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Messages - Jeff_Berryman

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46
What other programs are you referring to?  Are you suggesting that other programs made similar campaign contributions?  What evidence do you have of that?  I see no reason to assume or even suspect that anyone paid to have this article run.  WWASP is in the news, and a story like this sells newspapers.  That's all the reason any editor would need to run it.

47
This article is at:

http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_2417418


Teen-help operators have clout
Family behind schools with checkered record calls in political favors, critics say
By Dan Harrie
and Robert Gehrke
2004, The Salt Lake Tribune  

 
 
A bill permitting state regulation of boarding schools for troubled teens was quietly smothered in the Utah Capitol this year after the founder of a chain of controversial schools, who is a major Republican donor, lobbied key lawmakers.
   Powerful legislators, including House Speaker Marty Stephens, held back the measure until the Legislature's clock ran out at midnight on March 3 - the final day of the session.
   Six days later, the bill's biggest opponent, World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools founder Robert Lichfield, presented a $30,000 check to Stephens' campaign for governor.
   Since then, one of the handful of Utah boarding schools, which would have been regulated under the bill, Majestic Ranch, near Randolph, Utah, has been investigated three separate times for alleged abuse, according to state Human Service officials. Only one ended in a criminal charge and conviction when a staffer - no longer employed there - pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault.
   Majestic Ranch is owned by Lichfield's brother-in-law, Dan Peart, who donated $500 to Stephens. The ranch is among seven troubled-teen schools affiliated with World Wide in four states and two foreign countries.
   Several others have been shut down amid allegations of abuse or squalid living conditions, including the Casa by the Sea facility near Ensenada, Mexico, closed last weekend by government officials. More than 500 students were returned to the United States from the program.
   Ken Stettler, director of the Utah Office of Licensing, remains convinced he had the votes to pass Senate Bill 140, giving his office regulatory authority over Majestic Ranch, if only Stephens and others had allowed it to come up for a vote.
   "It still goes back to the old deal that, you know, if you are giving political contributions, then when the time comes and you need to call in your chips, you're going to have a listening ear, which is more than a lot of the citizenry has," says Stettler.
   If cash is the secret to opening political doors, Lichfield and his profitable network of schools are well on their way to securing the master key.
   The La Verkin entrepreneur, his family members and business associates have poured more than million into political campaigns during the 2002 election and so far this year. The contributions - all to Republican candidates, and many to Utah politicians - have come like a desert downpour: fierce and sudden.
   The family donated no more than a couple of thousand dollars prior to Jan. 1, 2001.
   Lichfield told The Tribune there was nothing nefarious about his sudden plunge into the political arena.
   "We've been abundantly blessed, and when you're blessed, we feel you have a responsibility to bless others," he said, confirming that World Wide member schools gross more than $70 million annually.
   The family's charitable contributions dwarf political donations, Lichfield added, putting the former donations at $3 million last year.
   Utah politicians who were among the biggest benefactors of the Lichfield election-year largesse insisted they never had discussed issues with their patron.
   U.S. House candidate John Swallow has received 18,000 from Lichfield and his associates, more than any other candidate.
   Swallow's campaign manager, Tim Garon, said Swallow had not met Lichfield until 2002, when the Lichfield family handed over 30 checks on a single day totaling $30,000 to Swallow's campaign.
   "John and I are close friends," said Lichfield. "We just connected as families."
   After his 2002 election loss, Swallow did legal work for a Lichfield company in Nevada. As a state representative, Swallow had twice sponsored legislation that would have allowed parents to get a tax break for enrolling their children in a private school.
   Lichfield   said he has "mixed emotions" about tuition-tax credits, although "you obviously see I have an incentive to be for them." Although such tax breaks would benefit private schools, including World Wide members, he said he has reservations about hurting public schools by draining resources.
   As with Swallow, Sen. Bob Bennett met Lichfield just a few years ago, but has become a friend. They don't discuss policy, said Bennett's spokeswoman, Mary Jane Collipriest.
   Last year, Lichfield sent Bennett a form letter supporting a Medicare reform bill, according to Collipriest. The bill expanded Health Savings Accounts, which allow parents to make tax-free contributions to an account that can be used for medical costs, including the type of residential treatment provided by schools affiliated with World Wide.
   Lichfield said he doesn't remember the letter or the issue.
   He said he hasn't pressed his issues on Bennett nor any of the Utah gubernatorial candidates who have received 40,000 so far this year from the Lichfield family and business associates.
   "I don't think I've ever sat down and given them a litmus test," Lichfield said. "There were so many good candidates."
   Republican gubernatorial nominee Jon Huntsman Jr. concurs.
   "We have not talked about any of his issues. I do not know a whole lot about his business," said Huntsman, who accepted $60,000 from Lichfield and $5,000 from Majestic Ranch. "What business is he in?"
   Former U.S. Rep. Jim Hansen took more than $45,000 from Lichfield for his unsuccessful campaign for governor this year.
   "Bob Lichfield is a great American," said Hansen. "I don't know a thing about" the string of schools for troubled youth.
   Stephens, the outgoing House speaker whose bid for governor ended unsuccessfully in the May 8 Republican State Convention, did not return eight messages for comment over a period of more than two weeks.
   "Believe me, the check had nothing to do with SB140," said Lichfield. "Marty Stephens was going to get a donation from me no matter what happened to SB140. Marty Stephens is a quality guy."
    Lichfield shrugs off any suggestion he has, in just two years, become a political power broker.
    "I'd like to use my means and resources to bless peoples' lives. Does that also imply influencing policy-makers to make good policies that support good family values, quality education and the things I believe in? Definitely. I'd like to have some influence in that," he said.
    Reps. Steve Urquhart and Dave Clark, both St. George Republicans, helped stall SB140 in the Legislature's House Rules Committee after consulting with Lichfield family members and their business associates. Each received $2,500 in donations in 2002 from Lichfield.
   Urquhart, who said he was representing a constituent and his philosophy of limited government, acknowledged consulting with Stephens.
   Stettler identified Stephens as a key player in the demise of SB140 - a claim confirmed by bill-sponsoring Sen. Chris Buttars, R-West Jordan.
   "He was determined it wasn't going to pass," said Buttars.
    Buttars, who shepherded the bill through the Senate, came under attack himself because he is the head of Utah Boys Ranch, which also treats troubled youth.
   "Mine is a full, licensed residential program and I think that makes me a better facility," he said. "I'm prejudiced and I admit that. I think every kid deserves to have his food, safety and shelter guaranteed by oversight."
   Buttars declined to comment on Lichfield or his affiliated companies directly.
   "There are some huge forces that I took on there. . . . I really don't want to talk much about that," he said. "This is a mean, ugly game with money going in lots of directions."
   Ken   Kay, World Wide's president, questioned Buttars' sponsorship of a bill that would affect his competitors.
   "Personally, I found that dazzling that here's a guy that has something to do with this Utah Boys Ranch in there trying to do this," said Kay.
   He dismisses as "baloney" the claim by Stettler and Buttars that the bill simply would have allowed state licensing officials to inspect Majestic Ranch twice a year - including once in an unannounced visit.
   Kay said the legislation would have required professional diagnoses of the 65 youngsters at Majestic Ranch and allowed regulators to pore through "private financial records" and dictate "how you conduct [operations] and train staff and who they are."
   Kay said there is simply no need for the state to have such a strong hand in the boarding schools' operations.
    "We see certain bureaucrats that want more control. I think it has a lot to do with power," said Kay. "I think we are every bit as sensitive, if not more sensitive, to children's rights and safety. We have a total anti-abuse stand - 100 percent."
   But the Association-affiliated schools have a checkered record. Government agencies in the Czech Republic, Costa Rica and, most recently, Mexico have shut down schools.
   In South Carolina, inspectors put Carolina Springs Academy's license on probation after administrators failed to report child abuse. They also found students sleeping on stained, torn mattresses in unfit dormitories and problems with how students were restrained.
    Regulators also banned Lichfield's brother, Narvin, from the facility based on his operation of the Costa Rican school.
   Congressman George Miller, D-Calif., has twice asked the Justice Department to investigate the schools, and more recently Rep. Jack Quinn, R-N.Y., made a similar request. The Bush administration has said it lacks the authority to initiate such a probe.
   The Justice Department said it has forwarded the complaints to the U.S. Attorney for Utah and the FBI field office, but a   spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney said nothing has come of the referral.
   Meantime, Attorney General Mark Shurtleff, whose office two years ago unsuccessfully prosecuted the director of Majestic Ranch on abuse charges, as recently as last week toured one of the affiliated schools in St. George with Urquhart.
   Shurtleff's campaign has received no Lichfield contributions, a spokeswoman said.
    Lichfield said in his two or three meetings with Shurtleff, he has never attempted to get Shurtleff to rein in investigators or prosecutors. He said he doesn't have that kind of influence and wouldn't use it if he did.
   Scott Simpson, a former executive director of the Utah Republican Party, spoke with Lichfield often during the 2002 campaign.
   "From my perspective, it seemed based on ideology," said Simpson. "There are a few ways you can get involved in politics. You can run for office, you can be the grass-roots guy pounding in the lawn signs or you can be the guy who writes the check."
   [email protected]

48
The Troubled Teen Industry / De Sisto's Controversial Leader Dies
« on: November 04, 2003, 06:45:00 PM »
When I was going to the University of Florida I used to drive past their Florida location all the time.  I believe it's out of business now.  The locals were terrified of the place.  I talked to people who were under the impression that every kid there had committed at least one murder and all would be adjudged insane and packed off to state hospitals when they turned 21.  I presume that this was a way to assure that runnaways would not be offered assistence.  From what I've heard about DeSisto's other location, I sincerely hope that this program does not long survive its founder.

49
The Troubled Teen Industry / This is interesting.
« on: October 22, 2003, 10:02:00 AM »
The article is at:

http://64.71.146.119/articles/topics/ca ... 0nine.html

You must understand that I wrote this for an Industry magazine and slanted it accordingly.  I would have preferred far more substantial changes than the ones I advocated.  However, politics is the art of the possible so I went with what I considered possible.

50
The Troubled Teen Industry / Media, Lawsuits and Insurance
« on: September 21, 2003, 12:24:00 AM »
I talked to a lawyer's investigator recently who was getting interested in WWASP.  Before that he investigated nursing homes in Texas.  The first time his law firm got a big judgment against a nursing home there, every lawyer in Texas became an advocate for nursing home reform.  They badgered the biggest operator in the state into selling off over two hundred facilities and leaving Texas.  He was of the opinion that one big judgment against WWASP or any major player in the BM industry would have much the same effect.  And that will drive the cost of their liability insurance out of reach.

51
The Troubled Teen Industry / ivy ridge
« on: September 20, 2003, 12:51:00 PM »
Quote
On 2003-09-20 08:57:00, Antigen wrote:

"WWASP and other totalitarian organizations are just pissing themselves lately because, over the last decade, it's gotten so easy and inexpensive for regular people to find each other and swap info. That really sort of puts a kink in their pipes. They have an absolute need to keep us all from talking together.


You just hit upon a fundamental truth about human society.  I like to beleive that I was the first to make this observation:  Whenever there is an improvement in man's ability to communicate, SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC REVOLUTION FOLLOW."

As a young man I majored in the Russian Language because I had a sneaky scheme to destroy the Soviet Union and get rich doing it.  I knew something like the Internet was in the works, and I wanted to help the Soviets get computerized.  I figured Marxism-Leninism could never survive the Internet.  Unfortunately, Chernoble screwed up my carreer plans.  Right now the Internet is playing a major role in political upheavals in Iran.  It's gratifying to me to know that my plan might have worked.

52
The Troubled Teen Industry / did wwasp close another school?
« on: September 20, 2003, 09:26:00 AM »
I've tried Google News and I can't find any confirmation of the closure.  Would anyone with first-hand knowledge please post a link to any news story about it?

53
The Troubled Teen Industry / BELL ACADEMY CLOSED. ANOTHER WWASP DOWN
« on: September 20, 2003, 09:22:00 AM »
Quote
On 2003-09-19 23:05:00, Anonymous wrote:

"The students that stayed there chose to be there, no "against their will" lock down, etc.



Actually, I'm in agreement on this one.  If Social Services wanted to put their restrictions on it, it's better off closed.  They wanted to make it something it was not.

"


So if the place was so above-board, why didn't they just get the license and stay open?

54
The Troubled Teen Industry / ivy ridge
« on: September 20, 2003, 09:20:00 AM »
Quote
On 2003-09-20 01:17:00, FaceKhan wrote:

"Yeah if WWASP ever sued me I would just hire the most unscrupulous lawyer I could find and let him turn the discovery process into a nightmare as every document and record in their posession was publicized.
"


You don't need an unscrupulous lawyer.  Everything that goes into court pleadings or testimony is public record.  I personally scanned the Tranquility Bay testimony off of official transcripts which is available elsewhere at this site.  Now I can send links to everybody and his brother.  (I previously sent it on CD to everyone from leading journalists to the Jamaican supreme court and ministry of health)  WWASP will be hearing about it for the rest of their corporate existence.  If my case ever goes to a jury we're going to have LOTS of depositions and witnesses whose testimony will come back to haunt WWASP forever after.  I anticipate beating their SLAPP suit with little difficulty.  And then, they will discover that he who sues last sues best.

55
The Troubled Teen Industry / ivy ridge
« on: September 19, 2003, 10:09:00 AM »
Yeah.  Tell me about it.

56
The Troubled Teen Industry / My Bona Fides as an Activist
« on: September 19, 2003, 10:07:00 AM »
One contacts me at the E-mail address which I always provide.  And I don't make allegations, I just send some links to recent news stories in reputable publications.  That's more than enough to convince anyone playing with a full deck to look elsewhere (Not that they're all playing with a full deck, alas.)  It's not my fault if the truth hurts.  WWASP's problems are entirely of its own making and it deserves what it's going to get.  I'm merely a catylist who's speeding up the process a bit.

57
The Troubled Teen Industry / To Melissa R
« on: September 18, 2003, 12:21:00 PM »
No, you lost my respect a long time earlier.  Shortly after we spoke on the phone, in fact.

58
The Troubled Teen Industry / My Bona Fides as an Activist
« on: September 18, 2003, 12:17:00 PM »
Quote
You know what insanity is? Doing the same things over and over expecting different results.



No, I expect exactly the results that I am getting.  In the past five years I have prevented literally hundreds of children from falling into WWASP's clutches.  I have helped victims find lawyers.  I have gotten the media involved.  I have helped people find help in getting their kids out of WWASP programs.  WWASP's enrollment is down, they have had facilities closed, and they are facing a class action lawsuit.  Those results look good to me.

59
The Troubled Teen Industry / My Bona Fides as an Activist
« on: September 18, 2003, 12:12:00 PM »
And why exactly have you made this personal choice.  What led you to this conclusion?

60
The Troubled Teen Industry / My Bona Fides as an Activist
« on: September 17, 2003, 10:49:00 PM »
http://www.bridgetounderstanding.com/cgi-bin/bbs.pl

Melissa R or anyone else who cares, check the old message board at Bridge to Understanding at the above link.  You will find postings from me dating back to 1998, before Sue Scheff and WWASP ever heard of each other.  So much for my being Sue Scheff's lackey.

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