Salt Lake City, UT (October 15, 2006) – On August 25, 2006, William Chase Wood and his parents, Tammy and Gregory Wood, filed a lawsuit against the World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools (WWASPS) and their associates, alleging Child Abuse, Fraud, Breach of Contract, Conspiracy, Gross Negligence, RICO Violations, False Imprisonment, Assault, Battery, and More.
An estimated 300 - 500 new plaintiffs have joined in the Wood lawsuit and filed an Amended Complaint in the Utah Federal Court on October 13, 2006. Families from California, Texas, Maryland, Kentucky, Lousiana, Florida, Minnesota, and Michigan have decided to fight back against this corporate giant. Plaintiffs are represented by the prominent and prestigious Turley Law Firm of Dallas, Texas.
WWASPS Parents click here to submit your information to the Turley Law Firm.
WWASPS Students click here to submit your information to the Turley Law Firm.
Over the past decade thousands of children have been housed in WWASPS programs. Children were not placed there, for the most part, because they were in trouble with the law. These are generally children whose parents, for one reason or another, seek outside help for their children and teens - to the tune of about $40,000 to $60,000 per year or more. While some parents can afford to pay for these programs, others cannot and are forced to take out second mortgages, tap into their retirement funds or their children’s college funds.
According to the Amended Complaint, every child named was subjected to multiple forms of child abuse over extended periods of time. While parents believed they had sent their children to programs that would provide them a proper education and, depending on the situation, help for their troubled child or teen, according to the Amended Complaint, some children were:
• Forced to eat their own vomit
• Kicked, beaten, thrown, and slammed to the ground
• Bound and tied by their hands/and or feet
• Chained and locked in dog cages
• Forced to stay in isolation for long periods of times
• Locked in small boxes or cages
• Locked in basements
• Forced to lie in or wear urine and feces as a method of punishment
• Forced to clean and scrub toilets and floors with their toothbrush and then use the toothbrush afterwards
• Forced to sleep on cold concrete floors, box springs, or plywood used as beds – some had no bed linens
• Forced to assume distorted and painful physical positions for long periods of time
• Forced to live in unsanitary living conditions
• Denied adequate food
• Denied even a minimally sufficient education
• Denied proper medical and dental treatment and care
• Exposed to extreme hot and cold temperatures for long periods of time
• Forced to exercise beyond their physical capacity
• Forced to carry heavy bags of sand or logs around their neck throughout the day over many days
• Sexually abused, including sexual relations and acts of fondling and masturbation performed on them
• Emotional abuse by subjecting children to near total parental and societal isolation; personal visits, correspondence, and telephone calls were either forbidden or discouraged
• Because of near-total isolation, these children were totally unequipped to enter outside society
• Forced to work many hours a day violating child labor laws
• Confiscated and/or kept students’ US mail
• Deprived from using the toilet, and as a result, urinated or defecated on themselves
• Verbally abused by lying that their parents knew what was happening to them and were supportive of it all
• Subjected to buddy system where older students were allowed to physically, mentally, and sexually abuse younger students and manage them as part of “cleansing” process
• Deprived of sleep
• Forced to wear the same, unwashed clothes for weeks at a time
• In most cases. denied religious affiliation
• Forced to eat raw or rotten food
• Poked and prodded with various objects while being strip-searched
• Forced to write false confession letters to parents to justify being sent to the WWASPS schools
• Threatened severe punishment, including death, if they told anyone about the abuse or poor living conditions --
The Amended Complaint seeks damages for:
• Battery
• Assault
• False imprisonment
• Negligence
• Defendants’ intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress
• Actual and constructive fraud
• Breach of contract/breach of warranty
• Conspiracy and fraudulent concealment
• RICO violations
• Breach of fiduciary duty
• Wrongful and actionable conduct of defendants
• Breach of statutory duty to prevent child abuse
• Breach of duty to act imposed by prior dangerous conduct
• Breach of duty to aid another harmed by defendants’ conduct
• Negligent assumption of risk of intentional or criminal conduct
• Negligent misrepresentation involving risk of physical harm
• Utah deceptive trade practices violations
• Gross negligence and exemplary damages --
The facts of the case allege that each parent entrusted their minor children to the control and direction of defendants because defendants marketed themselves as a residential boarding school where children with problems could get an education while receiving instruction and direction in behavior modification for emotional growth and personal development.
The Amended Complaint seeks damages to each student and each parent plaintiff and requests an injunction against further physical, emotional, or sexual abuse of minor children. It requests an injunction against further deceptive advertising. It is asking for an order against destruction or spoliation of evidence.
The Amended Complaint goes on to say student plaintiffs alledgedly witnessed other children being kicked, hit, slammed, beaten, thrown to the ground, and humiliated by teachers, supervisors, and/or staff, that their human rights were violated when Defendants used isolation as a form of punishment, that Defendants often conspired with one parent or guardian to kidnap or take away by force the child from another parent with equal or superior custody, and that Defendants conspired with parents to implement an “Exit Plan”, which had the effect of compelling the student to remain at the schools past the student’s 18th birthday, despite the alleged torture or inhumane conditions.
The Turley Law Firm is investigating other potential claims. There are no up-front costs to plaintiffs as cases are taken on a contingency fee basis. If you feel you were defrauded or harmed in any way by any WWASPS facility, feel free to contact the Turley Law Firm at 1-800-692-4025, or visit their website and fill out their Evaluation Form at www.wturley.com.
Defendants named in the Amended Complaint include:
World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools, Inc., Cross Creek Center for Boys, LLC, Cross Creek Manor, LLC, Majestic Ranch Academy, Inc., Academy of Ivy Ridge, Spring Creek Lodge, Inc., High Impact, Dundee Ranch, Casa by the Sea, Tranquility Bay, Carolina Springs Academy, Brightway Adolescent Hospital, Paradise Cove, Resource Realizations Inc., Peacock Enterprises, LLC, Dixie Contract Services, LLC, Premier Educational Systems, LLC, Robert Browning Lichfield Family Partnership, Teens in Crisis, LLC, Teen Help, LLC, R & B Management Group, LLC, R & B Billing, Robert B. Lichfield, Ken Kay, Karr Farnsworth, David Gilcrease, and John Does I through XX.
WWASPS Parents click here to submit your information to the Turley Law Firm.
WWASPS Students click here to submit your information to the Turley Law Firm.
Source: http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=22096
