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Topics - tlcrescue

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1
Thayer Learning Center / Protective Order Sought Against the Bundys
« on: October 07, 2005, 05:17:00 PM »
Parents in Thayer lawsuit seek protective order ;

Credit: The Kansas City Star
By Steve rock
Source: KCS
Friday, October 7, 2005
Edition: METROPOLITAN, Section: METROPOLITAN, Page 1
   _____  

ST. JOSEPH - The parents of a boy who died at a northwest Missouri military-type home for troubled teens have asked for a protective order
against the home's owners.

Victor and Gracia Reyes alleged in recent court filings that John Bundy, who owns Thayer Learning Center with his wife, Willa Bundy, made an
unannounced visit to the Reyes' home in Santa Rosa, Calif., in July and "threatened and harassed" the Reyeses.

The motion for a protective order, filed last week in Buchanan County Circuit Court, said John Bundy and his son Isaac Bundy encouraged the
Reyeses to settle their wrongful-death lawsuit against Thayer.

Roberto Reyes, 15, died in November 2004 while a resident at Thayer, about 50 miles northeast of Kansas City in Kidder, Mo. He had been there
less than two weeks, and his death has been attributed to a probable spider bite.

Rhonda Smiley, an attorney for Thayer, said Thursday that she would have no comment until attorneys file a formal response with the court next week. John and Willa Bundy have denied in court records any wrongdoing in conjunction with Roberto's death, and Thayer officials previously
said in a written statement to The Kansas City Star that general allegations of abuse at Thayer were "ludicrous and false."

According to the motion, the Bundys indicated they "would be forced to investigate all family members in an attempt to uncover any embarrassing
or personal information which would then be publicized through the litigation" if the lawsuit continued.

The Reyeses alleged in their wrongful-death lawsuit, filed in February, that Roberto was subjected to physical exertion and abuse that caused or contributed to his death. They alleged that Roberto was dragged, hit, "forced to lay in his own excrement for extended periods" and that he would have lived had he received competent medical care in a timely manner.

In court records, Thayer officials deny those and other allegations. According to an affidavit signed by Victor Reyes and entered into the
court file, John and Isaac Bundy told the Reyeses they were in California on business when they showed up at the Reyeses' home about 7 p.m. on July 27. The Bundys said that they were sorry for what happened to Roberto and that they did not wish to see the Reyeses hurt further. They said that if the lawsuit continued, however, they would seek any information that would cause "embarrassment, hurt and anguish" to the
Reyeses, the affidavit said.

The affidavit said the Bundys indicated that the embarrassment could be avoided if the Reyeses reached a settlement "outside our lawyers'
knowledge" and that the Reyeses "would be able to keep all the money and not have to give the lawyers any of it."

No dollar amounts were listed in court records.

"We felt threatened and scared that the Bundys would try to embarrass us and cause our family further hurt," Victor Reyes wrote in the affidavit.

The Reyeses asked that all defendants in the case - including their agents and employees - be required to stay 100 feet from the Reyeses and
be ordered to refrain from contacting them by any means. There are seven defendants in the case: Thayer, two affiliated businesses and four
employees of Thayer at the time of Roberto's death.The case is scheduled to go to trial in June.

To reach Steve Rock, call (816) 234-4338 or send e-mail to [email protected]

2
Thayer Learning Center / John Bundy Speaks Out
« on: April 27, 2005, 04:55:00 PM »
...

3
Thayer Learning Center / Thayer will be exposed!
« on: April 27, 2005, 10:50:00 AM »
Be aware...Thayer WILL be exposed for how they abuse and neglect children!  Certain things are coming to light, including their staff tampering with evidence.  That is a big no no.  And, not to mention, if they had "nothing to hide" why would they tamper with evidence and falsify records?

There are many of us out here willing to speak and will not be silenced by the threat of litigation.  I do believe we have this thing in our country called "freedom of speech".  I have the RIGHT to speak of the acts and/or omissions committed by Thayer upon my son.  That is my given right as a citizen of this wonderland land we call the United States.  We will continue to speak the truth and will not stop until abusive schools are no longer!

4
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascit ... 387752.htm

Posted on Thu, Apr. 14, 2005

State report criticizes boot camp's actions

By STEVE ROCK The Kansas City Star

A state investigative team has concluded that a northwest Missouri boot camp apparently ?failed ? to provide access to appropriate medical evaluation and/or treatment? to a student who recently died.

In addition, the report said ?interviews and evidence also suggest significant contradictions and possible deliberate falsification of written records.?

The investigation, conducted by the Missouri Department of Social Services, took place after Roberto Reyes died in November while at Thayer Learning Center, a military-type home for troubled teens in Kidder, Mo.

Roberto, from California, was 15. The autopsy report said his death was probably due to a spider or insect bite.

John and Willa Bundy, who own Thayer, have not returned several phone calls from The Kansas City Star and couldn't be reached Wednesday. Ed Proctor, an attorney for Thayer, also could not be reached but previously has told The Star that ?every child at Thayer has immediate access to medical care at any time.?

In interviews excerpted in the investigative report, John and Willa Bundy and others said they didn't know or didn't think Reyes was sick before he died. Willa Bundy also said she hadn't read the records in question until she was interviewed by a state investigator in late February.

The state conducted the investigation at the request of the Caldwell County sheriff's office.

The report, which took more than four months to complete, totals 275 pages.

It was presented last week to Caldwell County Prosecutor Jason Kanoy, who has jurisdiction over whether charges will be filed in the death. On Wednesday, Kanoy released the report to The Star and said he hadn't decided whether he would take any action.

?There are some alarming parts about it,? he said. ?But I have not made a decision as to who I would file charges on or if I will file charges at all.?

Reyes' parents filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Thayer in February in Buchanan County Circuit Court and alleged that Roberto was subjected to physical exertion and abuse that caused or contributed to his death.

They alleged that Roberto would have lived had he gotten competent and timely medical care, that Roberto was dragged and hit, that he was forced to lie in his own excrement for lengthy stretches, and that the symptoms of his failing health ?would have been present for a significant period of time prior to his death.?

In court records, officials at Thayer denied those and other allegations.

James Thompson, a Kansas City area attorney representing the Reyes family, said Wednesday that portions of the report were ?very disturbing.?

?The whole motivation here is to get to the bottom of what happened,? he said.

?The report at least moves one step ? in that direction.?

November death

Reyes died Nov. 3, less than two weeks after his parents enrolled him at Thayer. A school official found Reyes unresponsive in a sick bay area, and employees performed CPR and called 911.

Reyes was transported to Cameron Regional Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead. The autopsy report identifies ?complications of rhabdomyolysis? as the cause of death. It says the rhabdomyolysis, which is a breakdown of muscle fibers, was probably due to a spider or insect bite.

About a month after Roberto died, a panel of county and state officials charged with reviewing child deaths said that earlier medical treatment ?may have prevented this fatality.?

In the investigative report released Wednesday, at least 10 witnesses identified as Thayer employees gave varied statements about Roberto. One said Roberto appeared lazy, and another said he had a bad attitude.

Some said Roberto struggled to keep up with the rigorous exercise regimen, and some said he complained of sore muscles. Some said he needed assistance walking and at times used other people as ?a crutch.? Some said Roberto defecated on himself, which is something one employee said that previous Thayer students had done to get out of exercising.

At least four said they never saw or were told anything to suggest Roberto was sick. The report said one Thayer employee, for example, thought Roberto ?just didn't want to do anything.?

One drill sergeant, however, told the state investigator she eventually came to think maybe Roberto was sick. At some point ? the report notes that she wasn't sure when ? she relayed that opinion to Dorothy Steele.

The report identifies Steele, of Kidder, as the facility's medical officer, and one witness said she decided whether any student would be taken to a doctor. The report says that Steele, who was also the general manager of Thayer's kitchen facilities, is not a registered nurse and had an EMT license that expired in 2003.

Steele couldn't be reached for comment but said in the report that she treated Reyes on Nov. 1 for blisters on his feet. She said he reported at the time that he had sore arm and leg muscles but that he didn't have any other medical complaints.

Shift report questions

The finding in the report about ?significant contradictions and possible deliberate falsification of written records? relates to statements given to a state investigator by former Thayer employee Sarah Mackey.

The report says Mackey worked for Thayer from Sept. 7, 2004, until her resignation on Dec. 13, 2004. She said that part of her duties included filing daily ?shift notes? written by Thayer employees about various students and activities.

After Roberto died, the report said, Mackey read about 10 pages of shift notes written in the days leading up to Roberto's death.

?Sarah stated that every day,? the report says, ?the log sheets indicated that Roberto was getting worse and worse and worse.?

According to the report, she read in those shift notes that:

As many as three days before Roberto's death, he was urinating and defecating on himself. He had to have urine and feces cleaned off him for several days. One employee wrote in the notes that on the Saturday and Sunday before Roberto's Wednesday death, Roberto was very sick and needed to be taken to a doctor. The employee also said Steele refused, saying Roberto's vital signs were fine and that he was faking.

After Roberto's death, that employee told the state investigator he didn't remember telling Steele that Roberto was sick.

Less than two weeks after Roberto died, Mackey told the state investigator, Willa Bundy took files of the shift notes, asked for 10 copies of blank shift note forms and went into her office.

A Thayer attorney provided the state investigator with faxed copies of shift notes, and the investigator took those to Mackey in early February.

?Sarah reviewed the shift notes,? the report says, ?and stated they were inaccurate and incomplete, compared to the shift notes she had seen and read in the office.?

Mackey provided a signed statement to the state investigator saying, in part, that some of the shift notes were completely inconsistent with those she had previously read.

Shift notes dated Oct. 25-27 and Oct. 29-Nov. 1 are included in the state's report. There are several references to Reyes ? he had to be ?restrained against the wall ? for aggression? on Oct. 25, did ?nothing but swear? on Oct. 26, threw up water but ate all his food on Oct. 27, fell going to the bathroom and ?scraped his knees and elbows? on Oct. 31 ? but there is no indication that he was seriously ill.

Mackey, reached by phone Wednesday at her Polo, Mo., home, told The Star that she spoke with the state investigator and ?answered all questions truthfully? to the best of her knowledge.

It's not clear in the report whether Willa Bundy or anybody else was asked directly whether any shift notes had been altered.

Some details in the report are contradictory, varying from one witness to another. For example: One Thayer employee said Roberto had been eating all his meals until the day he died, while another said he sat in a sick bay area with Roberto about two days before Roberto's death and tried to get him to eat.

?All Roberto wanted to do,? the report said, ?was lay down.?

One witness stated that, as early as Oct. 27, Roberto ?appeared to be completely out of it.? That witness, a fellow resident, said he had to call Roberto's name and wave his hand in Roberto's face to get his attention.

That same witness said Roberto would walk about five feet and fall down, then one of the drill sergeants or two or three students would pick Roberto up by all fours or drag him on the ground to get him around the exercise track.

The report also gives some background information about Roberto.

Documents show he was suspended in middle school for using vulgar language and stealing a CD player. He was earning poor grades in high school at the time he transferred to Thayer. He also had run away from home at least twice.

To reach Steve Rock, call

(816) 234-4338 or send e-mail to [email protected].

5
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Intervention
« on: March 21, 2005, 03:19:00 PM »
Has anyone seen that show called Intervention on A&E?  I was wondering cause I watched it last night and the lady popping pills was put into the SAFE program.....

6
Thayer Learning Center / St. Joseph Article - March 14th
« on: March 14, 2005, 12:22:00 PM »
Does anyone have access to the St. Joseph News paper online?  There is an article in today's paper titled "Families Fighting to Close Thayer" with a snippit that says:

Parents of two teens who attended Thayer Learning Center are concerned about the treatment the youths have received there. Another couple, Gracia and Victor Reyes, have filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the center after their son died less than a week after enrolling.

Mothers of two former students at the Thayer Learning Center near Kidder, Mo., vow to support shutting down the military-style boot camp for teen-agers.

I can't access the remainder of the article because I don't have a subscription.

7
Thayer Learning Center / new thayer article by steve rock
« on: March 09, 2005, 09:56:00 AM »
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascit ... 085363.htm

Posted on Wed, Mar. 09, 2005
 
 
 


Allegations denied in teen's boot camp death

By STEVE ROCK The Kansas City Star


A 15-year-old boy who died in November while attending a Missouri boot camp for troubled teenagers was not abused or neglected, say officials at Thayer Learning Center.

In court documents filed late last week and Tuesday in Buchanan County Circuit Court in St. Joseph, attorneys for Thayer denied allegations of abuse and medical neglect made in a wrongful-death lawsuit filed by the parents of Roberto Reyes.

The lawsuit, filed last month by Victor and Gracia Reyes of Santa Rosa, Calif., alleged that Roberto was subjected to physical exertion and abuse at the Kidder, Mo., facility that caused or contributed to his death. The lawsuit contended he was dragged, hit, placed into solitary confinement and ?forced to lay in his own excrement for extended periods of time.?

In addition, the lawsuit alleged that Roberto would have lived had he received competent medical care in a timely manner.

The lawsuit named Thayer, a referral service and three Thayer employees as defendants.

?Thayer makes proper medical care, treatment and evaluation available to its students,? the defendants said in their response. ?? Students have access to proper medical care, evaluation and treatment upon request.?

Thayer attorneys argued in the filings that if the plaintiffs sustained injury or damage, it was caused ?through the sole fault and/or negligence of decedent Roberto Reyes and/or others whose fault must be compared with that of these defendants.? The ?others? are not identified.

Benjamin Fadler, an attorney for Thayer and the three employees, declined comment Tuesday. Ed Proctor, an attorney for the Parent Help referral service, which steered Roberto to Thayer, couldn't be reached.

The three Thayer employees ? Richard Sperry of Chillicothe, Dave Swymeler of St. Joseph, and Robert Carter of Kidder ? denied in court filings all allegations against them, such as failing to take reasonable steps to dial 911 once it was clear Roberto was gravely ill. They asked to be dismissed from the lawsuit.

Attorneys for Thayer also argued that if Roberto's parents sought punitive damages, they should be denied.

Thayer, a military-type home, houses about 100 students in Kidder, about 50 miles north of Kansas City in Caldwell County.

Roberto died Nov. 3, and the probable cause of death was identified as a spider or insect bite by the Jackson County medical examiner. According to the lawsuit, however, the condition that killed Roberto ?would have been present for a significant period of time prior to his death.? What caused that condition, the Reyes' attorney has said, has not been determined.

The lawsuit ?misstates? the conclusion of the medical examiner, the defendants said.

Some of the specific allegations in the wrongful-death lawsuit, all of which were denied in court filings, include:

? That Roberto ?was subjected to sadistic, cruel and harmful acts,? and that he was dragged to the showers ?in a crude attempt to wash off human excrement and filth.?

? That the defendants treated Roberto's physical complaints as ?games and ploys,? and that he was left ?to die alone ? with a feeling of utter hopelessness.?

? That Thayer and Parent Help are ?inextricably intertwined for common schemes and goals,? and that Parent Help misrepresented the type of discipline and care that children got.

No charges have been filed in connection with Roberto's death. A division of the Missouri Department of Social Services is conducting an investigation, and Caldwell County Prosecutor Jason Kanoy has said he is awaiting results from that state investigation before deciding whether his office would take any action.

After Roberto died, a panel of county and state officials charged with reviewing child deaths said earlier medical treatment ?may have prevented this fatality.?

To reach Steve Rock, call

(816) 234-4338 or send e-mail to [email protected]

8
Thayer Learning Center / New lawsuit against Thayer
« on: March 02, 2005, 04:49:00 PM »
There is going to be another lawsuit filed against Thayer.  Anyone who was subjected to neglect and/or abuse (neglect can even include sleep deprivation, inadequate food, etc.)  please contact me through PM or email me.  Once I have received a PM or email, I will provide you with my personal contact info.  I am just not inclined to post it on these boareds.

We would like to include as many people as possible so we can try to shut this place down!

9
The Troubled Teen Industry / WWASP - BEWARE
« on: February 11, 2005, 05:19:00 PM »
i was recently contacted by someone of what they call "Teens in Crisis".  Their website is http://www.2helpteens.com/bootcamps/index.html

I have never visited that site until today, so I don't know they got my email address (it is different from the one here).  At any rate, ALL they push are WWASP schools.  They support Spring Creek Lodge, Carolina Springs, Casa by the Sea, Cross Creek Programs and Tranquility Bay.

Below are the emails, so beware people!

Dear Karyn,

I am trying to find out if you have need for help concerning your teen. I would like to help in doing something in an extremely structured environment that will help start your teen on the track to a better future for them and for you.

I Hope things are going better For you, but if not we are here to help.
It is horrible to hear from a parent whose child is about to turn 18 and they have been dealing with the problems for years and it is getting worse. Programs need time to work with the child. The problem did not happen overnight and it takes a while to help relearn appropriate behaviors.

For your teen's sake, please don't put off this difficult decision until it is too late. We can get them the help needed right now.

I Would love to Talk and go over the options we have for Schools, financial Loans and Suggested Funds Plan That can help you in this difficult time. I Look Forward to your call.

May God bless you in your efforts.

Paul Curtis
Teens in Crisis
Admissions Coordinator
______________________________________

My response:

Paul, my son was in a bootcamp military style school for one week and it turned out to be a horrible experience.  I am open to other schools, but after what happened to my son, I will not agree to enroll him a school that (1) limits contact with your child; (2) censors all phone and mail; (3) and uses excessive restraints/force as a means of consequence.
 
Do you have any schools like this?

______________________________

His Response:

Dear Karyn,
I understand your concerns. The schools I represent
have a 97% success record in turning the lives of troubled
teens around. The three things you mentioned are the primary
reasons why they are so successful. I dont feel that they are
right for you however because of your concerns. The schools
need to show tough love and zero tolerance. They do not use
restraints unless the teen is out of control. My prayers are with you
in finding the right kind of school for your son.
ThankYou,
______________________________

This is such a CROCK.  97% my azz......

10
The Troubled Teen Industry / Rite of Passage Schools
« on: February 08, 2005, 01:11:00 PM »
Does anyone know anything about this school?  I talked to them today and went down the "list of questions to ask" and they seem to be pretty good. They don't restrict access to the children, you can call and visit, they dont monitor phone calls, mail, etc.  They will let you and your child tour the facility before hand, etc...

any input would be greatly appreciated!  After my son's experience at Thayer, I just want to make sure that I send him to the right place.  I will do lots and LOTS of research before I send him anywhere now!

If my son doesn't feel comfortable with the school when we tour, then he doesn't go!  Plain and simple!  Believe it or not, he wants to help as much as I want hi to get help, he doesnt like where his life is headed but doesn't know how to stop it.  Of course, after one week of hell at Thayer, he is doing good, but once the trauma of it all wears off, I am concerned the old ghosts will reappear.

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