Elan School - Dancing With The Devil – Cases of Teen Reform School
In the 70s, 80s, 90 all the way to 2011 Elan had a reputation of harsh punishments and allegedly good results. But in 2011, when funding stopped, and an increasing number complaints of abuse reported, the school was shuttered. The late founder and owner, of the facility ‘Joe Ricci’ lured many parents to those kinds of places and parents did not know of what happening there. The accounts were chilling. The extent of the abuses included, but not limited to, kids beaten to exhaustion. The maladapted staff, were nothing short of sadists with biggest problem being PTSD and in fact, kids are stating their time there was hell.
Phone calls and letters were heavy redacted or disappeared altogether. Sounds familiar, huh? It is not just kids who do the wrong things, but politicians, state workers and Law Enforcement, though the latter a bone of contention.
The students were most of the time kidnapped by professionals (Escorts) and taken to the school and processed, for lack of a better word. The parents signed over their children and staff, by weight of ‘in loco Parentis”. In place of Parents, but this does not abrogate Constitutional Protections of children. It does not mean abuse but the protection of them.
Maine police are looking into a claim that a 15-year-old boy who died three decades ago had been forced to participate in a boxing match at a now-closed school for troubled youth
LEWISTON, Maine (AP) — Maine state police are looking into a claim that a boxing match used as punishment at a now-closed school for troubled teens preceded a student's death from a brain injury three decades ago.
Authorities told Pam Newell in 1982 her brother, Phil Williams Jr., died from a brain aneurysm. She said she only learned two weeks ago that he had been forced into the infamous boxing ring at the Elan School the day before he died, the Sun Journal (
http://bit.ly/1plHWB7 ) reported.
"There's a lot of information that needs to be gathered," Maine State Police spokesman Steve McCausland said Tuesday. "A great deal of time has elapsed since the teenager's death."
Forced fighting was among several controversial therapies employed by the school, which closed in 2011. The practice emerged during Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel's 2002 murder trial in Connecticut.
Former student Ann Bowen told the newspaper Newell's brother was pummeled by teenagers wearing boxing gloves as punishment because staff members thought he was faking a headache. Another former student, Laura Allemang, said she remembers Williams going into convulsions.
The school in Poland, Maine, was founded by the late Joe Ricci, a former heroin addict, and the late Gerald Davidson, a psychiatrist.
Several former school officials said they'd never heard of the allegations.
The death certificate for Williams cites a probable brain aneurysm as the source of "brain stem compression" and "massive cerebral hemorrhage." An aneurysm is a weakening of the wall of an artery or vein wall that can cause death in the event of a rupture.
McCausland said another former student from Chicago came to him with the same allegation that a boxing match preceded the teen's death. He said they were forwarded to the major crimes unit, which is looking into the death.
Williams ended up at Elan after he and his sister, both from Auburn, became wards of the state and were sent to a foster home in Rockland after their father was imprisoned. Williams was sent to the Maine Youth Center, then to the Elan School, after getting into trouble.
Newell said she and her father, now 74, want answers.
"I want to know," she said. "If he was murdered, my brother deserved justice."
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This story has been corrected to show the victim was 15, not 12, when he died.
Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Finally, I support institutions that get kids on the right track and rewards for and breaks from stress. But with 3,000 of these places down to only a few. Better training, accreditation and oversight, which includes food, clothing and the kind. No kidnapping.