Fornits

Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform => Facility Question and Answers => Three Springs => Topic started by: Ursus on January 02, 2010, 02:54:12 PM

Title: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Ursus on January 02, 2010, 02:54:12 PM
Breaking News
Posted: Jan 2, 2010

Sequel TSI Holdings, LLC (Three Springs)
Huntsville, AL

Three Springs Acquired By Sequel Youth And Family Services (http://http://www.strugglingteens.com/artman/publish/SequelYouthFamilyBN_010210.shtml)

Contact:
Aida Porras
VP Marketing
256-880-3339 x222
http://www.threesprings.com (http://www.threesprings.com)

December 30, 2009

Sequel Youth and Family Services, a nationally recognized leader in youth services, announces the acquisition of privately held Three Springs, Inc. (TSI) a leading provider of specialized behavioral health treatment for adolescents. Three Springs Inc. headquartered in Huntsville, Alabama is a strategic and valued addition to Sequel. The acquisition will extend the company's geographic footprint with the combined companies operating 22 programs across the country. Paint Rock Valley, an outdoor therapeutic program located in Trenton, AL and Auldern Academy, a therapeutic boarding school located in Siler City, NC will add private educational and therapeutic programming to Sequel's continuum of service. Leadership in these programs will remain unchanged. Three Springs' referral sources, clients and families will continue to receive the same level of quality and support as both companies will work to ensure a seamless transition. The merger of these organizations will create a company that is stronger programmatically and financially. The combined entity will be stronger than either company standing alone and perfectly positions the organization for growth and continued service excellence. Most importantly, Chairman, Jay Ripley states, "we will stay true to the operating philosophy and core values shared by both Sequel and Three Springs."

For additional details please contact Aida Porras, VP of Marketing at (256) 880-3339.


Copyright © 2009, Woodbury Reports, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Title: Who is Sequel Youth and Family Services?
Post by: Ursus on January 03, 2010, 06:42:42 PM
Who is Sequel Youth and Family Services?


One with a number of personnel ties to Youth Services International Inc., which, if I'm not mistaken, is or was also a former owner of Three Springs, no?

I'm guessing that the acquisition of Three Springs represents part of Sequel's efforts at expansion, expressed below as "looking ... to add additional bases of operation throughout the country for these highly-sought-after services."  

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

COMPANY HISTORY (http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/history.html)

Sequel Youth and Family Services (SYFS) was founded by Cindy Cox, Adam Shapiro, and Jay Ripley, and in June, 1999 began managing the Clarinda Academy in Clarinda, Iowa at the request of the Clarinda Youth Corporation. The following year, in December, 2000, we entered into a management contract with the Woodward Youth Corporation to operate the Woodward Academy in Woodward, Iowa. Normative Services Prep School (NSI), located in Sheridan, Wyoming, followed in January, 2003, as the NSI Board sought a smooth transition from the school’s retiring founding principals to a manager that shared their core values and operating philosophy.  In February, 2004 we began managing Mingus Mountain Academy (MMA), located in Prescott Valley, Arizona, as a result of a search by its Board for a manager to continue MMA’s rich history of serving adolescent females in the equestrian tradition of its founders. In the spring of 2007, Lakeside Academy, located in Kalamazoo, Michigan entered into a management contract with Sequel Youth and Family Services.  These five programs constitute the foundation of our Academy Division.    

In July 2006, we launched SequelCare, our Community-Based Services (CBS) division. SequelCare of Iowa was established in the summer of 2006 and serves youth and families across the state of Iowa. In the spring of 2007, SequelCare purchased Gift of Life, a CBS provider located in Pinellas Park, Florida and changed the name to SequelCare of Florida. SequelCare of Florida provides a broad continuum of services in the Tampa Bay area. In August of 2008, SequelCare purchased DayBreak Behavioral Resources in Prescott, Arizona and changed the name to SequelCare of Arizona. In addition we are looking at a number of opportunities to add additional bases of operation throughout the country for these highly-sought-after services.  

The combination of our Academy and Community-Based Services divisions positions us to become the premier full-service provider of youth and family services nationally. We are proud of all of our programs, and believe that they are among the elite behavioral health programs for troubled and at-risk youth in the country.

Sequel continues to seek high-quality Academy and CBS opportunities. Accordingly, if you are seeking high-quality, professional, and proven leadership for your troubled or at-risk youth population, please feel free to contact us.


© Copyright 2009 Sequel Youth and Family Services, All Rights Reserved.
Title: Sequel Youth & Family Services and Patriot Capital
Post by: Ursus on January 03, 2010, 11:51:39 PM
At some point, Sequel Youth and Family Services solicited the investment services of Patriot Capital. SYFS is described as follows on Patriot Capital's page titled Prior Portfolio Companies (http://http://www.patriot-capital.com/patriot_prior_portfolio.htm):

Sequel Youth and Family Services is a for-profit education and correctional facility services company. The Company develops and operates programs for at-risk and delinquent juveniles. Sequel's management team approached Patriot Capital with a five year business plan and financing strategy that would allow the Company to execute its internal growth, acquisition strategy and meet the shareholder needs. Patriot Capital presented a structural alternative to equity financing that would meet management and shareholder needs and enable the company to successfully execute its strategy.[/list]
Title: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES, Executive Team
Post by: Ursus on January 04, 2010, 10:51:49 AM
EXECUTIVE TEAM (http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/executive_team.html)


(http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/images/j_ripley.jpg)
John ("Jay") F. Ripley
Chairman

Mr. Ripley is Chairman of Sequel Youth and Family Services (SYFS). He was a founding stockholder of Youth Services International (YSI) and served as its President and COO as well as its CFO. Mr. Ripley also has served as President and CEO of Precision Auto Care, a publicly held, worldwide franchiser of automotive service centers, as well as Corporate Controller and then VP of Eastern Division Retail Operations for Jiffy Lube, the leading franchiser of quick lube centers in America. Mr. Ripley began his career with Ernst & Young, CPAs, in Baltimore, MD.

Contact Information
Phone: (540) 338-5182
Email: [email protected] (http://mailto:[email protected])


(http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/images/s_gilbert.jpg)
Steve Gilbert
Senior Vice President,
Business Development


Mr. Gilbert is Senior Vice President of Sequel Youth and Family Services. He began his career in the childcare industry as a youth counselor at the Clarinda Academy in 1992. He was employed with Youth Services International (YSI) for seven years and served the company as the Clarinda Academy Admissions Director, Regional Admissions and Marketing Director, and the National Marketing and Business Development Director. Mr. Gilbert joined Sequel Youth and Family services as Vice President of Marketing and Business Development in 1999.

Contact Information
Phone: 712-310-9395
Email: [email protected] (http://mailto:[email protected])


(http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/images/J_stupak.jpg)
John Stupak
Senior Vice President,
President of SequelCare


Mr. Stupak is President of Sequel Care and has over 25 years experience in the human services field. Before joining Sequel in 2007, John worked for NHS Human Services, a large and diversified provider of behavioral health and human services. Mr. Stupak graduated from Temple University with a Master's Degree from the School of Social Administration with a concentration in planning, research, and evaluation.

Contact Information
Phone: (267) 419-8913
Email: [email protected] (http://mailto:[email protected])


© Copyright 2009 Sequel Youth and Family Services, All Rights Reserved.
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Che Gookin on January 04, 2010, 11:16:34 AM
Jesus, talk about being saved from the edge of the abyss. Most of the recent reports I've gathered about 3 turds over facebook showed me that they were on the very edge of going under.

1) New Dominion was chopped..
2) Duck River and Wayne County were axed..
3) The Paint Rock Valley programs were consolidated, meaning the girl's side was rolled into the boy's side. (they were two separate campuses before)

There is a list on facebook showing all the programs that have been sent down, I'll find it later. Reading this is very depressing as by all accounts this is a program that needs to be shutdown. Just reading this made me want to curl up in a corner with a bottle of Johnie Walker and tie one on. I figure one shot for every kid I saw weeping at that damn place is about right. Ought to keep me busy for  a week or two.
Title: YOUTH SERVICES INTERNATIONAL's prior ownership of 3 SPRINGS
Post by: Ursus on January 04, 2010, 11:59:12 AM
Che, would you care to comment on Youth Services International Inc. prior ownership of Three Springs? Your insight would be greatly appreciated.

The top two players in Sequel Youth and Family Services are former YSI people, namely Jay Ripley (SFYS Chairman) and Adam Shapiro (SFYS CEO). In fact, it made me wonder just how they came up with the "Sequel" name, i.e., whether SFYS is supposed to be some sort of sequel to YSI.  :D

Here's when the proposed YSI acquisition of Three Springs was announced:

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

The Baltimore Sun
Youth Services shares rise on acquisition Owings Mills firm buying Ala.-based Three Springs (http://http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1996-04-17/business/1996108058_1_youth-services-three-springs-youth-corrections)

Stock price climbs 14%
$27 million deal could boost revenue by more than a third


April 17, 1996 | By Jay Hancock, SUN STAFF

Wall Street found more reasons to love Youth Services International Inc. yesterday, as the Owings Mills company announced an acquisition that would boost revenue by more than a third. The news propelled its stock price upward by 14 percent.

Youth Services agreed to buy Three Springs Inc., which is based in Huntsville, Ala., and runs programs for emotionally troubled adolescents. Three Springs operates 13 facilities across the Southeast and is best known for its "therapeutic wilderness" program.

Fast-growing Youth Services runs centers for juvenile delinquents across the country. Its executives signed a letter of intent to buy Three Springs for 800,000 shares of Youth Services stock, worth about $27 million yesterday.

Financial analysts praised the deal as one that would extend Youth Services' reach, add to its correctional tools and boost profits almost immediately.

"If they took over an operating facility in the past, they would delete it and put in their own program," said Dennis Moran, who follows Youth Services for financial house A. G. Edwards in St. Louis. "[Three Springs] has a program that works. They've picked up a growth company that they don't have to turn around."

Three Springs' management will stay on, and Youth Services is expected to add its wilderness program to its treatment menu.

Youth Services stock, which could have been had for $8.25 a share less than a year ago, popped by $4.25 yesterday to close at $34.25, a new high.

"It's a good acquisition. It's really going to solidify their market position in the Southeast as one of the major players," said William Bavin, who follows the company for Baltimore financial house Ferris, Baker Watts. "It ought to add a decent amount to earnings."

Youth Services earned $2.2 million on $53.1 million in revenue for the year ending June 1995. The Three Springs deal is expected to add another $20 million in revenue.

Youth Services said the acquisition would boost earnings, but didn't specify how much.

Even so, at 54 times this year's estimated earnings per share, Youth Services stock is expensive even by the inflated standards of today's market. One explanation: It is being discovered by Wall Street.

"YSI is getting on the map," Mr. Moran said.

In recent weeks, Genesis Merchant, A.G. Edwards and NatWest Securities all assigned financial analysts to the stock, nearly doubling the coverage and raising Youth Service's profile among mutual funds, pension funds and other deep-pocketed investors seeking the next hot growth company. Genesis, Edwards and NatWest all gave Youth Services "buy" ratings.

Wall Street has reason to be interested, Youth Services' fans say. It is the biggest company in what some measure as a multi-billion dollar industry, but its 1995 revenues weren't even $54 million.

Law enforcement agencies increasingly are hiring contractors like Youth Services for youth corrections work. And another trend may help the company even as it hurts society: The number of juvenile delinquents is expected to grow, as baby-boomers' kids move into their teens.

Three Springs has a capacity of about 500 beds. Youth Services treats about 4,000 youths at 19 facilities in 12 states.

If it goes through, and analysts expect that it will, the acquisition will add to Youth Services' facilities in Maryland, Tennessee and Virginia and introduce the company to Alabama and Georgia. Youth Services recently completed the buy of a Tampa, Fla., facility that is expected to add about $10 million in annual revenue.

At almost eight times Three Springs' annual cash flow of $3.5 million, its $27 million price tag is "a little high, but it's probably worth it," Mr. Bavin said.


Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert Street, P.O. Box 1377, Baltimore, MD 21278
Title: Jay Ripley (LinkedIn profile)
Post by: Ursus on January 04, 2010, 02:47:00 PM
Some more info on Sequel Youth and Family Services co-founder and chairman Jay Ripley... Note the 5 years spent as president and COO of Youth Services International Inc.

Also of relevance is the 5 years Jay Ripley spent at Jiffy Lube. Jiffy Lube founder Jim Hindman ... is also the founder of Youth Services International.

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

Jay Ripley (http://http://www.linkedin.com/pub/jay-ripley/4/aa9/879)
Chairman, Sequel Youth & Family Services
Washington D.C. Metro Area

Current
Past
Education
Connections - 60 connections

Industry - Individual & Family Services

Websites
[/li][/list]

Jay Ripley's Experience

Co-Founder and Chairman
Capitol Burger, LLC
(Restaurants industry)
2007 — Present (3 years )
Co-Founder and Chairman
Sequel Youth and Family Services
(Privately Held; 51-200 employees; Information Technology and Services industry)
1999 — Present (11 years )
President and CEO
Precision Auto Care
(Public Company; 11-50 employees; PACI; Automotive industry)
1995 — 1998 (3 years )

President and COO
Youth Services International
(Public Company; 1001-5000 employees; YSII; Individual & Family Services industry)
1990 — 1995 (5 years )

Vice President
Jiffy Lube
(Public Company; 51-200 employees; Automotive industry)
1985 — 1990 (5 years )
Supervisor/Manager
Ernst & Young
(Partnership; 10,001 or more employees; EY; Accounting industry)
1979 — 1985 (6 years )

Jay Ripley's Education

University of Baltimore

Additional Information

Jay Ripley's Websites:

Jay Ripley's Groups:

Jay Ripley's Contact Settings

Interested In:
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Che Gookin on January 04, 2010, 08:19:44 PM
Quote
Adam Shapiro (SFYS CEO)

If he's related to John Shapiro who used to be an adventure course guide or whatnot for Three Springs Paint Rock Valley Boys then things just got really interesting. YSI itself has been in business for awhile. I remember meeting a guy at Eckerds who worked for them. If my memory serves me right, they are nothing more than state contract detention centers.

Basically, a holding pen of sorts.
Title: Youth Services International and Jiffy Lube
Post by: Ursus on January 05, 2010, 11:53:04 AM
Quote from: "Ursus"
Jiffy Lube founder Jim Hindman ... is also the founder of Youth Services International.
Excerpt from an earlier post (http://http://www.fornits.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=51&t=29777&p=355057#p355057), regarding Youth Services International Inc., originally from an old issue of Prison Privatisation Report International, a bulletin (then) put out ten times a year by the UK-based Prison Reform Trust (PRT):

The company was started in 1991 by Jim Hindman, an acknowledged former child delinquent. By the 1970s, at the age of 35, he was a millionaire running a chain of private nursing homes. He then made - and lost - another fortune by starting Jiffy Lube, the famous American 'quick oil change' franchise. He sold this in 1989 after the company had defaulted on loans of more than $69 million, but Hindman himself still came out with $2 million. His next venture materialised when he realised the potential from juvenile crime figures in the US and the amount of money spent on youth rehabilitation programmes - about $3 billion a year at federal, state and municipal levels.[/list]
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Ursus on January 05, 2010, 12:03:47 PM
Quote from: "Che Gookin"
YSI itself has been in business for awhile. I remember meeting a guy at Eckerds who worked for them. If my memory serves me right, they are nothing more than state contract detention centers.

Basically, a holding pen of sorts.
I see organizations like this as logical extensions of the movement to privatize prisons. The folk who benefit most from them are not the community, not the employees, not the inmates ... but venture capital firms who exploit them as investment opportunities.

See also:

Global privatization of prisons and juvenile reform programs
viewtopic.php?f=51&t=29777 (http://www.fornits.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=51&t=29777)[/list]
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Che Gookin on January 05, 2010, 09:42:10 PM
Yeah saw that article last night, confirmed everything I already know. Not sure what this means for Three Springs though. Given the roots of Sequel being in the private teen prison business it stands to reason that the TS lockdown facilities are going to be looked at over the residential schools.

Alabama alone has courtland, madison, tuskegee, and new beginnings for light to heavy security lockdowns. Florida has Daytona and a couple others, I think.
Title: Ernst & Young, "heavy hitter" lobbyists
Post by: Ursus on January 06, 2010, 10:29:17 AM
Regarding SYFS Co-founder and Chairman Jay Ripley's prior employment, specifically:

Supervisor/Manager
Ernst & Young
(Partnership; 10,001 or more employees; EY; Accounting industry)
1979 — 1985 (6 years)[/list]

Ernst & Young is one of the top seven Lobbying Firms based on income over the past dozen years, raking in just over $143 million for that time period:

(http://http://www.opensecrets.org/lobby/IMG_client_year_comp.php?lname=Ernst+%26+Young&type=f)

Their top client in 2009 was ... Accounting firm Ernst & Young, paying themselves $1,784,201 (http://http://www.opensecrets.org/lobby/firmsum.php?lname=Ernst+%26+Young&year=2009). Funny how that works, sometimes.

Heavy Hitters
Ernst & Young (http://http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/summary.php?id=D000000098&lname=Ernst+%26+Young)

Ernst & Young is one of the world's largest accounting firms, offering its clients everything from auditing services to tax advice. Over the years, the firm has successfully led efforts to block increased federal oversight of the accounting industry. Yet the collapse of Enron and the corporate scandals that followed have largely put the company on the defensive. In 2002, the Securities and Exchange Commission sued Ernst & Young, accusing the firm of violating ethics rules when it was the chief auditor of one of its key business partners, PeopleSoft. At the same time, federal investigators launched efforts to crack down on companies that avoid taxes by incorporating in Bermuda or other offshore tax havens—a practice that has generated plenty of revenue for Ernst & Young over the years.[/list]


Copyright © 2009 Center for Responsive Politics
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Ursus on January 10, 2010, 11:21:43 PM
This person has apparently been working at Three Springs (Mountain Home, ID) since the Summer of 2007. Looks like it'll be binnis as usual, despite the acquisition by Sequel Youth and Family Services...

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

Wednesday, December 23, 2009
A New Job!!! (http://http://alwaysmee.blogspot.com/2009/12/new-job.html)

I have been keeping a secret. Some of you knew something was up. I called and asked to use people as referrences. I even called asking for an address I lived at for two months. Many many details were needed. It is complete. It is official.

Starting TODAY I am working as a Special Eduation Teacher for Sequel Youth and Family Services (http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/index.html). That's right as of today. If you follow the link you may notice Sequel seems very similar to Three Springs.

That is indeed the case. Similar, but not identical. Sequel acquired Three Springs facilities and employees. Although I am now a Sequel Employee I still work at Three Springs...for now anyway.

Posted by AlwaysMee at 4:58 PM
Labels: life, work
Title: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES ~ residential Programs
Post by: Ursus on January 13, 2010, 12:50:42 PM
Sequel Youth and Family Services owns some facilities, and has management contracts with other facilities. As noted above on their Company History page, their (formerly) five residential programs are actually owned by other organizations. Three Springs would appear to be their first residential program owned outright.

SequelCare, their Community-Based Services (CBS) division has three locations (Iowa, Florida, Arizona), all of which they own. At least the latter two were previous "community-based" programs: Gift of Life in Pinellas Park, Florida, purchased in 2007; and DayBreak Behavioral Resources based in Prescott, Arizona, purchased in 2008.

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

Residential Programs (http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/programs.html) managed by Sequel Youth and Family Services:

Clarinda Academy · http://www.clarindaacademy.org (http://www.clarindaacademy.org)
Clarinda Academy was established 1992 as a residential foster care facility for at-risk and adjudicated delinquent males between the ages of 12 and 18. Over the years, Clarinda has expanded its continuum of services and currently offers long-term residential treatment for males and females, 90-day impact programming, shelter care, and transitional living services. With a licensed capacity of 259 students, Clarinda Academy serves youth from several different states.  The Clarinda Academy environment focuses on behavioral change through the establishment of a positive peer culture and the intervention of negative behavior.

Mingus Mountain Academy · http://www.mmaaz.com (http://www.mmaaz.com)
Mingus Mountain Academy was founded in January 1985 to help young girls from Arizona who had special emotional needs. It now attracts girls from across the nation. Mingus proudly earned Joint Commission accreditation and also North Central school accreditation. A highly qualified staff of professionals provides medical, clinical, educational and recreational services. In 2004, Mingus Mountain Academy became part of the Sequel Youth and Family Services organization.  

Normative Services Prep · http://www.normativeservices.com (http://www.normativeservices.com)
Normative Services was founded in 1991 in Sheridan, Wyoming as a small residential treatment program for adolescents with behavioral and emotional problems. As additional programs were developed and the school's reputation grew, other jurisdictions throughout Wyoming took notice of a successful concept: "troubled adolescents" were taking significant responsibility for their own treatment programs. Referring agencies saw the positive results of the norms-based approach, and student population increased. The result was growth and the need for expansion to the fully developed campus on the present site some three miles west of Sheridan. Demand for Normative's services has continued to increase. Our belief in our students’ abilities, potential, and capacity to thrive and excel in a safe and challenging environment grows stronger each year.

Woodward Academy · http://www.wwacademy.com (http://www.wwacademy.com)
Woodward Academy opened on the campus of the Woodward Resource Center on July 10, 1995 with four youths in attendance. Today, Woodward Academy is a 168-bed residential facility for male youth (adjudicated delinquent or CINA -- child in need of assistance). Woodward Academy is located in Woodward, Iowa, 30 miles NW of Des Moines. Woodward Academy offers three different residential programs ranging from 90 days to 18 months, working with youth from 12 to 18 years old; each of these programs contain a chemical dependency component and complete health care services.  Woodward Academy also offers two non-residential programs, day school and community-based services. The non-residential programs serve the greater Des Moines and surrounding areas.

Lakeside Academy · http://www.lakesideacademy.net (http://www.lakesideacademy.net)
Lakeside Academy was established by community leaders in 1907. The original facility was a farmhouse on 46 acres of land and first served nine boys who worked the grounds to learn employable agricultural skills and attended community schools. In 2007 Lakeside Academy entered into a management agreement with Sequel Youth and Family Services. Sequel Youth and Family Services began managing the facility in July 2007. Lakeside Academy offers residential treatment and sexual offender programming to male youth aged 12-18.


© Copyright 2009 Sequel Youth and Family Services, All Rights Reserved.
Title: Kalamazoo's Lakeside Academy residents rebound...
Post by: Ursus on January 13, 2010, 01:04:32 PM
Lakeside Academy has been around the longest, but they ran into some real hard times in 2006 and had to close. My guess is that part of the deal of getting them operational again may have been the management contract with Sequel. Here is Lakeside's extremely abbreviated version of their 103-year history:

History (http://http://www.lakesideacademy.net/about_history.html)
Lakeside for Children was established by community leaders in 1907. The original facility was a farmhouse on 46 acres of land and first served nine boys who worked the grounds to learn employable agricultural skills and attended community schools. Over the years, Lakeside grew into a 79-bed facility that served boys, girls and sexual offenders. In July, 2007, Lakeside for Children entered into a management agreement with Sequel Youth and Family Services, who began managing the facility under the name Lakeside Academy.[/list]

Just one year later, things sound hopeful:

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

Kalamazoo Gazette
Kalamazoo's Lakeside Academy residents rebound from troubled past with summer basketball program (http://http://blog.mlive.com/kzgazette/2008/07/kalamazoos_lakeside_academy_re_1.html)
By Jeff Barr
July 17, 2008, 11:00AM


(http://http://blog.mlive.com/kzgazette/2008/07/large_01_LakesideBarrA.jpg)
Lakeside Academy student Dylan Hancock, 16, jokes with Titan Club members Wednesday while watching the Lakeside Academy Titans basketball team cruise to a 14-point victory at The Courthouse athletic facility in Portage.
Jennifer Harnish | Kalamazoo Gazette


They were playing basketball, but they were learning so much more.

A team of former car thieves, gun-toters, drug-dealers and gang-bangers -- all under 18 and residents at Kalamazoo's Lakeside Academy -- played their third summer-league basketball game Wednesday night. And they operated as one in The Courthouse athletic facility in Portage, employing a brand of teamwork and togetherness that has been carved into their personalities since living at Lakeside.

"Basketball is a tool, but it's secondary to what's really going on here," said Lakeside's coach Will Cowen, 26, shortly after watching his Lakeside Titans beat a team made up largely of Comstock High School basketball team members. "There are young athletes out here getting a second chance at life, learning lessons that somehow they missed or were unavailable to them before they came to Lakeside."

The Titans didn't miss much Wednesday night, cruising to a 72-58 victory to up their record to 2-1 in summer-league ball. Lakeside opened its season with a 20-point loss to this same team three weeks ago, so the victory was doubly sweet.

The selflessness necessary to win basketball games showed itself throughout Wednesday's contest. There were tip-passes, and forwards with contested layups giving up the ball to a teammate who could go in alone. It was a display of constant teamwork, from the time Larry Fields hit the first hoop in the steamy Portage gym to team during Wednesday's game at The Courthouse in Portage.

(http://http://blog.mlive.com/kzgazette/2008/07/medium_02_LakesideBarrB.jpg)
Lakeside Academy Coach Will Cowen speaks to his basketball team Wednesday night during a 14-point victory. Lakeside, a residential facility for youthful criminal offenders, recently reopened after closing in Oct. 2006.
Jennifer Harnish | Kalamazoo Gazette


"I messed up before I got here, I missed school, my grades dropped and I couldn't play basketball," said Shelton Coats, of Lansing, 16, who was sent to Lakeside as part of a sentence for carrying a weapon in a school zone when he was 15. "I didn't have any self-discipline at all, and that's what got me into trouble. By coming to Lakeside, and by playing basketball, I'm learning self-discipline. It takes a while, but it's coming."

Lakeside team members must earn the right to play on the team by remaining free of discipline issues at Lakeside. Another option for kids who remain out of trouble at Lakeside is the Titan Club, which filled the gym Wednesday night to root for their team.

Residents at Lakeside Academy -- funded by Lakeside for Children, a nonprofit organization, and managed by Sequel Youth and Family Services -- have plenty of time to learn self-discipline. The average stay is anywhere from six to nine months, during which time residents must pass a four-phase behavioral-adjustment program and given a recommendation by Lakeside staff to the court system from where they came.

The 88 residents comprise youthful offenders from throughout Michigan and Indiana who are deemed qualified for the program rather than be sent to a juvenile home, jail or prison. Kalamazoo offenders are rare at Lakeside because one of the most important facets of such programs is to remove troubled kids from the area in which they found trouble. There are other programs -- such as Sequel's Clarinda Academy in Indiana -- where Kalamazoo juveniles can be sent.

"Every kid here is reachable, savable, worthy of the time that is spent on them," said Michelle Gothard, 42, a youth counselor at Lakeside. "These are kids who've been told their whole lives that they are worthless, that they'll never amount to anything. Worse yet, some of them are not cared about enough to get told anything at all.

"At Lakeside, they have to work hard, have to work on themselves to get ready to go back into the world and interact in society. But they are given the tools to do it, and they know that they are worthy of being cared about."

It took care and planning for Lakeside Academy to recently re-open its doors after being closed in October 2006. Lack of funding and program shortcomings forced the closure, and the Lakeside for Children group took action. The nonprofit organization, which still owns the property, hired Sequel to manage the facility.

"It's a great program, and there are some kids coming through it who will go out there and succeed in society, without a doubt," said Cole Houser, 23, a team leader at Lakeside who formerly worked at Sequel's Clarinda facility in Indiana. "We get very specific with them about their own individual situations.

"Sometimes they try to give us general explanations, generic answers that could apply to anyone with behavioral problems. But we force them to get specific about what happened to them, how they could have acted differently, and how they will act differently in the future should a similar situation arise."

In order to qualify for Lakeside rather than be sent to a correctional facility, potential residents are first recommended by the courts, then interviewed by Lakeside Executive Director Travis Faulds and Director of Support Services Thom Lattig. If an offender seems legitimately welcome to the opportunity of turning his life around, seems willing to follow the rules and programs at Lakeside, and there is room at the academy, he then qualifies for acceptance.

Residents then begin the process of retraining themselves. Anger management, peer pressure and decision-making are all part of the process.

And, don't forget teamwork.

Contact Jeff Barr at [email protected] or 388-8581.


© 2009 Michigan Live LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Title: Lake Farm Boys' Home
Post by: Ursus on January 18, 2010, 10:45:32 AM
According to this Comment left for the above article (http://http://blog.mlive.com/kzgazette/2008/07/kalamazoos_lakeside_academy_re_1.html), Lakeside Academy used to be called Lake Farm Boys' Home a half century ago:


Posted by wds37 | July 21, 2008, 8:40AM
Title: Youth counselor charged in alleged assault at Lakeside
Post by: Ursus on January 18, 2010, 11:04:16 AM
Quote
In order to qualify for Lakeside rather than be sent to a correctional facility, potential residents are first recommended by the courts, then interviewed by Lakeside Executive Director Travis Faulds and Director of Support Services Thom Lattig. If an offender seems legitimately welcome to the opportunity of turning his life around, seems willing to follow the rules and programs at Lakeside, and there is room at the academy, he then qualifies for acceptance.

Residents then begin the process of retraining themselves. Anger management, peer pressure and decision-making are all part of the process.
Sometimes the psychosocial environment at Lakeside was not so healthy:

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

Kalamazoo Gazette
Youth counselor charged in alleged assault at Lakeside (http://http://www.mlive.com/news/kzgazette/index.ssf?/base/news-34/12430038104790.xml&coll=7)
Friday, May 22, 2009
Kalamazoo


BY REX HALL JR. AND JULIE MACK

KALAMAZOO -- A former employee at a home for troubled youths has been charged with sexually assaulting one of its residents, authorities said Thursday.

Kimeon Tyrone Bolden, 27, who was a youth counselor at Lakeside Academy at 3921 Oakland Drive, was arraigned April 28 in Kalamazoo County District Court on three counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, a court official said.

Police did not release information about the case until Thursday.

Investigators allege that Bolden sexually assaulted a 14-year-old boy from the Detroit area who was a resident at the facility, Kalamazoo County Prosecutor Jeff Fink said.

Lakeside is a residential facility that serves about 72 boys, ages 12 to 18, who have been placed there by the courts for antisocial behaviors. The teen was a resident of Lakeside's unit for young sexual offenders.

Don Nitz, Lakeside's executive director, said the fact that the alleged offenses occurred in the sexual-offender unit makes the scenario even more "painful'' because it was perpetuating behavior that Lakeside is trying to address.

"We're trying to help kids, and then to have a staff member take advantage of a child, it's awful,'' Nitz said. "We take it very seriously.''

Three incidents involving sexual penetration between Bolden and the boy are alleged to have occurred from March 13 to March 15, Fink said.

The boy reported the incidents to the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety on March 15, and investigators submitted the case to Fink's office in April.

Detective Sgt. Karianne Thomas declined to release any details Thursday about the allegations in the case but did confirm the allegations involve oral sex.

Fink said his office authorized a warrant April 21 charging Bolden with the three counts of criminal sexual conduct.

Bolden, whose bond was set at $10,000 cash/surety following his arraignment in front of District Judge Richard A. Santoni, was released from the Kalamazoo County Jail on May 1 after posting the necessary 10 percent of the bond.

He is scheduled to be back in district court June 3 for a hearing on evidence against him in the case.

Andis Svikis, Bolden's court-appointed attorney, said he had no comment about the case when reached Thursday afternoon by the Kalamazoo Gazette.

Thomas said the teen has been transferred from Lakeside to a different facility on the east side of the state since the incident was reported.

The boy's family has hired a lawyer, Steven L. Schwartz, of Farmington Hills, who is planning to file a lawsuit against Lakeside on the boy's behalf.

"It's a family's worse nightmare,'' Schwartz said the alleged assault. "It's going to affect the family for years to come.''

However, Schwartz did praise the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety for its investigation. "The investigators did a wonderful job,'' Schwartz said.

Lakeside's response

Nitz said the investigation had the full cooperation of Lakeside staff, who promptly contacted police after the boy told a staff member about the alleged assault.

Bolden was immediately suspended and was fired once the police investigation appeared to confirm the allegations, Nitz said.

Investigators found that no other students appeared to have been assaulted, Nitz said.

"This was an isolated incident involving one student,'' Nitz said. "I can state that as fact.''

Bolden had been working for Lakeside for about a year as a youth counselor, which is the term that Lakeside uses for its direct-care staff members.

Nitz said that Lakeside conducts state and national background checks on its employees before they are hired, including checking their names against a central registry for adults who have had inappropriate contact or behavior with youths. Nitz said there were "no red flags'' involving Bolden.

In the wake of the alleged assault, Nitz said, Lakeside is installing more security cameras and is increasing the number of staff during the evenings and overnight, so that there is not a lone staff member overseeing a unit alone.

Troubled history

The charges against Bolden come at a time when Lakeside appeared to have regained its footing after several years of turmoil.

Founded as an orphanage in 1907, the residential facility switched its focus to caring for abused and neglected children in the 1950s.

By 2004, the facility was licensed to care for both boys and girls who came for a variety of reasons, including youths with mental-health issues, those abandoned or neglected by their parents, and juvenile delinquents.

Staff had difficulty dealing with the range of problems among their clients, and the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety was being constantly called to the facility because residents were hurting themselves or others.

A report released in May 2004 by the Michigan Family Independence Agency detailed a chaotic environment where residents were "out of control'' and residents and staff had been injured. There was a 40-hour riot at the facility in April 2003. After the 2004 report, the state shut down Lakeside and moved its residents to other facilities.

Lakeside reopened six months later with a new program model and staff. Nitz, retired superintendent of the Kalamazoo County Juvenile Home, became executive director in February 2006. The facility closed again in August 2006 so the board could "refocus its mission and identify sustainable sources of funding.''

In July 2007, Lakeside reopened once again. This time, the board decided to stick to a specific type of client: boys who need residential treatment for antisocial behavior. Lakeside's board also signed a contract with Sequel Youth and Family Services, a private company that runs similar facilities in Iowa, Arizona and Wyoming, to use Sequel's program model and manage the facility. Bolden was a Sequel employee, although Lakeside's board retains oversight over the facility, Nitz said.

Nitz said the facility has improved considerably under the new management.

"Everything has been running swell, except for this incident,'' Nitz said. "My guess is that courts are placing kids here because they like what they see.''

In the wake of the alleged assault, Nitz said, the judges who place youths at Lakeside "have been extremely supportive, and they understand that these incidents can happen.''

Unlike 2004, when police were being constantly called to Lakeside, "now the police contact us to see if we're still open,'' Nitz said. "It's been a true turnaround.''


© 2009 Michigan Live LLC.
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Hedge on March 13, 2012, 03:43:23 PM
http://http://billingsgazette.com/news/state-and-regional/wyoming/wyoming-facility-restrained-youth-at-high-rate/article_c8dbe11b-9f9c-5309-aa4b-126a75b334ef.html

Wyoming facility restrained youth at high rate

Posted: Thursday, June 25, 2009

CHEYENNE - Youth at a Sheridan juvenile facility were physically restrained far more often than youth at similar institutions before the facility lost its state contract in March, according to documents from the Wyoming Department of Family Services.
 
The documents, obtained by The Associated Press through Wyoming's open records laws, show department concern that youth were being restrained 10 times as often at Normative Services, Inc., than they were at other facilities.
 
Department Director Tony Lewis said the problem has been corrected, and the department plans to reinstate Normative Services' contract as a state youth placement option in a week or so.
 
"To their credit, they've agreed to all these monitoring steps that we've taken, or we intend to take," Lewis said Wednesday.
 
Department officials haven't given a reason for pulling the contract. The previous contract with Normative Services allowed the department to withdraw from the agreement without offering a reason, and department officials have said giving a reason would violate those terms.
 
But the high number of restraints might be an answer to the question.
 
Normative Services is a non-confinement, residential facility for boys and girls ages 14 to 18. Judges place children there because of behavior problems or because of abuse or neglect. The facility had about 150 youth before losing its state contract, but has only about 50 now.
 
The private facility is one of five nationwide owned by Sequel Youth and Family Services.
 
Documents requested by AP included all reports of incidents at Normative Services over the year before the Department of Family Services withdrew from its contract with the facility March 18. The department provided 247 incident reports, including 216 that involved confrontations ending in staff pinning youths belly-down, face-up, standing, or in sitting positions.
 
Of the reports that involved physical restraint, 122 happened from March 18 through Oct. 20, when a department official raised concern about the high number of restraints in a letter to Normative Services Director Bud Patterson.
 
"Normative Services has had approximately 200 physical restraints so far this year. In comparison, the next two largest facilities in Wyoming have had less than 20 restraints combined," wrote John Kiedrowski, the state youth licensing program manager.
 
Kiedrowski wrote that he was concerned about a procedure called "touch for attention" - placing a hand on disobedient youth as a pre-restraint warning. The touch for attention, he wrote, "may trigger aggression instead of de-escalating it."
 
Normative Services staff wrote the incident reports on a Department of Family Services form. The reports documented much fewer pre-restraint warnings after the letter.
 
They also documented fewer cases of girls being restrained: 74 cases in the seven months before the letter and just five in the five months between the letter and the contract termination. Reports of boys being restrained increased significantly, however, from 53 to 89.
 
It's difficult to gauge how frequently youth were hurt by being restrained. Six reports documented minor injuries, including one youth with bleeding in his ear. Most reports were heavily redacted, however, and department spokeswoman Juliette Rule said the redacted information included follow-up medical treatment.
 
The 31 reports that didn't mention restraint documented a variety of incidents including youths running away and minor injuries. Rule said only a handful of reports - no more than five - were withheld because they documented abuse or neglect, and Wyoming law does not allow the release of such information.
 
Rule said it was possible the abuse or neglect didn't happen at Normative Services and the reports documented what children told staff had happened to them elsewhere.
 
Adam Shapiro, chief executive officer of Sequel Youth and Family Services, said Normative Services has made a number of improvements.
 
"We have made a lot of management changes, we have made some changes in our training, we have tremendously increased the amount of training, we've brought in some staff from our other programs from throughout the country to help stabilize the culture," he said.
 
"It's ongoing, it's a constant monitoring that we have to do of ourselves and that they have to do."
 
Lewis said the state will monitor who is admitted at Normative Services. A big problem, he said, was that Normative Services was accepting tough kids - gang members from large California cities -and putting them in with youngsters who weren't serious troublemakers.
 
"The reason that you can end up restraining a lot of kids in an institution is because you have an inappropriate mix of high and low risk kids," Lewis said. "When you have that kind of a mix, you have more management problems."
 
Lewis said Normative Services also has agreed to rely less on youth policing each other.
 
Sequel Youth and Family Services also owns four other similar residential facilities in Woodward, Iowa; Clarinda, Iowa; Kalamazoo, Mich.; and Prescott Valley, Ariz.


Read more: http://billingsgazette.com/news/state-a ... z1p1lKEbSs (http://billingsgazette.com/news/state-and-regional/wyoming/wyoming-facility-restrained-youth-at-high-rate/article_c8dbe11b-9f9c-5309-aa4b-126a75b334ef.html#ixzz1p1lKEbSs)
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Che Gookin on March 29, 2012, 05:05:36 AM
Quote
Adam Shapiro

Holy @#$#!!!!

So Three Springs never really died.


 :ftard:
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Hedge on April 03, 2012, 05:49:29 PM
Sure seems that way.

Some more Google searching about the specific Three Springs facility where I was abused came up with:


Quote
Information on SEQUEL TSI OF ALABAMA, LLC OWENS

NPI Number:  1114295326

State Identifier(s)

Group Name

SEQUEL TSI OF ALABAMA, LLC OWENS
Doing business as SEQUEL OF OWENS CROSS ROADS

Credentials

 - Lic #: ()

Mailing Address

Confidential

Business Address

 318 HAMER RD
OWENS CROSS ROADS, AL 35763-9612

Phone (256) 725-7170

Name
KENNY ROBERTS - (VP OF AL OPERATIONS)
Primary Specialty
Residential Treatment Facilities / Substance Abuse Treatment, Children

Additional Specialties


Last Modified
12/02/2011


View the Data Dissemination Notice from the CMS regarding the information that is being displayed on this site.

This information is from http://npidb.org/organizations/resident ... 95326.aspx (http://npidb.org/organizations/residential_treatment/substance_abuse_treatment_children_3245s0500x/1114295326.aspx)



This is Kenny Roberts's information from the Sequel, TSI website:

Quote
Kenny Roberts
Vice President of Alabama Operations
Mr. Roberts, MA, Vice President of Alabama Operations, is responsible for supervision of the Executive Directors, program oversight, and advocating of program needs to the Vice President and COO. Mr. Roberts has more than 17 years working in the field in multiple capacities and in an array of program settings to include sex offender population, residential, outdoor wilderness and group home. He has spent 11 of this 17 years supervising intensive juvenile justice programming. Mr. Roberts serves as the contact for all state-level communications regarding contracting and operations of programming.

Contact Information
Phone: 256-426-4434
 Email: http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/html ... berts.html (http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/html/about-vp_kroberts.html)


I wonder who Kenny Roberts is. Anybody recognize this name? Eleven years of "juvenile justice programming" means he must have had some experience in some of these other places.
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Hedge on April 04, 2012, 12:05:45 AM
Also, I haven't had time to highlight specific parts to take note of from this, but here is a PDF file from the end of 2011 from the State of Florida's Department of Juvenile Justice Bureau of Quality Assurance Program Report for Sequel Youth and Family Services' Kissimmee, FL Juvenile Correctional Facility.

It's on "New Beginnings Road." *sigh*

http://http://www.djj.state.fl.us/docs/quality-improvement---residential/kissimmeesop1112.pdf?sfvrsn=2


I've been at this too long today, and I need to go to bed, but I'm still haunted by this quote from the Sequel website, in reference to the Three Springs Madison program:

"In our safe environment, our students learn to verbalize needs, feelings, and goals without fear of abuse, and learn to function effectively in a cooperative society with other teens. "

Overcompensating much?

Source: http://http://www.sequelyouthservices.com/html/secure-madison.html
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Che Gookin on April 04, 2012, 01:32:51 AM
Kenny Roberts is one of the old Three Springs Klan of Komedic Klowns.

http://http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1842&dat=19990110&id=ijAzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=gMkEAAAAIBAJ&pg=1644,1376769

I swear to god I might have even have met this Klown before. His name sounds so very familiar.
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Oscar on April 04, 2012, 07:08:38 AM
More information about the 2010 trial:

Trial under way for Lakeside Academy counselor Kimeon Bolden accused of sex assault on teen (http://http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2010/04/trial_underway_for_lakeside_ac.html), By Lynn Turner - Special to the Kalamazoo Gazette , April 28, 2010

Lakeside Academy counselor Kimeon Bolden gets 9-30 years for sex assault on teen (http://http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2010/06/lakeside_academy_counselor_kim/4132/comments-newest.html), By Lynn Turner - Special to the Kalamazoo Gazette , June 01, 2010

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, Plaintiff-Appelle v. KIMEON TYRONE BOLDEN,  Defendant-Appellant (http://http://statecasefiles.justia.com/documents/michigan/court-of-appeals-unpublished/298770.pdf?ts=1323898416), STATE OF MICHIGAN, COURT OF APPEAL No. 298770, Kalamazoo Circuit Court,  LC No. 2009-000702-F
Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Hedge on April 04, 2012, 12:02:19 PM
Some copying and pasting here:

from http://http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2010/04/trial_underway_for_lakeside_ac.html

Quote
Trial under way for Lakeside Academy counselor Kimeon Bolden accused of sex assault on teen

Published: Wednesday, April 28, 2010, 8:28 AM     Updated: Wednesday, April 28, 2010, 9:49 AM

 By Lynn Turner | Special to the Kalamazoo Gazette

KALAMAZOO – A teen who says he was sexually assaulted while he a resident at a Kalamazoo facility for troubled youths testified Tuesday that he didn’t call out for help because he feared repercussions.

“I was afraid … he would try to blame it on me, that I was doing something wrong,” said the teen, who was 14 at the time of the alleged assault on March 14, 2009.

Kimeon Tyrone Bolden, 28, of Kalamazoo, is standing trial in Kalamazoo County Circuit Court on five counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct for alleged encounters with the teen. If convicted, he could face up to life in prison.

Bolden was a youth counselor at Lakeside Academy, 3921 Oakland Drive, where the teen was a resident.

During the opening day of testimony Tuesday, Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety detective Christina Ellis testified that Bolden told her there was no inappropriate action between him and the teen.

“He said he wasn’t necessarily surprised because of the way (the teen) was … but at the same time he was surprised the allegation was made,” Ellis testified. “At one point he said maybe (the teen) had dreamed it.”

A Kalamazoo County Sheriff’s Office detective testified during Bolden’s preliminary examination in June that Bolden told him a month after the incident that he had sex with the boy. Bolden said he had fallen asleep at work and awoke to find the boy had unbuckled his pants and was performing a sex act with him, according to that testimony.

Ellis testified on Tuesday that Bolden said the only way his DNA would be found in connection with sexual contact with the teen was if something had happened when he was asleep. But Bolden said he was “100 percent sure” nothing had happened, Ellis said.

Testimony, expected to include discussion of DNA evidence, was to continue this morning.

Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Hedge on April 04, 2012, 12:04:21 PM
From http://http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2010/06/lakeside_academy_counselor_kim.html

Quote
Lakeside Academy counselor Kimeon Bolden gets 9-30 years for sex assault on teen

Published: Tuesday, June 01, 2010, 9:06 PM     Updated: Wednesday, June 02, 2010, 7:18 AM

 By Lynn Turner | Special to the Kalamazoo Gazette

KALAMAZOO — A former counselor convicted of sexually assaulting a resident at a Kalamazoo facility for troubled teens was sentenced Monday to nine to 30 years in prison.

Kimeon Tyrone Bolden, 28, faced up to life in prison after a Kalamazoo County Circuit Court jury convicted him in April of five counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. At his sentencing Monday, Bolden apologized to his victim, who was 14 at the time of the March 2009 assaults.

“I was the adult and I knew better,” Bolden said before being sentenced by Kalamazoo County Circuit Judge Gary C. Giguere Jr.

In tears, Bolden also turned to a group of friends and family sitting in the courtroom and said, “I love you and thank you for your support.”

Giguere noted before sentencing that Bolden had an exemplary record and letters written in his support that read like a “who’s who” of clergy in Southwest Michigan. “If you were going for a job with these kinds of recommendations, you’d be a shoo-in,” the judge told Bolden.

But there was another side of Bolden that presented itself the night of the assaults, Giguere said. “The acts for which you stand convicted are depraved,” he said.

Bolden told an investigator he was groggy from working an overnight shift as a youth counselor at Lakeside Academy, 3921 Oakland Drive, and drifted to sleep but awoke to find the teen committing a sex act on him, according to testimony at the trial.

The victim, now 16, testified that he was initially afraid to tell anyone what happened for fear he would be blamed. There were five sex acts committed within a 24-hour period, he said.
DNA matching Bolden’s was found on the teen’s clothing, according to trial testimony.

A lawsuit filed by the victim’s mother on his behalf is ongoing in Kalamazoo County Circuit Court. It names Bolden, Lakeside and Sequel Youth & Family Services, which provided staffing for Lakeside. A case evaluation is scheduled for August.

Title: Re: SEQUEL YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES acquires THREE SPRINGS
Post by: Hedge on April 04, 2012, 12:06:18 PM
Here is the PDF from PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, Plaintiff-Appelle v. KIMEON TYRONE BOLDEN, Defendant-Appellant, STATE OF MICHIGAN, COURT OF APPEAL No. 298770, Kalamazoo Circuit Court, LC No. 2009-000702-F

http://http://statecasefiles.justia.com/documents/michigan/court-of-appeals-unpublished/298770.pdf?ts=1323898416