Protecting Young Offenders From Abuse
Across The Country, Child Advocates Deplore The Conditions In Juvenile Detention Facilities
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Johnny Coleman, Columbia Training School's interim director, stands outside a secure facility that houses suicidal girls or those in protective custody, Sept. 25, 2007, in Columbia, Miss. A number of teenage girls are suing the state over what they called "horrendous physical and sexual abuse" of them at the school. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
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If some of those girls and their advocates are to be believed, it is also a cruel and frightening place.
The school has been sued twice in the past four years. One suit brought by the U.S. Justice Department, which the state settled in 2005, claimed detainees were thrown naked in to cells and forced to eat their own vomit. The second one, brought by eight girls last year, said they were subjected to "horrendous physical and sexual abuse." Several of the detainees said they were shackled for 12 hours a day.
These are harsh and disturbing charges - and, in the end, they were among the reasons why state officials announced in February that they will close Columbia. But they aren't uncommon.
Across the country, in state after state, child advocates have deplored the conditions under which young offenders are housed - conditions that include sexual and physical abuse and even deaths in restraints. The U.S. Justice Department has filed lawsuits against facilities in 11 states for supervision that is either abusive or harmfully lax and shoddy.
Still, a lack of oversight and nationally accepted standards of tracking abuse make it difficult to know exactly how many youngsters have been assaulted or neglected.
The Associated Press contacted each state agency that oversees juvenile correction centers and asked for information on the number of deaths as well as the number of allegations and confirmed cases of physical, sexual and emotional abuse by staff members since Jan. 1, 2004.
According to the survey, more than 13,000 claims of abuse were identified in juvenile correction centers around the country from 2004 through 2007 - a remarkable total, given that the total population of detainees was about 46,000 at the time the states were surveyed in 2007.
Just 1,343 of those claims of abuse identified by the AP were confirmed by various authorities. Of 1,140 claims of sexual abuse, 143 were confirmed by investigators.
Wisconsin corrections officials reported one death and 63 claims of abuse in the state's juvenile facilities. Four of those claims were confirmed.
They also reported 12 claims of a staff member sexually abusing a detainee, but none were substantiated. Wisconsin's juvenile population was about 635 detainees last year.
Experts say only a fraction of the allegations are ever confirmed. These are some of the most troubled young people in the country and some will make up stories. But in other cases, the youth are pressured not to report abuse; often, no one believes them anyway.
One of the boys I interviewed said he didn't think it was fair that his roommate had a relationship with one of the staffers and he didn't
Sue Burrell, Youth Law CenterStill, advocates for the detainees contend that abuse by guards remains a major problem and that authorities aren't doing enough to address the situation.
In 2004, the U.S. Justice Department uncovered 2,821 allegations of sexual abuse by juvenile correction staffers. The government study included 194 private facilities, which likely accounts for the higher numbers than the AP found.
But some experts say the true number of sexual incidents is likely even higher. Some youth view sexual relationships with staff members as consensual, not as adults in positions of authority abusing their power.
Sue Burrell, an attorney for the Youth Law Center in San Francisco, recalls investigating sexual encounters between female staff and male inmates at a juvenile facility in Florida. "One of the boys I interviewed said he didn't think it was fair that his roommate had a relationship with one of the staffers and he didn't."
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It be even better if parents didn''t have to work day and night to pay for things like the high price of housing, the high price of health care, and the high price of gas and heating bills. Imagine, the could actually be home with their children. Then they could say NO to all those things.
Well, they failed to stop it. Vindictive and abusive human nature possesses all government everywhere in all ages. We don''t see what an awful civilization we have become.
Kinda like Bill Clinton?