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News Items / Sheriff - Juvenile probation officer performed oral sex
« on: February 16, 2012, 11:24:03 PM »
Juveniles are sent to the Amador R. Rodriguez Juvenile Boot Camp School in San Benito for long term discipline.

Cadets try to re-learn right from wrong.

It's a mission that comes into question when a probation officer is charged with improper sexual activity with a person in custody at the school.

"She admitted to the crime," Sheriff Omar Lucio said.

Patricia Aguilar is accused of having oral sex with a 17-year-old male cadet.

Sheriff Lucio says she lured the teen into her office last week following a basketball game where the incident took place.

It didn't stop there.

"When somebody who is an officer of the law... like this probation officer... Does something like that... It becomes a crime," the sheriff said.

He says Aguilar gave the cadet her phone number and the two later met in the parking lot of the San Benito Wal-Mart where she again performed oral sex on him while he was on supervised leave.

And that's what led to her termination, according to Tommy Ramirez Jr., chief executive officer for the juvenile center.

Ramirez says he was quite disturbed to hear the allegations against her adding how all employees go through a strict hiring process.

It's just one of the many safeguards in place to protect inmates, according to him.

"This particular individual has been here for several years," Ramirez said. "She has been a good employee... We are baffled, disappointed, sad that something like this happened... We just don't understand why it could have happened.... but it did."

Even though the cadet is considered an adult, rules prohibit outside interaction with staff at the center.

Ramirez says the teen faces disciplinary action, and officers will be monitored and educated to prevent this from happening again.

Administration at the center first learned about the case after another cadet made an outcry.

The teen bragged to others about what had happened, according to the sheriff's department.

Aguilar faces up to 10 years behind bars and a $10,000 fine for the second degree felony charge.

http://http://www.valleycentral.com/news/story.aspx?id=716528

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News Items / Facility Supervisor Charged In Strangulation Death
« on: August 04, 2011, 08:45:40 PM »
http://www.wpix.com/news/wpix-superviso ... 6777.story

NEW YORK (PIX11)— The parents of Jawara Henry, 27, tearfully praised the Richmond County District Attorney's office for bringing charges against Erik Stanley, 37, of Middletown, N.J in Henry's death last year. The family also announced plans to file a civil lawsuit against the state-run institution where their autistic son died. Henry died while being subdued by workers at the South Beach Psychiatric Center on Staten Island.

Stanley surrendered to police Wednesday morning and was arraigned in State Supreme Court, St. George, on charges of criminally negligent homicide and endangering the welfare of an incompetent or physically disabled person for Henry's death on Dec. 4, 2010. Stanley pleaded not guilty and was released on his own recognizance.

Courtney and Sharon Rowe of Staten Island, who held a press conference announcing their lawsuit, explain their son was highly non-functioning and could not speak since he was a child. Henry was a patient and Stanley was a developmental aide supervisor at a multi-diagnostic facility operated by Staten Island Developmental Disabilities Service Office, division of the NYS Office for People with Developmental Disabilities, located on the grounds of South Beach Psychiatric Center, according to prosecutors. His parents insist they placed him in the facility after Sharon, a health care aide, and stepfather, Courtney could not care for him anymore.

"I'm happy that somebody is going to pay for my son's death," Sharon Rowe said.

An eight-month investigation by Richmond County District Attorney Daniel Donovan included reviews of medical and forensic evidence and interviews with eyewitnesses and found that Stanley did not follow protocol nor use proper techniques while trying to restrain Henry. An indictment against Stanley claims he caused Henry's death by using excessive pressure on Henry's neck and torso. At the time, Henry was agitated and aggressive and was biting staff and other patients at the facility.

The New York City Medical Examiner concluded Henry died of asphyxia by neck and chest compression, according to the Donovan's office.

The Rowe's attorney, Gary Douglas from Douglas & London, P.C. in Manhattan, believes others knew of ongoing problems concerning Henry. Sharon Rowe describes three incidents including what she believed was a burn on his leg and a cut on the head that were allegedly dismissed by employees of the facility when the parents complained during the year their son was housed at the psychiatric center.

"I was always on top of it but they didn't even send me a report until after my son was dead," Sharon Rowe said.

"This is systematic. This has to do with how our state is using our tax dollars to purportedly help people," Douglas added.

The Rowe family hopes their upcoming lawsuit will shed light on a problem they feel is rampant at the facility and warn other parents of special needs children to be vigilant.

"I think the state has to do a better job of supervising people that take care of these people because these are special people that have special needs. And you got to have compassionate people to take care of them. I think the system really failed Jawara," Courtney Rowe said.

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News Items / Founder Of Electro-Shock Autism School Forced To Quit
« on: May 26, 2011, 10:42:15 AM »
The founder of a controversial school that treats severely autistic and emotionally disturbed children by shocking them into submission with the use of electrodes has been forced to quit the institution and serve five years' probation.

Matthew Israel, a Harvard-trained psychologist, has created a treatment that is unique to the US and possibly the world. The Judge Rotenberg Center, just outside Boston, disciplines its students using a punishment machine that Israel invented called the GED, which gives a two-second electric shock to the skin of up to 90 milliamps.

At the centre, which was profiled by the Guardian earlier this year, students wear backpacks around the clock with the GED electric generators inside them, and are zapped using remote control devices controlled by their carers. In some cases, they are shocked as often as 30 times a day as a means of dissuading them from behaviour deemed dangerous to themselves or others.

The criminal charges brought against Israel relate to an incident in August 2007 at one of the school's residential homes where students sleep at night. A call came in from someone posing as an authorised supervisor, who informed the carers on duty that two teenagers had misbehaved and should be given shock treatment.

At 2am, the boys were strapped on boards and given multiple shocks. One of the boys, aged 18, was shocked 77 times over a three-hour period and the other boy, aged 16, was shocked 29 times. It was later discovered that the initial call had been a hoax.

The Massachusetts attorney general, Martha Coakley, indicted Israel over allegations that he ordered his staff to destroy video evidence that revealed exactly what happened that night. Prosecutors had previously ordered that the video recordings from the home were preserved.

"Dr Israel then attempted to destroy evidence of the events and mislead investigators, and that conduct led to his indictments today. Today's action removes Dr Israel from the school and should ensure better protection for students in the future," Coakley said.

The conviction is a substantial blow to Israel, who has weathered a storm of protest about his controversial methods for 40 years. He announced his retirement from the school on 2 May, without referring to the pending criminal case. He said he was moving to California, where his wife Judy lives.

"I am now almost 78 years old, and it is time for me to move over and let others take the reins," he said in a resignation letter.

But his departure will not materially change the way the school operates, crucially its technique of disciplining children by meting out electric shocks as a form of supposedly therapeutic punishment. Of the school's 225 students, 97 are currently on the electric shock regime.

The terms of the plea deal struck between Israel and the prosecutors require the school to introduce additional monitoring to prevent a similar lapse of security happening again. But the shocks themselves can continue.

"The case was only about Israel's conduct, it did not address the way the school is run," a spokesman for the attorney general's office said.

Laurie Ahern of Disability Rights International, which has been a persistent critic of the school, said that without an end to the shocks, Israel's departure would be irrelevant. "I don't see any radical change at the moment."

Hillary Cook, who spent three years at the school until 2009, and who was regularly shocked, said that whatever happened to Israel, she wanted to see the regime of shocks abolished. "I'm just worried about the kids who live there, because I know what it's like. They say the shocks are like a bee sting, and believe me they are not. It should be illegal to physically harm children and disabled people in this country."

The school has been a subject of huge controversy over past decades, with regular attempts to shut it down. Last year its use of electric shocks was attacked as a form of torture by the UN rapporteur on torture.

In February, the justice department opened an investigation into the school after it received a complaint alleging the centre had violated disability laws.

Despite the negative publicity directed at him, Israel managed to keep operating for so long partly because he had the vociferous support of parents of severely autistic children at the school.

The centre rarely uses drugs on its students, in contrast to many other homes for autistic people where heavy doses of psychotropic drugs are prescribed. At the time of Israel's resignation, Louisa Goldberg, whose son has been on the shock regime for the past 11 years, said that "Dr Israel's pioneering efforts have given our child back his life and we are extremely grateful for all that he has done for our family."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/ma ... ent-school

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News Items / Outsourcing Troubled Kids (article)
« on: January 09, 2011, 08:55:38 PM »
D.C. is addicted to the most costly, most scary way of treating vulnerable youngsters.
 
By Jason Cherkis on January 7, 2011

Jumiya Crump was on the run. It was close to 9:30 p.m. on July 1, 2009. “I just left,” she blurted into the phone. “I don’t know what to do.”

So Jumiya, 16, started walking. From downtown, she moved east, in the shadow of a freeway overpass, past a public housing complex. A Metrobus got her over the Anacostia River. Another short walk brought her to her grandmother’s house off Minnesota Avenue NE, the safest address she had ever known.

http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/arti ... kids/full/

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Open Free for All / Pixie Stix Sandwich
« on: December 14, 2010, 02:04:45 PM »
From The Breakfast Club (1985)

1 slice white bread

1 slice wheat bread

butter

2 Pixy Stix (flavored sugar in straws)

2 handfuls of Cap'n Crunch cereal

Preparations:

1. Butter slice of white bread. You can also butter the wheat slice if you want.

2. Pour contents of one pixy stix evenly onto white bread slice.

3. Pour contents of one pixy stix evenly onto wheat bread slice.

4. Sprinkle handfuls of Cap'n Crunch evenly onto white piece of bread. Smash cereal down with your hands.

5. Repeat with wheat bread.

6. Carefully put slices together, and enjoy!

 7. Wash it all down with a Coke!


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