as it was my last class and felt it not as intriguing.  After my kidnapping to Idaho the beautiful lady justice that once in my mind shined like the sun atop a mountain of truth and integrity with even scales now appeared as a whore with the sins of injustice on her back.  No child should be treated as we were without having guilt of a serious crime; much less when our physical (sexual in 2 cases I know of and witnessed) abuse was carefully masked as "tough love" at the rate of 250 U.S.D.  per day.  



Burton restored my, and my fellow victims, faith.  I may have not completed my goal, however one "school" had to change names and hide for some years.  (While doing their best to silence us)  We are adults now, not the boys they tortured for their own sick entertainment.  We, yes WE,  will stop this most vile and unjust abuse to ensure the fear, nightmares, pain, and emotional scars WE face will never be placed on another human child again;  it must die with us and never return.



Children have died Sir; look at the photos of the dead and read their words.  You have no idea now horrible the persons Burton goes after are nor have you earned the right to comment on this subject.  Friends of mine tried to take their own life in front of me, one throwing himself off a cliff.  Have you ever seen a 15Yo boy hit a cliff from several hundred feet off the ground?  The human body bounces with a sound and wail.  Said boy was not mentally ill nor lacking standard mental capacity.



 "...send our boys to dark and bloody battlefields only to return physically handicapped  and psychologically deranged ...  I dont know about you but I dont want to study war no more." M.L. King



We returned from hell and few listened; what happens in these dark places is considered unacceptable for  convicted murderers and enemy soldiers during conventional war.  But we were children; all held w/o trial or a phone call.



Damn you sir, you have not earned the right to discuss such matters.   "


I would like to speak with you. Please consider an email or PM. I'm on your side.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
ear with me that I may speak, and after I have spoken, mock on.
Job 21;3