ReportWire

Tag: abuse

  • Transitions PA legal advocate was once a client

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    LEWISBURG — Stephanie Balliet discovered her life’s work amid one of the most difficult times in her young life.

    Following an assault by a stranger at the age of 12 while attending a sleepover at a friend’s house, Balliet received services from Transitions PA during the ensuing three-year-long court case involving her alleged abuser.

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    By Marcia Moore mmoore@dailyitem.com

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  • County seeks info on puppy brought to Bonita shelter with ‘severe neck injury’

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    A county Animal Services vehicle. (Photo courtesy of County News Center)

    A 10-month-old puppy was brought into the county’s Bonita animal shelter earlier this week with a “severe neck injury” caused by a tight collar and county officials Friday asked for the public’s help identifying the dog’s owner.

    The male shepherd, which was brought into the shelter on Monday as a stray, was wearing a chain collar around its neck that had not been loosened as the dog grew older and had become embedded in his skin, according to the county.

    Veterinary staff had to surgically remove the chain before treating the dog’s injuries and said he will have to undergo additional surgery to help the wound fully heal.

    Though the puppy was microchipped, the county’s Department of Animal Services has not been able to trace it to a registered owner.

    But Animal Services Director Vaughn Maurice says the puppy is recovering and doing well.

    “Once he’s fully healed, he’ll be neutered, vaccinated, and ready to find a loving home,” Maurice said. “Despite everything he’s endured, the puppy remains cheerful and full of life — wagging his tail at anyone who stops by to say hello.”

    Anyone who recognizes the dog and might have information regarding his owner was asked to contact San Diego County Animal Services at 619-236- 2341. Callers may remain anonymous.

    –City News Service


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  • An Isolated Boarding School Promised To Help Troubled Girls. Former Students Say They Were Abused.

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    From ‘Troubled Teens’ To Traumatized Adults

    Hokyoung Kim for HuffPost

    Molly Dickin had only been at an all-girls boarding school in Arizona for a few months when she and two other girls climbed over a barbed-wire fence and ran off into the desert.

    It was around 8 p.m. in late April 2015, and Dickin was making her escape from Spring Ridge Academy, a now-closed, for-profit boarding school just over an hour north of Phoenix that housed up to 76 teen girls at a time to treat behavioral problems.

    Dickin, now 28, told HuffPost she could no longer stomach the abuse she said she endured while there. Dickin said she was forced to participate in psychological games that included having to roleplay her own sexual assault in front of her peers, and faced punishments that included not being able to speak to anyone for weeks at a time.

    “We were just very, very desperate to get away from SRA,” said Dickin, who had turned 18 two months before her escape.

    Molly Dickin, of Burlington, Vermont, poses last month at a family home on Lake Champlain in neighboring Colchester. When she was 17, Dickin began an 11-month stay at Spring Ridge Academy, a now-closed center in Arizona that some former students say was abusive.
    Molly Dickin, of Burlington, Vermont, poses last month at a family home on Lake Champlain in neighboring Colchester. When she was 17, Dickin began an 11-month stay at Spring Ridge Academy, a now-closed center in Arizona that some former students say was abusive.

    Dickin made it over the barbed wire, but the dark made it hard to see the blood that now covered her arms and face. With backpacks filled with only a change of clothes and some snacks, the three girls sprinted into the cold desert.

    After a night of walking in the desert and eventually on dirt roads, the sun started to rise. The girls had settled to rest on the deck of an empty cabin when police finally found them.

    “The young lady had an apparent, recent scratch across her cheek and nose,” a report from the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office said.

    “We tried to explain to them the reasons that we had run away, like what we were running from,” Dickin said. “But they just returned us without looking into anything.” The sheriff’s office declined to comment for this story.

    Nine years later, in 2024, the school’s controversial practices exploded into public view when the mother of a former student won a federal lawsuit after alleging that Spring Ridge was an abusive, cult-inspired program that used fraud and manipulation to “imprison students for an arbitrary and uncertain time period for money.” She also claimed that the program was able to “sever” the relationship between her and her daughter.

    Spring Ridge, and other boarding schools and boot camps like it, which together are known as the “troubled-teen industry,” had started to come under scrutiny from media outlets and lawmakers. Last year, a jury awarded the mother more than $2.5 million in damages, an unprecedented amount that experts hoped would be a turning point toward reining in a multibillion-dollar industry they say preys on vulnerable teens and their families.

    But the ruling was reversed earlier this year over allegations that a juror may have done their own research about the industry prior to the verdict being read, potentially biasing the outcome. A judge declared a mistrial and scheduled a new trial for January 2026.

    Though Spring Ridge closed in 2023, former students say too many facilities like it are still in operation. HuffPost spoke with six former students who attended the school as teens and reviewed hundreds of pages of court records, police reports and on-site government inspection reports. Together, they paint the picture of a facility that traumatized many of its students. Meanwhile, Spring Ridge’s founder insists there was no abuse and referred HuffPost to two former students who spoke highly of her and the program.

    Many alums can no longer speak for themselves; during the trial, the attorney for the plaintiff listed nearly 30 former students who have died since Spring Ridge’s inception in 1997. Many died by overdose or suicide, the attorney said.

    The school’s founder, Jeannie Courtney, told HuffPost in a statement that those numbers are “deeply misleading.”

    “Unfortunately, despite our best attempts to help these individuals lead healthy, productive lives, some did later succumb to the same issues that had led them to Spring Ridge to begin with,” Courtney said.

    Shannon Saul, 27, pictured last month in Los Angeles, attended Spring Ridge Academy from 2013 through 2015 and is now an advocate, sounding the alarm about the dangers of the troubled-teen industry.

    Alisha Jucevic for HuffPost

    Shannon Saul, 27, pictured last month in Los Angeles, attended Spring Ridge Academy from 2013 through 2015 and is now an advocate, sounding the alarm about the dangers of the troubled-teen industry.

    Former student Shannon Saul, now 27, told HuffPost she knew four of those who died and still struggles with survivor’s guilt.

    “I would say that a [minority] of us are out there living our lives thriving,” Saul said. “A lot of people are still struggling with addiction, or the trauma is too intense and they can’t handle relationships.”

    From Lifespring ‘Cult’ To Spring Ridge Academy

    Stories of abuse from troubled-teen facilities have trickled out for decades, but few programs have been held accountable. HuffPost previously reported on a Utah facility in 2016 that responded to allegations of abuse from former students by changing its name while keeping the majority of its staff. A 2024 story from NBC News outlined the facility’s continued allegations of abuse. A lawyer for the facility denied the allegations.

    Around 120,000 to 200,000 children are estimated to be living in troubled-teen schools and camps at any given time, with little to no government oversight.

    “The number of youth who have been physically, emotionally, or sexually abused or neglected while living in a residential facility is unknown,” noted a 2024 report by the federal Government Accountability Office that examined the safety of the programs after multiple teens died while in their care.

    A law signed by then-President Joe Biden that same year mandates a federal study with a report issued every two years for the next decade on child abuse in programs similar to Spring Ridge — a victory for advocates and survivors who have worked to shed light on the industry’s practices.

    Celebrity Paris Hilton testified in front of Congress in 2024 about the trauma she said she endured at Utah’s Provo Canyon School when she was 17.

    “These programs promised growth, healing and support, but instead did not let me speak freely or even look out a window for two years,” Hilton testified.

    Those who attended Spring Ridge struggled with “substance abuse, addiction, physical abuse from the people they trusted most, and more,” Courtney said in her statement.

    Meg Appelgate, the CEO of Unsilenced, an organization advocating for survivors, told HuffPost that programs like Spring Ridge only serve to amplify trauma many kids have already experienced.

    “If you look really, really deep, almost every survivor I know had trauma before getting sent away,” said Appelgate, who herself was put in a troubled-teen program as a child. “And what happens is it compounds the trauma once you’re in there, and so now you have trauma on top of trauma on top of trauma.”

    The now-abandoned Spring Ridge Academy is located in the remote, high desert town of Mayer, which has a population of less than 900 people. Saul, who attended the school from 2013 to 2015, said staff members who lived in the town had a name for the girls: the “hoes on the hill.”

    Jeannie Courtney, 79, founded the program in 1996 and led it until her retirement in 2016, when she handed the reins off to her son, Brandon Courtney, and his wife, Suzanne. Despite retiring, Jeannie Courtney continued to play a role in the day-to-day operations of Spring Ridge, along with conducting workshops and seminars, former students allege. In a statement, Jeannie Courtney said she “continued to support the school in facilitating some workshops” but was not involved in the daily operations of the school. Brandon and Suzanne Courtney declined to comment for this story.

    In the 2021 lawsuit against Spring Ridge that names Jeannie, Brandon and Suzanne Courtney as defendants, mother Kimberly Sweidy alleged she was duped by the program, which promised evidence-based therapy for her child but instead led to her daughter being “manipulated, coerced and abused by Spring Ridge.” Parents would pay up to $9,000 a month for their kids to receive therapy likened to cult practices, according to her lawsuit. Claims against Jeannie, Brandon and Suzanne Courtney were ultimately dismissed before the trial. Spring Ridge Academy, however, remained a defendant. At the trial, Jeannie Courtney testified that she is not a licensed therapist and has no background in psychology.

    The facility’s so-called therapeutic practices “employed public shaming, food deprivation, bathroom privilege deprivation, isolation, administration of drugs and encouragement of physical violence and screaming,” the lawsuit said.

    The practices of the school mirrored those promoted by David Gilcrease, Jeannie Courtney’s ex-husband and a former facilitator for Lifespring, a “personal growth” training program that has often been likened to a cult. Courtney was also employed by Lifespring and married Gilcrease six years after she left the program in 1986.

    Critics of Lifespring include Ginni Thomas, the wife of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who became an anti-cult activist after getting involved with Lifespring in the 1980s.

    “When you come away from a cult, you’ve got to find a balance in your life as far as getting involved with fighting the cult or exposing it,” Thomas told attendees at a Cult Awareness Network panel in Missouri in 1986. (In recent years, she has aligned herself with far-right conspiracy theories linked to QAnon, which has also been likened to a cult.)

    After leaving Lifespring, Gilcrease started the company Resource Realizations, which did seminars for troubled-teen programs that involved “psychological responses to intense emotional distress,” an advocacy group for survivors of the industry said. The practices are strikingly similar to what many of the former Spring Ridge students said they experienced.

    “The methods used by Resource Realizations and SRA are identical, as evidenced by years of reporting from parents and students who attended Resource Realizations workshops, reports from former SRA students, experiences of Ms. Sweidy and her daughter and SRA literature,” the 2021 lawsuit said.

    The lawsuit, alongside former students, described a game in which students were instructed to beat a chair with a towel that had been rolled up in duct tape. The students were told that the towel represented their anger at their parents and that the chair represented their parents, according to the lawsuit.

    Courtney directed HuffPost to two former students who both described the chair-hitting exercise as a great way to “release anger.” Other students felt differently.

    Dickin, who said she had to beat a chair with a towel in 2015, said she and other students were expected to act overly emotional if they wanted to progress through the school’s ranks.

    Dickin told HuffPost that after running away from Spring Ridge, she was subjected to a "school-wide attack therapy session."
    Dickin told HuffPost that after running away from Spring Ridge, she was subjected to a “school-wide attack therapy session.”

    “We were instructed to scream things at our parents,” Dickin said of the activity. “Like things that we resented them for, things they’d done to us. We were instructed to get as aggressive and as emotional as possible. And I did not break, I guess. During that, I wasn’t crying. I was in shock and felt so uncomfortable.”

    Dickin said she got in trouble for not crying. The lawsuit echoed a similar complaint.

    “Those children who don’t participate in emotional hysterics are singled out as the group pariah,” the lawsuit said.

    As punishment for her escape attempt, Dickin said, she and the two other girls were subjected to a “school-wide attack therapy session,” in which Dickin said other students yelled at them for running away. Their punishment then included no longer being allowed to speak to other students, she added.

    The 2021 lawsuit also alleges the use of attack therapy several times, calling it a “humiliating” process for the kids. Courtney said in a statement that attack therapy “was never part of our program.”

    Dickin described another group roleplay activity led by Jeannie Courtney in which Dickin had to take “accountability for my own rape,” she told HuffPost. That involved getting down on her knees while another girl took the role of assaulter, reenacting the traumatic moment in front of a room full of students, she said.

    Hokyoung Kim for HuffPost

    “I would have to hear the things that [my abuser] said to me — that I had shared during therapy — and the degrading things he said when he assaulted me,” she said. “I had to say, ‘I take accountability. I never should have let him physically overpower me and gotten myself into that situation. I never should have been wearing a dress that made it so easy for him to have access to me. I never should have allowed him to choke me.’”

    “I would never have talked about girls’ orgasms or anything of that nature. And I don’t scream and yell, either.”

    -Jeannie Courtney on allegations she told girls that their unhealthy relationship habits will lead to an inability to experience an orgasm.

    Jeannie Courtney denied all allegations of abuse — including that she had Dickin reenact her assault — in a call with HuffPost that she ended after 15 minutes. She later responded in a statement to a list of emailed questions.

    “We took rapes incredibly seriously,” Courtney said on the call. “In fact, a very high percentage of the young women coming to Spring Ridge Academy were raped. We would never ask someone, ‘How are you accountable for your rape?’ In fact, I have made the statement that I don’t care if you are sitting naked on somebody’s lap, you do not deserve ever to be raped.”

    If girls were being abused, Courtney argued, why weren’t there reports?

    “If we were in any way harming girls, it would have been reported, and we would have had reports of it,” Courtney said. “I find it kind of interesting that all of a sudden it comes out years later, when we didn’t get reports of this, or parents calling me about this years and years ago.”

    HuffPost reviewed documents that show dozens of instances of students running away or attempting suicide over the years. The Mayer Fire Department, which handled dozens of self-harm calls in the years Spring Ridge was operational, declined to share additional information.

    Still, more than 120 Yavapai County Sheriff’s Office incident reports from 1997 to 2022, obtained by HuffPost, give a glimpse into the desperation many of the girls said they felt and the limits of the program in providing the safe, stable environment it advertised to parents. It’s unclear exactly how many times the sheriff’s office was called to the school; a spokesperson acknowledged the batch of records released to HuffPost was not comprehensive.

    One 2012 report describes how a student tried to kill herself.

    In 2019, a deputy was dispatched to Spring Ridge “in reference to a 14-year-old female who attempted suicide,” according to a report.

    Another student attempted to kill herself in 2021, a report said.

    And as the 2024 GAO report points out: “Youth placed in residential facilities may not make reports for fear of prolonging their stay in the facility, being punished, becoming a target for additional abuse, or having privileges taken away.”

    While Spring Ridge housed up to 76 students at a time, the total number of students who entered its doors over the years is unclear.

    In her statement, Courtney called HuffPost’s reporting on the sheriff’s office reports “deeply misleading” and a “minor fraction” of the full Spring Ridge student body over two decades.

    “The school rightly reported incidents of students leaving campus without permission or attempting self-harm to relevant authorities because their safety was always our top priority,” the statement said.

    Despite the allegations from former students, Jeannie Courtney denies the facility ever mistreated girls in its care. She believes her accusers are making it up.

    “This is what I think has happened: I think it took a few people to start the criticism of what I see throughout the internet, and that’s why I’m not on social media,” Courtney told HuffPost in a phone call. “I think that it became the thing to do: People say, ‘Oh yeah, that’s the ticket.’ And they become angry, and they lash out and literally — literally — make things up. And this is not unusual, by the way, if you study group dynamics: They begin to mirror what they hear, and they believe it happened to them.”

    ‘I Think I’m Being Kidnapped’

    For many kids sent to a troubled-teen facility, the story starts the same: Late at night, a child is woken up by strangers tasked with taking them to a for-profit institution, often out of state.

    The strangers, usually two men, receive permission from a child’s parents to forcibly take them. They call themselves “transporters,” but survivors of the troubled-teen industry call them by a different name: goons.

    Michaela Harrington, 27, said she was 13 years old when she was hospitalized for self-harming. When she came home, she said, she was woken up in the middle of the night.

    “There’s two big men standing in my doorway,” Harrington said. “I’m screaming because I think I’m being kidnapped, and my parents are waiting behind them.”

    The two men took her on a plane to Georgia, where she was sent to Blue Ridge Wilderness Therapy before eventually getting transferred to Spring Ridge in 2014.

    Harrington would soon find herself in a worse situation while at Spring Ridge, she said.

    In spite of Spring Ridge’s hefty tuition, the 2021 lawsuit alleged Sweidy’s daughter “trained” herself not to eat after seeing cockroaches in the salad bar and ultimately developed an eating disorder. Courtney said in her statement that it is “false and unimaginable that there would ever be cockroaches in our food areas or that students would be ill as a result of our kitchen services.”

    Records with the Arizona Department of Health Services show the facility was cited in 2019 after a student grabbed a knife from the kitchen and used it to self-harm.

    “During an interview, [a staff member] acknowledged the resident did not receive continuous protective oversight,” the report said.

    In 2021, Spring Ridge was cited after a student was able to gain access to an unlocked medicine cabinet and reportedly swallowed several ibuprofen tablets. The facility was cited for failure to “ensure residents did not use or have access” to materials that “present a threat to the resident’s health or safety.”

    Spring Ridge was also cited $500 that same year over staff members not providing proper documentation “before the personnel member provides behavioral health services.”

    “Three personnel members’ skills and knowledge were not verified and documented,” the report said. “This is a repeat deficiency.”

    A 2013 sheriff’s office report details Suzanne Courtney’s suspicions that a faculty member was taking items from students and giving them cigarettes. (The report said the school decided to handle the situation internally. In her call with HuffPost, Jeannie Courtney said that over the years she personally fired two people for breaking the facility’s rules but did not elaborate on the nature of the firings.)

    “Spring Ridge Academy held staff to high standards, and we took action if staff did not meet them,” Jeannie Courtney said in a statement. “Of course, if staff broke our rules, we terminated them — just as anyone would expect for an institution charged with caring for students.”

    To finish the program at Spring Ridge, students were expected to complete four phases, a difficult process at a facility that demanded absolute compliance, former students said.

    During Phase 1, where every new student started, girls were not allowed to speak to anyone other than students who shared the same therapist. At Phase 2, girls could have one 15-minute phone call with their parents each week and occasionally go off campus to visit them. At Phases 3 and 4, students could have internet access, watch movies and play games like basketball and tennis without staff supervision, according to a 2010 student manual obtained by HuffPost.

    Moving up in phases could take weeks or even months, and required grueling emotional games that involved students verbally tearing each other down if they wanted to rise in the ranks, former students said.

    The process could feel arbitrary. Caro Maltz, a 27-year-old who uses they/them pronouns, attended Spring Ridge from 2014 to 2015 and said Jeannie Courtney gave them homework asking what two gifts they would give their “inner child.” Maltz chose a stuffed animal and a seashell. At a group session with students and Courtney the next day, Maltz presented their gifts and explained what they meant to them.

    The other students, under the gaze of Courtney, “determined that I was inauthentic,” Maltz said.

    “And so I was sent out of the training — and this is a training that you needed to do to phase up,” they said. “So I had to then wait a couple months to do the training again.”

    Jeannie Courtney said in her statement that students were required to repeat therapy exercises if they engaged in “destructive, defiant behavior.”

    Former students who spoke to HuffPost described an isolated, regimented environment with draconian rules enforced by uncaring staff. Maltz recalled an incident in 2014 when a girl shattered a light bulb on a bathroom mirror and cut herself with the shattered glass. Staff told Maltz to pick up the pieces of blood-stained glass scattered over the floor, they said.

    Hokyoung Kim for HuffPost

    “That’s when I knew in my brain that this wasn’t OK,” Maltz said. “But there was nothing else I could do. I couldn’t refuse.”

    In her statement, Jeannie Courtney said the incident described by Maltz “could not have happened because of precautions we took at Spring Ridge,” including covering light bulbs.

    Police were called to the school in 2015 over a separate incident in which a girl smashed a light fixture with her hand, according to a sheriff’s office report. The girl, who needed a bandage for her bloody right hand, told an officer she became angry after “being picked on by other students.”

    “[Redacted] stated that she took out her anger by hitting the glass lights instead of making physical contact with the other students,” the report said.

    Sarah Olsen, 26, who was sent to the school in 2014 when she was 14 because of poor grades at school, said she reported other students for breaking rules in an effort to rank up. Anything to survive, she said.

    “I played the role,” Olsen said. “It was like being a method actor, and you’re in character 24/7. It really comes down to how deeply you can internalize it, because it’s like brainwashing.”

    Saul said that students who were gender nonconforming or “not feminine enough” would be forced to wear makeup and dresses. Dickin also recalled the “femininity assignment” in which she said she was forced to wear “bright red lipstick and heavy makeup.” Jeannie Courtney declined to comment on the assignment.

    Saul says she knew four former students who later died from suicide or drug overdose after attending Spring Ridge.

    Alisha Jucevic for HuffPost

    Saul says she knew four former students who later died from suicide or drug overdose after attending Spring Ridge.

    “They loved to control every little thing that we did,” Saul said. She added that every kid “had to be an addict of some kind,” but because Saul had no history of drug abuse, she was told she had an emotional addiction.

    “I wanted to be loved, but they convinced me that I was addicted to relationships,” she said. “So it was hard for me to adjust to being in romantic relationships [after Spring Ridge].”

    As hard as it could be to move up in phases, dropping down phases was a common punishment employed by staff.

    Harrington, who said she had made it to Phase 4, was dropped to Phase 1 after staff discovered she and another girl were in a relationship and had kissed. Harrington wrote about the kiss in her journal, which was confiscated and read by staff after another student told on her.

    As punishment, the two girls were forbidden to speak to each other. At a “feedback” session with other students about the incident, Harrington said, she was berated by her classmates.

    When she was caught kissing the girl again, she said, Brandon Courtney made her shovel gravel by herself in the sweltering Arizona heat over the course of two weekends to make a walking path.

    Hokyoung Kim for HuffPost

    Harrington, who was then 15, said her hands started to blister and bleed as she shoveled gravel into a wheelbarrow. Staff would not give her gloves, she said.

    Courtney denied the allegation in her statement, saying, “This is false.”

    Olsen said she saw Harrington struggle in the triple-digit heat.

    “We’re not allowed to have shorts because shorts are too sexual, apparently,” Olsen recalled. “And her hands were bleeding; she wanted to stop.”

    During her own time at the school, Olsen described living under constant surveillance and likened the structure of Spring Ridge to a “totalitarian government.”

    “Staff were shining a flashlight in your face every 15 minutes while you slept,” she said.

    “This is false,” Jeannie Courtney said in her statement. She added that while Spring Ridge staff checked students’ rooms at night, it was “to ensure student safety and health and wellness, not to disrupt their sleep.”

    Olsen said she often went to bed hungry, eating watermelon-flavored toothpaste to reduce her hunger pangs. “It was the best-tasting toothpaste that I could get,” she recalled.

    Even the parent manual, obtained by HuffPost, seemed to acknowledge the “horrendous circumstances” that a girl at the facility would “undoubtedly describe.”

    “Do not negotiate, placate, or promise,” the manual told parents. “Do not acknowledge concern about any of the horrendous circumstances and events she will undoubtedly describe.”

    ‘Jail Was Fun’ Compared To Spring Ridge Academy

    One of the earliest documented runaways took place Nov. 7, 1997, just months after the school opened. A 14-year-old girl ran away and was missing for six days before police found her at an apartment complex with an unknown person, according to a sheriff’s office report. She was handed back to school staff.

    Reports of runaways continued to roll in for years, with nearly 40 police reports detailing students escaping from the time the facility opened until it closed in 2023.

    Raelynn Bumgardner, now 27, was one of those runaways.

    Raelynn Bumgardner, seen last month in the courtyard of her home in Stockholm, says the conditions at Spring Ridge were enough to force her to run away, with the hopes that someone at a neaby motel would take her to Texas.

    Meli Petersson Ellafi for HuffPost

    Raelynn Bumgardner, seen last month in the courtyard of her home in Stockholm, says the conditions at Spring Ridge were enough to force her to run away, with the hopes that someone at a neaby motel would take her to Texas.

    After arriving at Spring Ridge in 2014, Bumgardner said, she was forced to strip naked in front of staff. She said she was given a pregnancy test, and her body was inspected to document her self-harm scars.

    In her statement, Jeannie Courtney said students “always wore undergarments and a hospital gown” during the inspection.

    While at the facility, Bumgardner claimed she was overmedicated. As a result, she felt “more docile,” started to hallucinate and had panic attacks, she said. At last year’s trial, Dickin testified that Spring Ridge put her on medication for bipolar disorder even though she had “never shown any signs of bipolar disorder.”

    “My medication was frequently increased, once three times in one week, despite adverse side effects,” Dickin testified.

    Raelynn Bumgardner said she was overmedicated while at Spring Ridge, causing her to become “more docile” while also causing her to hallucinate and have panic attacks.

    Meli Petersson Ellafi for HuffPost

    Raelynn Bumgardner said she was overmedicated while at Spring Ridge, causing her to become “more docile” while also causing her to hallucinate and have panic attacks.

    The facility was also cited in 2019 for “failure to ensure that policies and procedures for medication administration are reviewed and approved by a medical practitioner.”

    Roughly a year into Bumgardner’s stay, she was dropped from Phase 3 to Phase 1 as punishment for sneaking in photos of her friends after a home visit.

    The drop meant her stay would be prolonged by months, at a minimum. Bumgardner decided to take her chances at running away. She planned to convince someone — anyone — at the local motel to take her to Texas.

    After walking for miles on the night she escaped, Bumgardner was picked up by sheriff’s deputies. She was sent to a juvenile detention center after threatening to run away again if she was returned to the school, a sheriff’s office report confirmed.

    Bumgardner didn’t mind.

    Raelynn Bumgardner says "jail was fun" compared to Spring Ridge Academy after she ran away from the facility.

    Meli Petersson Ellafi for HuffPost

    Raelynn Bumgardner says “jail was fun” compared to Spring Ridge Academy after she ran away from the facility.

    “Jail was fun compared to what I had been doing, because I was allowed to speak freely,” she said. “If I was hungry, I could just ask for food, and they would feed me. They really just left you alone, and I had more alone time in jail in those 24 hours than I ever did at SRA.”

    In March 2013, Alyssa C., 29, planned her escape from the school because she “couldn’t take it anymore.” After an Easter visit with her family in Texas, the then-17-year-old purposefully missed her connecting flight in New Mexico and instead went with a stranger — a man roughly in his 30s, she said — on a train to California.

    “That’s how badly I did not want to go back to that school,” said Alyssa, who asked that her full name not be used for privacy reasons. “I got off a plane at 17 years old with a random man who said he would take me to California.”

    On the train, she said, the man sexually assaulted her in a bathroom. During the assault, Alyssa recalled thinking to herself: “Just get through it, and you don’t have to go back to the school.”

    “I definitely disassociated, went out of my body,” she added. Alyssa said that the two of them went back to their seats after he assaulted her, but he got up about 30 minutes later and never returned.

    She sat in her seat until the train reached its last stop in California and broke down in tears as she told the train attendant what happened. Alyssa said she told police what happened to her, and they took her to the hospital to have a rape kit done. The man who assaulted her was never arrested for the attack, she said.

    She was sent back to Spring Ridge, where she found herself in “a shit ton of trouble,” she said. Once back, Alyssa said, she had to write a thorough “trauma narrative” describing her assault in detail.

    “I had to describe my own rape, and then they made me read it to my parents over the phone,” she said.

    Her story of escape is backed up by a treatment plan school staff put her on when she returned.

    “Alyssa admitted that she had lied and got off the plane with an unknown male voluntarily and accompanied him to LA consensually,” said the report, obtained by HuffPost. “She stated that he engaged sexually with her in the restroom on the train and that she told him no, but he continued to do so despite her asking him to stop.”

    The report added that Alyssa should take “accountability” for what it called her “pattern of poor sexual boundaries and dishonesty coupled with a lack of accountability and a very immature stance that as long as she denied misbehavior, she would not be ‘found out’ or have negative consequences.”

    The document also misdiagnoses Alyssa with histrionic personality disorder, which her recent medical records confirm she does not have.

    Jeannie Courtney acknowledged assigning “trauma narratives” to students but declined to comment on Alyssa’s allegation.

    “It is important to note, however, that many students came to Spring Ridge Academy facing mental health challenges and with a history of problematic behavior that included running away from home, being dishonest with their parents, and taking high-risk unsafe actions within their own lives,” Courtney said in her statement.

    Appelgate, the advocate for survivors of troubled-teen programs, said that the mental and behavioral health concerns programs like Spring Ridge claim to address should be held to the same standards as other health care facilities. (In her statement, Courtney said Spring Ridge provided “high-quality education and therapeutic services” to its students.)

    If “hundreds of patients” accused a hospital of abuse, it would be shut down, Appelgate said.

    “So why aren’t we treating [the troubled-teen industry] in the same way?” she asked.

    ‘The All-Powerful Cult Leader’

    As stories of abuse have gone public since Spring Ridge shuttered, Jeannie Courtney believes she did nothing wrong. Many of her former students disagree.

    “She was incredibly cruel,” Dickin said. “She knew how to exploit trauma and insecurities.”

    In group sessions led by Courtney, Dickin said, the school founder would draw out personal details about the kids, only to use those against them.

    “It was used to control us and keep us compliant and keep us stuck in shame,” Dickin said. “It didn’t feel like it was to benefit us. It felt horrible.”

    “My medication was frequently increased, once three times in one week, despite adverse side effects,” Dickin testified in a federal civil trial against Spring Ridge.
    “My medication was frequently increased, once three times in one week, despite adverse side effects,” Dickin testified in a federal civil trial against Spring Ridge.

    Courtney called the allegation “completely false” in her statement to HuffPost.

    “Why would I have given my life to this only to ‘shame’ these same women I was trying so desperately to help?” the statement said. “At Spring Ridge, we did everything we could to help our students, and my only regret is that we were not able to do more for those who are clearly still struggling in their lives.”

    Olsen described being in a group session with other students in which Courtney lectured them about sex and relationships.

    “I was 14, and she started screaming at us that we were never going to experience an orgasm if we didn’t do exactly what she said, and that none of us knew how to properly climax because of our unhealthy relationship habits,” Olsen said. Saul, who was also in the group session, said Courtney had “branded it as a sex education intensive.”

    Courtney denied that ever happened in her call with HuffPost.

    “There would be absolutely no reason for me, with my philosophy of working with girls — and over 1,000 girls — to have ever said that,” Courtney said. “I would never have talked about girls’ orgasms or anything of that nature. And I don’t scream and yell, either.”

    The two former students that Courtney put HuffPost in touch with had only positive things to say about the school’s founder. The two women would only speak on the condition of anonymity over fears of retaliation from other former students.

    “She saw me in a way that others didn’t,” a 28-year-old woman who attended the facility from 2013 to 2015 told HuffPost about Courtney.

    At 16, she said, she’d developed a heroin and Xanax addiction and “there weren’t a lot of girls I could relate to because I was in so deep at such a young age.”

    “I always felt like there was something wrong with me,” she added. “And she really, really took me under her wing.”

    A 35-year-old woman who went to Spring Ridge from 2007 to 2008 said Courtney has gotten a bad rap.

    “She was the all-powerful cult leader — God. She knew it. She loved it. She’s a malicious, evil woman.”

    -Sarah Olsen on Spring Ridge founder Jeannie Courtney.

    “I just wish that I could make you believe me,” she told HuffPost. “I’m sure there are so many people saying shit [about Courtney] that you don’t, but I wish I could, by myself, change the perception of Spring Ridge and Jeannie. I wish that a lot of these people would just stop.”

    Maltz said that despite their traumatic experience at the school, they don’t harbor a grudge against Courtney.

    “I don’t have a lot of beef toward Jeannie, because I think she is kind of a kook that genuinely thought she was helping people initially and then got carried away by the amount of money you can get in the troubled-teen industry,” Maltz said.

    Olsen was less forgiving.

    “She was the all-powerful cult leader — God,” Olsen said of Courtney. “She knew it. She loved it. She’s a malicious, evil woman.”

    Courtney said if her former students were so upset after their time at the facility, they should have called her.

    “I am saddened that anyone feels that they were harmed at Spring Ridge Academy,” Courtney said in a phone call. “What I do wish they had done is picked up the phone and called me. Because I have over the years — even after I retired, after 2015 — I still get calls from girls all the time, not only talking about their experience at Spring Ridge, but asking for help with a problem they might have.”

    Before ending the call with HuffPost, Courtney questioned how so many former students could dislike her when her 2016 retirement party was such a hit. If Courtney had an abusive facility, why were there almost “500 people” at her party, she reasoned.

    “When I retired — and I didn’t want them to do anything — they did a retirement party at Camelback Inn in Paradise,” she said. “There were almost 500 people: students, parents, staff, even people from other programs that came to honor me.”

    Karen Bumgardner, seen here at her home in Southlake, Texas, says she regrets sending her daughter, Raelynn, to Spring Ridge, and believes Jeannie Courtney should be in jail.

    Allison V. Smith for HuffPost

    Karen Bumgardner, seen here at her home in Southlake, Texas, says she regrets sending her daughter, Raelynn, to Spring Ridge, and believes Jeannie Courtney should be in jail.

    Karen Bumgardner, who said she regrets sending her daughter Raelynn to Spring Ridge, said Jeannie Courtney should pay for the harm her program inflicted on kids.

    “I do think she should be in prison,” she said of Courtney.

    Karen Bumgardner said she thought she was doing the right thing by sending her daughter to Spring Ridge over what she described as poor grades and “not being nice at home.”

    “I obviously have regrets, because it’s affected her so much, but again, we didn’t know what else to do,” Karen Bumgardner said. “We listened to the therapist, we listened to her school counselors, my husband listened to Jeannie [Courtney] and believed that that was the best place for her.”

    The mom admitted she put her trust in the wrong people.

    Karen Bumgardner, left, says she thought she was doing the right thing by sending her daughter to Spring Ridge over what she described as poor grades and “not being nice at home.”

    Photos by Allison V. Smith and Meli Petersson Ellafi for HuffPost

    Karen Bumgardner, left, says she thought she was doing the right thing by sending her daughter to Spring Ridge over what she described as poor grades and “not being nice at home.”

    “You’re putting your faith in these people that you don’t know, but you’re hoping that they’re legitimate,” she said. “You have no recourse.”

    Raelynn Bumgardner said she tried to tell her parents what was happening at Spring Ridge, but they didn’t listen.

    “Not a single adult stood up for me,” she said.

    Saul said her mom was “doing the best she could with the information she had” when dropping her into the unregulated, abusive, multibillion-dollar industry.

    “She was preyed upon by an industry that makes its money off of people like her,” she said.

    A recent law school grad, Saul said she wants to work to help the vulnerable. Already, she has repeatedly publicly sounded the alarm about the dangers of the troubled-teen industry.

    Saul says she thinks her mom, who sent her to Spring Ridge, "was preyed upon by an industry that makes its money off of people like her.”

    Alisha Jucevic for HuffPost

    Saul says she thinks her mom, who sent her to Spring Ridge, “was preyed upon by an industry that makes its money off of people like her.”

    “It made me want to advocate and fight for people who don’t have power and control,” she said.

    Maltz recently left their job working with adolescents with substance abuse problems to begin a graduate program in counseling. Dickin said she also works in the mental health field. Both separately noted that their jobs were nothing like their experiences at Spring Ridge.

    Alyssa has worked as an educator for over a decade, a career that she said she finds fulfilling after her time at Spring Ridge.

    “I think it heals part of my inner child working with kids,” she said. “I would lay down my life for any of the kids that I’ve watched in the 11 years I’ve been doing this.”

    Raelynn Bumgardner now lives in Sweden and is studying to become a histotechnologist.

    Meli Petersson Ellafi for HuffPost

    Raelynn Bumgardner now lives in Sweden and is studying to become a histotechnologist.

    Raelynn Bumgardner lives in Sweden, where she is studying to become a histotechnologist. She echoed what other former students have said: The trauma of Spring Ridge will stay with her forever.

    “I’ve been two different people,” she said. “There was Raelynn before SRA, and then there’s Raelynn post-SRA. And they do not know each other.”

    If you or someone you know needs help, call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org for mental health support. Additionally, you can find local mental health and crisis resources at dontcallthepolice.com. Outside of the U.S., please visit the International Association for Suicide Prevention.

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  • Colorado juvenile detention staff violated strip-search policy 1,000 times in 9 months, watchdog finds

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    Staff at Colorado’s juvenile detention centers violated policies meant to protect youth during strip searches more than 1,000 times during nine months between 2023 and 2025, according to a new review by the Child Protection Ombudsman of Colorado released Tuesday.

    There is no effective oversight to ensure strip searches at juvenile detention centers are justified and properly documented, the review found, and the vast majority of youth strip searches did not reveal any contraband, raising questions about how Colorado Division of Youth Services staff members are using the invasive procedure.

    In one instance, five youth in a detention center were strip-searched because one of them might have been charging a vape pen in a computer classroom, the review found. In another instance, a 14-year-old boy was held in a room by himself for more than 10 hours until he consented to a strip search. Another time, a youth was strip-searched three times in one day because staff believed he possessed drug paraphernalia, the report found.

    Nothing was found during any of those searches, the office reported.

    AnneMarie Harper, a spokeswoman for the Division of Youth Services, said in a statement Tuesday that the agency would investigate the ombudsman’s findings.

    “When it comes to searches of youth in our care, DYS staff is trained to balance personal privacy while also taking a trauma-informed approach,” she said. “These efforts help to make sure that dangerous materials and substances that could put all youth and staff at risk are not in our facilities.”

    The ombudsman’s office discovered 1,006 policy violations across 1,009 youth strip searches statewide during three three-month stretches in 2023, 2024 and 2025. Division of Youth Services staff members failed to document supervisor approval for searches, conducted searches with just one staff member present when two are required, and failed to clearly document the reasons for searches or the results, according to the report.

    “When you are talking about the strip search of youth, we have to be incredibly careful that we are documenting every detail and trying to treat these youth as safely as possible,” said Stephanie Villafuerte, the child protection ombudsman.

    ‘Reasonable suspicion’ for search

    About 2,000 youth between the ages of 10 and 21 are housed at juvenile detention centers statewide, according to the report. They are strip-searched when they arrive at the facilities, after visits with family, and after returning to the detention centers from court or other appointments. But they are also subject to strip searches when a staff member has “reasonable suspicion” to believe a juvenile might have contraband.

    The ombudsman’s review focused only on those searches for reasonable suspicion, which the report noted is “arguably the most subjective” reason for a search, a process during which youth fully undress and an adult staff member looks at their naked body.

    The practice is inherently traumatic, even when done completely within policy, the report noted. Youth who are committed to a detention center are more likely than other juveniles to have suffered abuse and neglect, and strip searches can retraumatize them.

    “Strip searches are traumatizing for anyone, and perhaps particularly for teenagers,” said Jessica Feierman, senior managing director at Juvenile Law Center. “They are very aware of their bodies, their bodies are changing, so it is a moment where a strip search can have unique harm.”

    Strip searches should be used sparingly, she said, and ideally not at all — alternatives like handheld metal detectors or airport-style body scanners can often be just as effective at revealing contraband, Feierman said.

    The sheer number of strip searches of Colorado youth, the missing documentation about how the searches were conducted and why, and the low amount of contraband recovered raise concern, she said.

    “All of those things suggest a heavy overreliance on strip searches, even though they are so harmful to young people,” she said.

    On average, DYS staff members found contraband in just 10% of the 1,009 strip searches for reasonable suspicion that the ombudsman’s office reviewed.

    That low percentage suggests that detention center staff are misusing strip searches, said Dana Flores, senior manager for youth justice in Colorado at the National Center for Youth Law.

    “The report indicates that DYS staff are treating strip searches as a mechanism to assert power and control, and that is not rehabilitative,” she said. “That is just an abuse of discretion by adults who are supposed to be providing trauma-informed care to young people we know have already experienced trauma. If only 10% are turning up contraband, and that is the rationale behind strip searches… there must be a motivation for staff to keep doing this that goes above and beyond simply seeking contraband.”

    Contraband — in particular, cocaine and fentanyl — is a ubiquitous problem across Colorado’s youth detention centers, she added, noting that kids who are jailed often search for ways to escape reality. Strip searches of youth don’t address the big-picture problem, she said.

    “That ultimately isn’t going to address the root cause of the problem, which is that this youth has access to contraband,” she said. “So you could strip search a kid on Monday and find drugs on their person — the larger question is what are you doing to provide that young person with the appropriate behavioral health treatment and education to address what may be a substance abuse disorder?”

    ‘We don’t have documentation’

    Division of Youth Services workers document strip searches in handwritten logs, the review found. That log is supposed to include information on when the search was conducted, who approved and carried out the search, the purpose of the search and the outcome.

    However, the Child Protection Ombudsman’s review found the information in the log was often missing, Villafuerte said.

    “We don’t know whether these searches are being conducted in a way that is incorrect, because we don’t have documentation,” she said. “Oftentimes, we don’t know who conducted the search, we don’t know if one or more people were present, we don’t know the underlying reasonable suspicion behind the reason to search. Without having the information, it makes it incredibly difficult to understand whether these searches are being conducted in a way that is effective, and if not, what can we do to make them effective.”

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  • L.A. County will pay $20 million to family of 4-year-old boy who was tortured, killed

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    Los Angeles County agreed to pay $20 million Tuesday to the family of Noah Cuatro, a 4-year-old Palmdale boy who was tortured to death by his parents in 2019.

    The case brought intense scrutiny of the county’s child welfare system after it was revealed that the Department of Children and Family Services had failed to remove Noah from his parents despite a court order.

    DCFS had been given 10 days to get Noah away from his parents and seen by a doctor after multiple reports of neglect and abuse, The Times previously reported. The department ignored the order.

    He died less than two months later, right before his fifth birthday. His parents later pleaded no contest to murder and torture charges.

    “He always begged me not to send him to his parents,” said Eva Hernandez, Noah’s great-grandmother. “I tried to explain to him so many times, but he didn’t understand. He’d take his little hands and look into my eyes and say, ‘Don’t make me go there.’”

    Eva Hernandez cries while remembering her great-grandson Noah Cuatro as the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors prepares to approve a $20-million settlement to his family.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    Hernandez sued DCFS in 2020, alleging the department had failed her grandson and should have intervened to keep him safe. Cuatro had been under the supervision of the agency from the time he was born because his mother had been accused of fracturing his half sister’s skull.

    The child welfare department said since Noah’s death they’ve hired thousands of social workers to decrease caseloads and retrained social workers on interviewing techniques and use of forensic exams.

    “It is DCFS’ hope that this resolution gives Noah’s family a sense of peace,” the department said in a statement. “DCFS remains committed to learning from the past, improving its work, and operating with transparency.”

    At the time of his death, Noah remained under supervision by DCFS despite more than a dozen reports to the child abuse hotline and police from callers who believed that he and his siblings were being abused.

    Attorney Brian Claypool, who represented Cuatro’s family in the lawsuit, said Noah’s death was a direct result of the county failing to follow the court order to remove him from his parents. A Superior Court judge had agreed to remove him after a social worker filed a 26-page request with the court, citing evidence of abuse.

    “The county really blew it with the removal order. There’s no excuse for them not to have picked up Noah,” Claypool said. “The most shocking, upsetting part of this case is when I took the deposition of the social worker in the case and the two supervisors, none of the individuals read the petition of all the abuse that was submitted to the court. That was inexcusable.”

    Hands hold up a framed photo.

    Eva Hernandez holds a photo of her great-grandson Noah Cuatro.

    (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

    Noah’s parents initially called 911 on July 5, 2019, saying their son had drowned in a swimming pool of their apartment complex, but authorities grew suspicious after finding the boy unconscious and dry in the apartment. Doctors later found bruises across his body and signs of “mottling” around his neck.

    County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, whose district includes Palmdale, called his death a “heartbreaking tragedy.”

    “While nothing can undo the harm he suffered, today’s $20 million settlement awarded to his surviving siblings and grandmother provides some measure of support as they continue to heal,” she said in a statement. “Noah’s life was not in vain. His case has reinforced the need for ongoing review of child welfare cases, stronger partnerships with our schools, and a stabilized DCFS workforce to better protect children in the Antelope Valley. Noah leaves behind a legacy — he will not be forgotten.”

    His great-grandmother, Hernandez, said she still thinks of him every day.

    “I know that he’s not suffering anymore,” she said.

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    Rebecca Ellis

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  • Mayor announces another business shuttered and creation of Human Trafficking Task Force

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    METHUEN — The city has followed up a “declaration of war” against human trafficking with the investigation of another business and the creation of a task force.

    On Monday, city inspectors shut down Eastern Bodywork Therapy, which officials allege is a front for human trafficking. Mayor D.J. Beauregard, who had announced the crackdown on Sunday, said in a press release that the task force would hold both the perpetrators and landlords accountable.


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    kAm%96 :?G6DE:82E:@? :?E@ t2DE6C? q@5JH@C< %96C2AJ 😀 24E:G6 2?5 @?8@:?8[ 244@C5:?8 E@ E96 AC6DD C6=62D6k^Am

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    By Teddy Tauscher | ttauscher@eagletribune.com

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  • BREAKING NEWS: Methuen mayor declares ‘war on human trafficking’ after spa owner’s arrest

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    METHUEN — The manager of Beauty Garden Spa on Wallace Street is facing human trafficking charges after a lengthy police investigation.

    Suping Zhu, 38, of Flushing, New York, is to be arraigned Monday in Lawrence District Court on charges that include deriving support from prostitution and trafficking person for sexual servitude.


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    By Teddy Tauscher | ttauscher@eagletribune.com

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  • Methuen mayor declares ‘war on human trafficking’ after spa owner’s arrest

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    METHUEN — The manager of Beauty Garden Spa on Wallace Street is facing human trafficking charges after a lengthy police investigation.

    Suping Zhu, 38, of Flushing, New York, is to be arraigned Monday in Lawrence District Court on charges that include deriving support from prostitution and trafficking person for sexual servitude.


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    By Teddy Tauscher | ttauscher@eagletribune.com

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  • Menendez brothers won’t get new trial; judge rejects petition over sexual abuse claims

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    A judge has rejected Erik and Lyle Menendez’s petition for a new trial, ruling that evidence showing they suffered sexual abuse at their father’s hands would not have changed the outcome of the murder trial that has put them in prison for more than 35 years for gunning down their parents.

    The ruling, handed down by Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge William C. Ryan on Monday, is the latest blow to the brothers’ bid for release. Both were denied parole during lengthy hearings in late August.

    A habeas corpus petition filed on behalf of the brothers in 2023 argued they should have been able to present additional evidence at trial that their father, Jose Menendez, was sexually abusive.

    The new evidence included a 1988 letter that Erik Menendez sent to his cousin, Andy Cano, saying he was abused into his late teens. There were also allegations made by Roy Rosselló, a former member of the boy band Menudo, who claimed Jose Menendez raped him.

    The brothers have long argued they were in fear for their lives that their father would keep abusing them, and that their parents would kill them to cover up the nightmarish conditions in their Beverly Hills home.

    Prosecutors contended the brothers killed their parents with shotguns in 1989 to get access to their massive inheritance, and have repeatedly highlighted Erik and Lyle’s wild spending spree in the months that followed their parents’ deaths.

    “Neither piece of evidence adds to the allegations of abuse the jury already considered, yet found that the brothers planned, then executed that plan to kill their abusive father and complicit mother,” Ryan wrote. “The court finds that these two pieces of evidence presented here would have not have resulted in a hung jury nor in the conviction of a lesser instructed offense.”

    Ryan agreed with Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman that the petition should not grant the brothers a new trial because the abuse evidence would not have changed the fact that they had planned and carried out the execution-style killings.

    Ryan wrote the new evidence would not have resulted in the trial court proceeding differently because the brothers could not show they experienced a fear of “imminent peril.”

    A spokesperson for the group of more than 30 Menendez relatives who have been fighting for the brothers’ release did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for the district attorney’s office was not immediately available for comment.

    The gruesome killings occurred after the brothers used cash to buy the shotguns and attacked their parents while they watched a movie in the family living room.

    Prosecutors said Jose Menendez was struck five times with shotgun blasts, including in the back of the head, and Kitty Menendez crawled on the floor wounded before the brothers reloaded and fired a final, fatal blast.

    The petition rejected this week was one of three paths the Menendez legal team has pursued in seeking freedom for the brothers. Another judge earlier this year resentenced them to 50 years to life for the murders, making them eligible for parole after they were originally sentenced to life in prison.

    Both were denied release at their first parole hearing, but could end up before the state panel again in as soon as 18 months. Clemency petitions are also still pending before Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    The first trial ended with hung juries for each brother. In the second, allegations of abuse and supporting testimonies were restricted, and Lyle and Erik Menendez were convicted of first-degree murder in March 1996.

    Erik Menendez insisted at his parole hearing that he and his brother had purchased the shotguns because they believed that their parents might try to kill them, or that his father would go to his room to rape him.

    “That was going to happen,” he said. “One way or another. If he was alive, that was going to happen.”

    Asked why the two killed their mother as well, Erik Menendez said that the decision was made after learning she was aware of the abuse.

    “Step by step, my mom had shown she was united with my dad,” he said at the hearing. “On that night, I saw them as one person. Had she not been in the room, maybe it would have been different.”

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    Richard Winton, James Queally

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  • Central Florida doctor unveils kratom research findings, potential dangers

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    Central Florida doctor unveils kratom research findings, potential dangers

    Orlando Health Orlando Regional Medical Center emergency medicine physician and toxicologist, Dr. Josef Thundiyil, joins WESH 2 to discuss the potential dangers of kratom.

    ALERT AND FOCUSING ON A SUBSTANCE CALLED KRATOM. ACCORDING TO THE U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, THE FDA HERE SAYS THIS SUPPLEMENT IS TYPICALLY MARKETED AS AN ENERGY BOOSTER, MOOD LIFTER, PAIN RELIEVER, AND OPIOID WITHDRAWAL REMEDY. IT’S FOUND AT DISPENSARIES, EVEN RESTAURANTS, SOMETIMES INFUSED WITH DRINKS. AND DESPITE ITS GROWING POPULARITY, THERE ARE MANY QUESTIONS WHEN IT COMES TO THE SUBSTANCE. SO HERE TO GIVE US ANSWERS AND SHARE RESEARCH AND FINDINGS, WE HAVE EMERGENCY MEDICINE PHYSICIAN AND TOXICOLOGIST AT ORLANDO REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, DOCTOR JOSEPH DUNHILL. GREAT TO SEE YOU, DOCTOR. THANK YOU FOR HAVING ME. OKAY, SO YOU’VE DONE THE WORK HERE. THIS IS SOMETHING THAT WE’VE HEARD A GOOD BIT ABOUT LATELY. THE KRATOM PRODUCTS. WHAT ARE YOUR FINDINGS IN TERMS OF LOOKING INTO THIS SUBSTANCE THAT IS REALLY WIDELY POPULAR AND WIDELY AVAILABLE? YEAH. AS A BACKGROUND, THERE’S A FEW CONCERNS THAT HAVE COME UP. NUMBER ONE, IT’S VERY UNREGULATED. THERE’S ABOUT 40 DIFFERENT CHEMICAL ALKALOIDS IN THIS. THE SECOND IS THAT WE KNOW IT’S ADDICTIVE. SOME OF THE REPORTS FROM PEOPLE IS THAT IT’S COMPULSIVELY ADDICTIVE. PEOPLE SPENDING HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS A DAY TO GET SORT OF A FIX WITH IT. THE OTHER THING WE KNOW IS THAT IT INTERACTS WITH EXISTING MEDICATIONS THAT MANY PEOPLE ARE ON. WE DON’T KNOW EXACTLY WHAT THOSE INTERACTIONS ARE. AND THEN THE FINAL THING, EVEN BEFORE I GOT INTO THIS RESEARCH, IS THAT WE KNOW THAT THERE’S NO PROVEN MEDICAL BENEFITS. SO PEOPLE ARE USING THIS WITH THE THOUGHT IT MIGHT BE HELPING, BUT WE DON’T KNOW THAT IT’S HELPING THEM WITH ANYTHING. AND YOU WORKED WITH A LOT OF MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS TO PUT THIS TOGETHER. MORE THAN TWO DOZEN, I BELIEVE. YEAH. WE WORKED ACTUALLY. IT WAS A GROUP OF US PHYSICIANS. WE ESSENTIALLY REACHED OUT TO 25 MEDICAL EXAMINERS IN THE STATE OF FLORIDA. REALLY TO TRY TO ANSWER THE QUESTION IS, ARE PEOPLE DYING FROM KRATOM? AND WE FOUND SOME VERY INTERESTING THINGS. WE ACTUALLY HAD THE MEDICAL EXAMINER SEND US ANY REPORTED DEATHS, AND WE FOUND ALMOST 40 DEATHS IN THE STATE OF FLORIDA OVER A PERIOD OF ABOUT FIVE YEARS. OKAY. AND WAS THIS TIED TO ANYTHING SPECIFIC? THE SUBSTANCE AND OPIOIDS OR ANYTHING ALONG THOSE LINES? NO, THESE ARE DEATHS IN THE ABSENCE OF OPIOIDS. NOW, WE KNOW THAT THE CHEMICAL STRUCTURE RESEMBLES OPIOIDS. AND THAT’S WHAT GAVE US THIS CONCERN THAT IT COULD CAUSE DEATH. AND WE STILL ARE LEFT WITH NOT KNOWING EXACTLY WHY SOME PEOPLE DIE AND SOME PEOPLE DON’T. BUT THE BOTTOM LINE IS IT STILL HAS SOME SIGNIFICANT DANGERS WITH IT. RIGHT. AND, YOU KNOW, AS A PHYSICIAN, YOU KNOW, WHAT IS YOUR ADVICE TO SOMEONE WHO’S, YOU KNOW, THERE’S SOMETHING THAT MAY CAUSE SOMETHING AS SEVERE AS DEATH? WHAT WHAT ARE YOU ADVISING PEOPLE? I WOULD ADVISE TREMENDOUS CAUTION. IT IS UNREGULATED. MOST OF THESE PRODUCTS DON’T HAVE ANY DOSING LISTED ON IT. WE KNOW IT INTERACTS WITH MEDICATIONS. YOU KNOW, MY TYPICAL ADVICE WOULD BE TALK TO YOUR PHYSICIAN ABOUT IT. BUT WHAT I’M FINDING IN THE COMMUNITY IS THIS THERE’S ENOUGH UNKNOWNS ABOUT THE SUBSTANCE THAT EVEN YOUR PHYSICIAN MAY NOT KNOW WHAT ALL THE INTERACTIONS WITH OTHER SUBSTANCES ARE. SO MAKE SURE YOU KNOW WHAT THEY ARE. AND AT THE MOMENT, I PERSONALLY WOULD ADVOCATE FOR SAFETY. BE VERY, VERY CAREFUL WITH THIS BECAUSE WE KNOW THERE IS HARM. WE KNOW THERE’S ADDICTION. ANYTIME THERE’S A POTENTIAL FOR ADDICTION AND ESCALATING USE, WE NOW KNOW THAT IT CAN ALSO CAUSE DEATH. YEAH. WHAT ARE THE MOST VULNERABLE POPULATIONS YOU’RE SEEING WHEN IT COMES TO THE SUBSTANCE? YEAH. FROM A PUBLIC HEALTH STANDPOINT, WE ALWAYS THINK ABOUT VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN TERMS OF WHO MIGHT BE AT RISK. SO PEOPLE WHO ALREADY SUFFER FROM ADDICTION BECAUSE THEY MAY BE LOOKING FOR ANYTHING TO HELP THEM GET OFF OF SUBSTANCE USE. I ALWAYS AM CONCERNED ABOUT ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS. FOR THIS REASON, PEOPLE WHO ARE ON OTHER MEDICATIONS BECAUSE OF THE POTENTIAL TO INTERACT. AND SO THAT INCLUDES NOT ONLY YOUNG PEOPLE WHO ARE ON MEDICINES, BUT ESPECIALLY PEOPLE WHO ARE OLDER AND THE ELDERLY. THOSE ARE SOME OF THE HIGHEST RISK GROUPS THAT WE GET CONCERNED ABOUT. YEAH, WELL, THIS IS REALLY AMAZING FINDINGS AND GREAT RESEARCH THAT YOU AND ALL THESE OTHER PHYSICIANS AND MEDICAL EXAMINERS HAVE WORKED ON COLLECTIVELY. WE’RE GOING TO POST SOME MORE INFORMATION ON OUR WEBSITE SO YOU CAN FIND OUT AND HELP NAVIGATE YOUR JOURNEY. IF YOU IF YOU HAV

    Central Florida doctor unveils kratom research findings, potential dangers

    Orlando Health Orlando Regional Medical Center emergency medicine physician and toxicologist, Dr. Josef Thundiyil, joins WESH 2 to discuss the potential dangers of kratom.

    Updated: 10:00 AM EDT Sep 15, 2025

    Editorial Standards

    Orlando Health Orlando Regional Medical Center emergency medicine physician and toxicologist, Dr. Josef Thundiyil, joins WESH 2 to discuss the potential dangers of kratom.Click here to learn more.

    Orlando Health Orlando Regional Medical Center emergency medicine physician and toxicologist, Dr. Josef Thundiyil, joins WESH 2 to discuss the potential dangers of kratom.

    Click here to learn more.

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  • Shuffleboard club files lawsuit against Leesburg for donating land

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    The Leesburg Shuffleboard Club has filed a lawsuit against the city of Leesburg for donating the land on which its shuffleboard courts were to a nonprofit to build tiny homes for youth in need.The decision was a controversial one, made in late August to donate the property to construct tiny homes for at-risk teens, displacing the shuffleboard club.Following the vote, the shuffleboard club sued the city, bringing on Lake County Commissioner Anthony Sabatini as legal representation.“It is disturbing that members of the Leesburg City Commission are giving away our public parks and taxpayer money to cram in more dense housing – it’s wrong, it’s illegal and it’s corrupt, since it was pushed by a commissioner to his wife’s nonprofit,” Sabatini said. “We need to be protecting all of our parks and recreational areas and stop the rampant growth.”Leesburg Commissioner Jimmy Burry is married to the executive director of the Forward Paths nonprofit.”We’re just looking to give them a start after facing abuse and neglect, a chance to start off life as an adult,” said the organization’s executive director, Denise Burry. Burry said they have been working to find a spot in Leesburg to build 10 tiny homes where these young people could live for free — similar to a project they have in Eustis.”We always have a waiting list, so we’re looking to accommodate the need here in Lake County,” she said.Leesburg declined to comment on the lawsuit, citing pending litigation.

    The Leesburg Shuffleboard Club has filed a lawsuit against the city of Leesburg for donating the land on which its shuffleboard courts were to a nonprofit to build tiny homes for youth in need.

    The decision was a controversial one, made in late August to donate the property to construct tiny homes for at-risk teens, displacing the shuffleboard club.

    Following the vote, the shuffleboard club sued the city, bringing on Lake County Commissioner Anthony Sabatini as legal representation.

    “It is disturbing that members of the Leesburg City Commission are giving away our public parks and taxpayer money to cram in more dense housing – it’s wrong, it’s illegal and it’s corrupt, since it was pushed by a commissioner to his wife’s nonprofit,” Sabatini said. “We need to be protecting all of our parks and recreational areas and stop the rampant growth.”

    Leesburg Commissioner Jimmy Burry is married to the executive director of the Forward Paths nonprofit.

    “We’re just looking to give them a start after facing abuse and neglect, a chance to start off life as an adult,” said the organization’s executive director, Denise Burry.

    Burry said they have been working to find a spot in Leesburg to build 10 tiny homes where these young people could live for free — similar to a project they have in Eustis.

    “We always have a waiting list, so we’re looking to accommodate the need here in Lake County,” she said.

    Leesburg declined to comment on the lawsuit, citing pending litigation.

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  • UPDATED: A Timeline of the Gateway Church Scandal, Robert Morris Court Activity

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    It’s been a year since North Texas megachurch founder and pastor Robert Morris stepped down from his position amid claims that he had sexually abused a minor, and the Southlake-based ministry is still reeling from the scandal’s aftershocks. Most recently, leaders at the Gateway Church, which is based out of Southlake but has campuses across North Texas, announced the end of Saturday services…

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    Emma Ruby

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  • Survivors, lawmakers demand release of all Jeffrey Epstein files

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    Survivors, lawmakers demand release of all Jeffrey Epstein files

    Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse and a bipartisan group of lawmakers are pushing for a discharge petition, forcing a House floor vote to release nearly everything related to the case.

    Updated: 3:17 PM PDT Sep 3, 2025

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    Demanding transparency, truth and their own healing, survivors of sexual abuse, along with bipartisan lawmakers, called for the release of all documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case. Survivors accuse Epstein of abusing and trafficking countless underage girls for decades before his death in a New York jail cell in 2019. Survivors, including some speaking out for the first time, joined a bipartisan group of lawmakers, pushing for a discharge petition that would force a House floor vote on releasing nearly everything related to the Epstein case. “I am no longer weak, I am no longer powerless and I am no longer alone,” Anouska De Georgiou, a survivor, said before reporters on Wednesday. “With your vote, neither will the next generation be.”On Tuesday, the House Oversight Committee released more than 30,000 pages on the case, which some say were heavily redacted and revealed too little new information. The petition’s supporters want all investigation files released, emphasizing that the issue should be non-partisan.”The American people deserve to see everything,” Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., said. “When you sign this discharge petition, it should mean nothing should be off limits.””The FBI, the DOJ, and the CIA hold the truth. And the truth we are demanding come out,” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said.But the petition is already facing some roadblocks. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., says he believes the House Oversight Committee should be responsible for carefully handling the documents, while President Trump dismissed the effort Wednesday, calling it “a Democrat hoax.”Related video below: Speaker Johnson on meeting with Epstein victimsSurvivors responded directly to President Trump’s dismissal, with one registered Republican calling on him to meet her at the Capitol to share her story and explain why the issue is not a hoax. Others pleaded that he recognize the abuse as real and humanize them.Lawmakers leading the petition are close to a House floor vote, needing only two more signatures to reach the required 218. So far, the petition includes all Democrats and at least a handful of Republicans, including Greene and Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C.Lawmakers emphasized the rare coalition of bipartisanship, signifying the growing issue. If the petition passes the House, it still needs to pass the Senate before heading to Trump’s desk.Regardless of the petition’s outcome, survivors are planning their own action for justice by compiling a list of those involved in Epstein’s network of abuse, though they did not specify if or when they would release it. In Wednesday’s press conference, the victims said they aim to hold the powerful accountable and help their healing, despite concerns about retaliation from Epstein’s circle.

    Demanding transparency, truth and their own healing, survivors of sexual abuse, along with bipartisan lawmakers, called for the release of all documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case.

    Survivors accuse Epstein of abusing and trafficking countless underage girls for decades before his death in a New York jail cell in 2019.

    Survivors, including some speaking out for the first time, joined a bipartisan group of lawmakers, pushing for a discharge petition that would force a House floor vote on releasing nearly everything related to the Epstein case.

    “I am no longer weak, I am no longer powerless and I am no longer alone,” Anouska De Georgiou, a survivor, said before reporters on Wednesday. “With your vote, neither will the next generation be.”

    On Tuesday, the House Oversight Committee released more than 30,000 pages on the case, which some say were heavily redacted and revealed too little new information. The petition’s supporters want all investigation files released, emphasizing that the issue should be non-partisan.

    “The American people deserve to see everything,” Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., said. “When you sign this discharge petition, it should mean nothing should be off limits.”

    “The FBI, the DOJ, and the CIA hold the truth. And the truth we are demanding come out,” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said.

    But the petition is already facing some roadblocks. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., says he believes the House Oversight Committee should be responsible for carefully handling the documents, while President Trump dismissed the effort Wednesday, calling it “a Democrat hoax.”

    Related video below: Speaker Johnson on meeting with Epstein victims

    Survivors responded directly to President Trump’s dismissal, with one registered Republican calling on him to meet her at the Capitol to share her story and explain why the issue is not a hoax. Others pleaded that he recognize the abuse as real and humanize them.

    Lawmakers leading the petition are close to a House floor vote, needing only two more signatures to reach the required 218. So far, the petition includes all Democrats and at least a handful of Republicans, including Greene and Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C.

    Lawmakers emphasized the rare coalition of bipartisanship, signifying the growing issue.

    If the petition passes the House, it still needs to pass the Senate before heading to Trump’s desk.

    Regardless of the petition’s outcome, survivors are planning their own action for justice by compiling a list of those involved in Epstein’s network of abuse, though they did not specify if or when they would release it. In Wednesday’s press conference, the victims said they aim to hold the powerful accountable and help their healing, despite concerns about retaliation from Epstein’s circle.

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  • Annual Salem Walk for Overdose Awareness emphasizes need for community support

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    SALEM — A group of about 30 community members walked from the Salem Common to Riley Plaza on Thursday as a part of the annual Walk for Overdose Awareness.

    The event included speakers stressing the importance of creating a larger support network for community members struggling with substance abuse and addiction.


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    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

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  • Timeline of events in Fitzsimmons case

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    A timeline for the case of North Andover police officer Kelsey Fitzsimmons, 28.

    Feb. 16: Fitzsimmons gives birth to her son with fiance Justin Aylaian, a North Andover firefighter, and takes maternity leave.


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    By Angelina Berube | aberube@eagletribune.com

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  • Report: State education officials failed to investigate child abuse claims

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    BOSTON — A “breakdown” in communication between two state agencies during the COVID-19 pandemic delayed the release of information about allegations of child abuse and neglect by licensed educators and others, putting students at risk, according to a new state audit.

    The review by state Auditor Diana DiZoglio’s office, released last Tuesday, faulted the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education for a “failure” to ensure it received up-to-date information from the Department of Children and Families on whether alleged child abuse or neglect against licensed educators warranted investigation or disciplinary actions.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • NY man pleads guilty to rape charges

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    SALEM — A New York man pled guilty to charges of rape, open and gross lewdness, and distributing obscene matter to a minor on Monday in Superior Court in Salem, according to the Office of Essex County District Attorney Paul F. Tucker.

    Anthony Bowden, 34, of Albany, New York, was sentenced to four years in state prison to be followed by three years probation, during which time he must stay away and have no contact with the victim, have no unsupervised contact with anyone under the age of 16, undergo a sex offender evaluation, and register with the sex offender registry board (SORB). Bowden was represented by attorney Christina Rose Kenney.


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    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

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  • Good Will Hunting: A Masterclass in Therapy and Emotional Growth

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    Take a deep dive into the therapeutic relationship as illustrated in the classic film Good Will Hunting, where a defiant genius and a compassionate therapist confront pain, grief, and regret in an emotional journey that changes them both.


    Good Will Hunting (1997) is a widely acclaimed cinematic masterpiece, offering one of the most compelling depictions of therapy ever portrayed on screen — and it remains one of my personal favorite movies of all time.

    The main protagonist is Will Hunting (played by Matt Damon) who is portrayed as an underachieving genius who works a modest life as a janitor at the prestigious MIT. Despite his intelligence, he’s emotionally guarded and frequently gets into brawls and run-ins with the law. One day he solves a difficult math equation on a chalkboard and is then approached by professors and faculty to pursue his talents in mathematics, but first he has to see a therapist and work out his personal problems.

    Will’s journey into therapy begins reluctantly with a typical “I don’t need to see a shrink” attitude. But after a series of arrests and getting bailed out, he’s court-ordered to start seeing someone. He cycles through five therapists, including a hypnotist, antagonizing each one to the point that they refuse to work with him. Will’s sharp intellect and deep emotional defenses make it nearly impossible for anyone to break through and connect with him.

    Finally he meets Sean Maguire (played by Robin Williams), a compassionate but no-nonsense therapist with a rich life of experiences, including deep wounds from his past, and accumulated wisdom. This article breaks down their relationship, session by session, to explore how it evolved throughout the film and potential lessons we can takeaway from it.

    First Meeting: Tensions and Boundary Testing

    Will’s first meeting with Sean begins with his usual strategy of intellectual dominance and boundary testing.

    He scans Sean’s office, searching for things to criticize, and immediately targets his book collection. “You people baffle me. You spend all this money on beautiful, fancy books, and they’re the wrong f***ing books.” Sean, unfazed, spars back, standing his ground while playfully naming books he assumes Will has read.

    Things reach a climax in the scene when Will begins to mock a painting hanging on the wall, which hits a personal nerve for Sean regarding the grief and loss of his wife. Sean’s reaction is striking and unconventional. After listening patiently, he suddenly grabs Will by the throat and threatens him: “If you ever disrespect my wife again, I will end you.”

    While it’s an unethical move for a therapist, this unorthodoxy shows Will that he is not dealing with an ordinary therapy. Both Will and Sean share working class Irish backgrounds in the hard streets of Boston. Sean knows this language and he is willing to speak it if it’s the only way to get through to Will. Sean thus establishes himself as someone who understands Will’s world, where strength and confrontation often dominate.

    This moment lays the foundation for their relationship. Sean shows he’s human, not just a clinical professional, but also that he won’t be intimidated or dismissed by Will’s antics. It’s the first step in breaking down Will’s defenses.

    The Bench Scene: A Turning Point

    After their intense first meeting, Sean invites Will to a park, where he delivers one of the most memorable monologues in the film. Sean begins by admitting his vulnerability, sharing that Will’s comments about the painting kept him up all night and genuinely bothered him.

    By admitting Will’s comments hurt him, Sean shows he’s willing to show weakness, but then he sharply pivots to challenge Will directly, “But then you know what occurred to me? You’re just a kid. You don’t have the faintest idea what you’re talking about.”

    Sean goes on to explain that despite Will’s intellectual brilliance, he lacks lived experience. Sean shares personal moments that defined him — seeing the Sistine Chapel in person, being truly in love with someone, the scars of losing friends in war, and watching a loved one die of cancer. These deep experiences illustrate the limitations of knowledge without life. Sean’s speech is a blend of tough love and empathy, forcing Will to confront the gap between his intellectual defenses and his emotional reality.

    good will hunting bench

    The bench scene sets the tone for the remainder of their therapy. Sean acknowledges Will’s brilliance but challenges him to live beyond books and theories. Sean leaves the door open for Will to continue having sessions with him only if he is ready to truly open up.

    Second Therapy Session: Silence

    The next therapy session begins with complete silence as Sean and Will sit across from each other. After two emotionally charged meetings and still lingering tensions, neither is willing to be the first to reach out or break the quiet.

    The entire hour goes by and neither says a word. While this may feel like an unproductive session, this is another important moment in their relationship. The power of silence acts as a reset button in their relationship.

    Sometimes, simply sitting in the same room without confrontation (“sharing space”) can be a meaningful step toward healing. It allows both Sean and Will to recalibrate, setting the stage for a more productive dynamic moving forward.

    Third Therapy Session: Humor and Opening Up

    The silence stand-off continues into their third session, with each still not willing to budge or say the first word.

    Finally Will breaks the silence with a dirty joke, immediately breaking the tensions in the room and reinitiating conversation in a fun and light-hearted way. After they share a laugh, Will begins to open up about a girl he’s been dating recently. Will mentions how he worries the girl is “too perfect,” and that getting to know her more would just shatter that illusion. Sean wisely responds back, “That’s a super philosophy, that way you can go through your entire life without ever really getting to know anybody.”

    Sean opens up about his wife and the quirks behind their love, like her farting in her sleep and waking up the dog. After all these years, these are the little moments he remembers and cherishes about her. No one is “perfect,” and it’s often the imperfections that make someone special to us.

    good will hunting laugh

    Robin Williams improvised the story about his wife causing Matt Damon to genuinely burst out into laughter during this scene.


    After more light-hearted banter, Will turns the tables and ask why Sean never got remarried. Will firmly replies, “My wife is dead.” Then Will, always testing and challenging, uses one of Sean’s lines against him: “That’s a super philosophy, that way you can go through your entire life without ever really getting to know anybody.”

    Fourth Therapy Session: Love, Opportunities, and Regrets

    Now on much more amicable terms, Will opens up with an honest question, “Do you ever wonder what your life would be like if you never met your wife?”

    Sean accepts that there’s been a lot of pain and suffering in his relationship, but he doesn’t regret any of it, because the good moments were worth it and he wouldn’t trade a single day with her through good or bad times. Will presses to learn more, “When did you know she was the one?”

    “October 21, 1975.”

    It was game six of the World Series, the biggest game in Red Sox history – and Sean slept on the sidewalk all night with friends to get tickets. He recalls the momentous occasion when the Red Sox hit a game-winning home run and everyone rushed the field.

    “Did you rush the field?”

    “Hell no, I wasn’t there. I was in a bar having a drink with my future wife.”

    The story illustrates how Sean knew his wife was the one when he was willing to miss the opportunity of a life-changing moment (being at a historical sporting event) for an even bigger life-changing moment (finding love and his future wife).

    Will is incredulous and yells at Sean for missing the game. He asks, “How did your friends let you get away with that?” And Will simply replies, “I just slid my ticket across the table and said, ‘Sorry guys, I gotta see about a girl.’”

    Fifth Therapy Session: Facing Potential and Values

    In this session, Will begins to ask deep questions about what he wants to do with the rest of his life and what are the best uses of his intelligence and talents.

    After a job interview with the NSA, Will goes into a diatribe about how his talents could be hypothetically used for catastrophic consequences, like overthrowing foreign governments, destabilizing entire countries, or getting his friends sent to fight some war overseas.

    Sean asks him directly, “What are you passionate about? What do you want?”

    They discuss the honor of work, including construction work and Will’s job as a janitor and the pride he takes in it, even though society may not view it as the most rewarding job in the world. Sean prods further asking why he chose to be a janitor at the most prestigious technical university in the world, and why he secretly finished math problems, highlighting that there may be something else driving Will.

    Sean asks again what Will wants to do with his life, and he deflects by joking that he wants to be a shepherd on his own plot of land away from the world. Sean isn’t willing to waste his time and decides to end the session early. Will has a final outburst before leaving, “You’re lecturing me on life? Look at you, you burnout!”

    This session reveals how Will is afraid of his potential and talents, including the responsibility that comes with them. “I didn’t ask to be born like this.” He feels safe continuing to live in his hometown, work his everyday job, and hangout with his childhood friends. He’s afraid to dream bigger. There may be something deeper driving Will’s thirst for knowledge, but he doesn’t know his core values and motivations, and doesn’t truly know himself or what he wants out of life.

    Sixth Therapy Session: “It’s Not Your Fault”

    The next therapy session begins with Sean uncovering more about Will’s painful past, particularly his life as an orphan and the physical abuse he endured with his foster parents. Sean reveals that he, too, grew up with an abusive, alcoholic father, forging another shared bond between them.

    As their conversation unfolds, Will correctly guesses that his final psychological report likely diagnoses him with “attachment issues” and a “fear of abandonment.” He acknowledges that these issues may have driven him to push his girlfriend away, leading to their recent breakup. When Sean gently asks if he wants to talk about it, Will declines.

    Sean then shifts the focus, holding onto the reports as he says, “I don’t know a lot. But you see this? All this shit? It’s not your fault.”

    At first, Will politely agrees, brushing off the comment, but Sean repeats the line: “It’s not your fault.” With each repetition, Will’s emotional defenses begin to crumble, and he cycles through a range of emotions—politeness, confusion, anger, and aggression—until the weight of Sean’s words fully sinks in. Overwhelmed, Will finally breaks down and cries, releasing years of suppressed pain and guilt.

    good will hunting

    In this profoundly cathartic moment, Sean embraces Will, offering the safe and empathetic connection that has been absent from Will’s life. It’s a turning point where Will confronts his past without blame or self-judgment, finally opening the door to acceptance and healing.

    Last Goodbye

    In their last meeting, Will thanks Sean for all of his help and shares the good news that he has accepted an exciting new job. Sean, in turn, reveals his plans to travel and explore life on his own terms. They exchange numbers to keep in touch, symbolizing the respect and connection they’ve built.

    This moment underscores that therapy is often a chapter in life that prepares individuals to continue their journeys independently. Both Will and Sean needed to say their goodbyes and go their separate ways to continue following their paths in life. Will has learned to face his fears and embrace his potential. Sean has rediscovered purpose and fulfillment through helping Will. Their goodbye is bittersweet but profound, a reminder that growth often requires letting go and moving forward.

    In the final scene, Will leaves a letter at Sean’s place that reads, “If the professor calls about that job, just tell him sorry—I had to go see about a girl.” This moment beautifully exemplifies Will’s newfound courage to follow his heart and take meaningful risks.

    Conclusion

    The therapeutic relationship between Sean and Will in Good Will Hunting is a masterclass in storytelling and psychology. Through humor, vulnerability, and mutual respect, Sean helps Will break through years of pain and fear, while Will reignites Sean’s passion for life. Their journey is a powerful testament to the transformative potential of therapy — and how creating a space of acceptance, healing, and growth can change lives.


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    Steven Handel

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  • L.A. Catholic church covered up molesting priests for decades. The price: $1.5 billion and so much pain

    L.A. Catholic church covered up molesting priests for decades. The price: $1.5 billion and so much pain

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    Clergy sex abuse scandals have rocked Catholic churches across the world, but few places have seen the financial toll of the Los Angeles Archdiocese.

    With a record $880-million settlement with victims announced this week, the Los Angeles Archdiocese has now paid out more than $1.5 billion.

    The bill reflects its rank as the largest archdiocese in the nation, with more than 4 million members, and a California law that gave accusers more time to file suit.

    But attorneys and others who have been involved in more than two decades of litigation say it also is an indication of the failures of church leaders to identify molesting priests and prevent them from committing more crimes.

    Some of those priests, after undergoing treatment at residential centers, were shuffled to new parishes, frequently in immigrant neighborhoods where the abuse would continue.

    With the latest settlements, the number of people alleging abuse now stands at nearly 2,500.

    But the true number could be much higher, lawyers say.

    One reason for the size of L.A.’s payout is that the California Legislature in 2019 opted to give adults more time to file lawsuits over childhood sexual abuse, which prompted more survivors to come forward. This extended the amount of time available for litigation compared with other states, which were also roiled by abuse scandals.

    “The L.A. archdiocese is not an anomaly,” attorney Mike Reck said. “It’s larger and been subject to more litigation and so we have found out a lot more about how it operated. I am not sure the archdiocese is worse than other places. I think we just don’t know as much about other dioceses.”

    The abuse — and efforts to cover it up — dates back decades.

    It reaches into the highest levels of the church. Msgr. Benjamin Hawkes, the second-in-command to two cardinals and a well-known leader who was the inspiration for Robert De Niro‘s character in the movie “True Confessions,” was accused after his death of abuse.

    Troves of church documents that served as a road map for the cover-up placed extreme scrutiny on Cardinal Roger Mahony, whose handling of clergy abuse has been roundly criticized.

    Mahony, the archbishop of Los Angeles for more than two decades, was a youthful and high-profile leader who used his position atop the diocese in the 1980s and 1990s to champion social and economic justice, among other causes large and small. But his legacy was obliterated after it was revealed that he supervised the reassignment of numerous priests who admitted to or were accused of molesting young children.

    With the behavior left unchecked, the number of victims within the largest archdiocese in the United States grew exponentially.

    “The real fault lies at the feet of Roger Mahony,” said attorney John Manly, who for decades has represented victims of sexual abuse. “He could have come here in 1986 and made the change. Instead, he chose to conceal it from the public, the media and, more importantly, law enforcement.”

    The culture of secrecy and the practice of shifting accused priests between parishes rather than alerting law enforcement — a feature of the scandal that played out in dioceses across the country — was also a persistent issue in Los Angeles. Delayed enforcement against the accused priests allowed them to move between locations and abuse other children, victims’ advocates say.

    The list of abusers within the Archdiocese in Los Angeles includes more than 500 names, according to the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

    “There has been a continuous, uninterrupted flow of hundreds of perpetrators in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles,” said Patrick Wall, an advocate for survivors of sexual abuse and a former Benedictine monk.

    Mahony could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Mahony wrote in a letter in 2013 that he had made “mistakes” in handling sexual abuse, but added that he followed the procedures that were in place at dioceses across the country: to remove priests from active ministry if there was reasonable suspicion that abuse had occurred and refer them to a residential treatment center.

    He did not know at the time, he wrote, that “following these procedures was not effective, and that perpetrators were incapable of being treated in such a way that they could safely pursue priestly ministry.”

    “Nothing in my own background or education equipped me to deal with this grave problem,” he wrote.

    Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez in 2013 temporarily relieved Mahony of all public duties over his mishandling of the sex abuse scandal, a move that was unprecedented at the time in the American Catholic Church.

    Mahony, now in his late 80s, lived for several years on the campus of a parish in the San Fernando Valley. After his retirement, he vowed to devote more time to immigration reform, a lifelong passion for him that stems from his experiences with migrant workers in the fields of the San Joaquin Valley during his years in the Fresno and Stockton diocese.

    The church’s own records, shielded by an army of lawyers for decades, revealed an orchestrated conspiracy to prevent authorities from learning of criminal behavior.

    In memos written in 1986 and 1987, Msgr. Thomas Curry, then the archdiocese’s advisor on sex abuse cases, proposed ways to prevent police from investigating priests who had admitted to church officials that they abused children. Curry suggested to Mahony that the diocese prevent the priests from seeing therapists who might alert authorities and that they give the priests out-of-state assignments to avoid a criminal investigation.

    Msgr. Peter Garcia admitted to church officials to preying on undocumented children in predominantly Spanish-speaking parishes. After he was discharged from a treatment center, Mahony told him to stay away from California to avoid legal repercussions, according to internal church files.

    “I believe that if Monsignor Garcia were to reappear here within the archdiocese we might very well have some type of legal action filed in both the criminal and civil sectors,” the archbishop wrote to the treatment center’s director in July 1986.

    Garcia left the priesthood in 1989 and was never prosecuted. He died in 2009.

    Another priest, Father Michael Baker — one of the church’s most prolific abusers — had been accused of molesting at least 40 boys during his decades in the priesthood. In 2007, Baker pleaded guilty in criminal court to abusing two boys. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison but was released in 2011 based on the time he’d served in county jail and good behavior.

    Two brothers alleged that Baker began abusing them at St. Hilary Catholic Church in Pico Rivera in 1984 when they were 5 and 7, according to court records. The boys’ family moved to Mexico in 1986, but Baker, over the next 13 years, flew them to Los Angeles, Palm Springs and Arizona, where the abuse allegedly continued until 1999, at least once in the priest’s rectory in Los Angeles County, court records show.

    Records show that Mahony knew about Baker’s sexual abuse of boys decades before it came to light publicly.

    In 1986, Baker first broached the topic in a note to the cardinal after Mahony appealed for priests to report inappropriate behavior, according to internal church records.

    “During the priest retreat … you provided us with an invitation to talk to you about the shadow that some of us might have,” Baker wrote. “I would like to take you up on the invitation.”

    At a spiritual retreat in December 1986, Baker made a full confession and was transferred to a treatment facility in New Mexico. The police were not notified, and no effort was made to contact the children who had been abused, according to church records.

    Baker returned to ministry in the Los Angeles Archdiocese in 1987, church records show. At the time, Mahony informed Baker that he was not permitted to be left alone with a child, but records show that Baker violated this directive on at least three occasions, all of which were observed by archdiocesan personnel.

    Baker remained in the ministry until 2000, when he was defrocked, church records show. In 2002, as the clergy abuse scandal came to light, The Times revealed that the archdiocese secretly paid $1.3 million to two of Baker’s victims two years before.

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    Richard Winton, Hannah Fry

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