|
CALEB JENSEN
Really gonna miss you
Died: May 2, 2007, 15
years old
Program: Alternative Youth Adventures, Colorado
Cause of Death: Preliminary cause medical negligence
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 |
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Caleb's Mother mourns
the loss of her son
|
Caleb Jensen
|
Caleb's last letter to his mom
received a week before
his death * |
"I
wish I could go back and be a good little boy, a nice little naive
church boy who couldn't steal
bubble gum without feeling bad about it. I want to wear Sponge Bob
PJs and Teddy Bear slippers
and cuddle with my Mommy. I used to think I was too hard of a
gangster that nobody could break
me, but they found my weakness and I want to go home. Tell Heather
and Marie I miss them. I miss
you and love you all so much. Please write back. I love you. PS - I
want my Mommy."
Love, you're baby boy, Caleb
Caleb also wrote to his
mom telling her he had to climb mountains every day until he was
exhausted.
He said he was able to wash only twice a week using tiny amounts of
water. He had to clean his
dishes after meals by licking them and then using dirt to scour
them. "That's not how he should
have been treated, like a dog or a lizard," said his grandmother,
Ella Reese of Idaho.
She's right ... no child
should be treated this way!
* NOTE: CAICA President,
Isabelle Zehnder, has read many letters from children to their
parents and has seen a
pattern where children appear to be
completely broken, begging for "Mommy", pleading to come home.
ARTICLES:
7/24/07 -
AYA
surrenders license to state after boy's death
5/18/07 -
Teen who died at
wilderness camp wrote mother that he wanted to come home
5/16/07 -
Mother: My son fought to live Last letter home
before death reveals 15-year-old's pain, hope
5/12/07 -
Son died in wilderness program
5/12/07 -
Utah teens back from wilds after boy's death
5/12/07 -
Wilderness program loses license as result of
boy's death 5/11/07 -
Utah teen's death
has wilderness therapy program under scrutiny
5/10/07 -
Utah teen's wilderness
camp death may have been due to staph infection
5/5/07 -
Colo. officials monitor
probe of Utah teen's death
5/4/07 -
Teen died of staph infection while on outing
Montrose Daily Press
AYA surrenders license to state
after boy's death
July 24, 2007
By Katharhynn Heidelberg
MONTROSE — The Alternative
Youth Adventures program, under investigation following the
death of a participant, voluntarily surrendered its license to
the state.
The surrender did not include
an admission of wrongdoing. AYA's parent company, Community
Education Centers, Inc., also announced long standing
negotiations to sell the Montrose facility to its current
director.
The AYA is a wilderness therapy
program for at-risk youth. It came under the investigation of
the Colorado Department of Health and Human Services, Colorado
Attorney General and local district attorney after Jensen, 15,
succumbed to a staph infection while camping with a group on
Little Red Mountain May 2. The program's licenses for
residential childcare and therapeutical childcare were suspended
the following week.
"Since May 9, the date that our
license to operate was suspended, we have not maintained or
accepted any other children into the program. As a result, we
have continued to carry expenses and salaries for a program that
is no longer receiving revenues," John Clancy, chairman and CEO
of CECI wrote in a July 11 letter to the state.
Clancy wrote that quality
programs were important and the company has not been able to
renew its customer contracts because of AYA's suspended status.
"We wish to keep our reputation
intact. In that regard, it was our initial intent to pursue
reinstatement of our license, as it is our firm belief that our
program and its staff performed exactly as it should have and at
all times in full compliance with the regulations that govern
it," Clancy's letter stated.
"We are...without admission of
wrongdoing of any sort, surrendering our license to operate the
AYA Colorado facility."
He said the decision to
surrender the license was a business one and that, despite its
"noble mission," the AYA program wasn't achieving financial
gains. Clancy's letter also said CECI had already decided to
sell the Montrose facility to program director Jim Omer when
Jensen tragically died.
The surrender does not address
any possible criminal cases that could arise from Jensen's
death, state officials said.
"It essentially takes care of
the administrative side of the issue," Nate Strauch, spokesman
for the Colorado Attorney General's office said. "It wouldn't
affect any criminal proceedings. It's a favorable outcome for
the state."
District Attorney Myrl Serra
said he is still investigating and considering whether to pursue
charges. "I will make an independent decision when my
investigation is complete. It (license surrender) has no effect
on how I want to proceed or not," he said.
Bill Palatucci, CECI's senior
vice president and general counsel, said he could not comment
beyond the confines of Clancy's letter. He previously called
Jensen's death a tragedy and said the company did not believe
anyone had done anything wrong.
Contact Katharhynn Heidelberg
via e-mail at
katharhynnh@montrosepress.com
http://www.montrosepress.com/articles/2007/07/24/news/doc46a58b35dbdcc296658895.txt

Teen who died at wilderness
camp wrote mother that he wanted to come home
May 18, 2007
By Nancy Lofholm
In a last letter to his family from a wilderness camp for
troubled youths, Caleb Jensen wrote about the difficulties of
surviving in the wild and added a postscript: "I want my mommy."
Jensen's mother, Dawn Boyd of Salt Lake City, received the
letter from her youngest child during the week before he died of
an untreated staph infection. He was participating in a
court-ordered wilderness therapy program through Alternative
Youth Adventures near Montrose, Colo.
The program's license to operate was suspended in the wake of
Jensen's death.
Boyd said she believes camp staff ignored her son's assertions
that he was sick and needed to go home. She also believes the
Utah Division of Juvenile Justice Services, which placed her son
in the rough and remote program, failed to take into account her
son's frequent problems with staph infections
Boyd said her son's letters from camp recently said he was
feeling better about his life but badly wanted to come home.
Jensen described a different life in camp. He wrote he had to
climb mountains every day until he was exhausted. He was able to
wash only twice a week using tiny amounts of water. He had to
clean his dishes after meals by licking them and then using dirt
to scour them.
"That's not how he should have been treated, like a dog or a
lizard," said his grandmother, Ella Reese of Idaho.
Jensen
expressed some optimism along with the complaints. "Mom, I think I'm
going to make it this time," he wrote in a letter.
Jensen, 15, died May 2 of a methicillin-resistant staphylococcus
aureus infection. The bacterial infection traditionally is seen in
hospitalized or very ill or elderly patients.
Jensen's mother said he had been treated for numerous staph
infections since he was a toddler and suffered a related skin
problem called impetigo. He was treated for three infections while
he was in other juvenile justice programs in Utah before being sent
to the camp, she said.
Carol Sisco, a spokeswoman for the Utah Department of Human Services
that oversees the juvenile justice programs, said Jensen passed a
physical before he was sent to the camp March 28. She said he had a
physical in the field the week before he died and a session with a
therapist the day before his death. No one reported that he was ill.
His mother said he did not report being ill in his last letter.
Jensen's family has been unable to get much information about
Caleb's death. Reese said they pieced together information that
shows Jensen was sitting on his sleeping bag in the camp during a
rest day on the day he died. Jensen, who had been exhibiting
behavioral problems for several days before his death, told a
counselor he didn't feel well and needed to go home. After the
counselor moved on, Jensen slumped over. Less than 10 minutes later
when a counselor checked on him, he was dead, Reese said.
Bill Palatucci, a spokesman for Community Education Centers, Inc.,
the Roseland, the company that created the youth camp, said
complaints from troubled youths are common.
"They hear a lot that youths want to go home. The staff is taught to
sort through those and determine the genuine issues and the non,"
Palatucci said.
Palatucci would not reveal the amount of medical training the four
camp counselors have. He said their training meets state licensing
requirements.
Community Education Center is contesting the Colorado Department of
Human Services suspension of its license to operate the camp. A
hearing is expected to be scheduled within the next month. The other
26 participants in the camp have been moved to youth detention
facilities in Utah and Colorado.
Boyd said she is working with an attorney to try to find out more
about the death of her son, who had been in and out of state custody
"for anger issues" since she and her children moved to Salt Lake
City in 2004.

Mother: My son fought to live Last
letter home before death at remote camp reveals 15-year-old's pain,
hope
May 16, 2007
By Nancy Lofholm
"I want my mommy." Dawn Boyd said
her son Caleb Jensen's letters said he was feeling better about his
life but badly wanted to come home. (Special to The Post)In a last
letter to his family from a wilderness camp for troubled youths,
Caleb Jensen wrote about the difficulties of surviving in the wild
and added a postscript: "I want my mommy."
Caleb's mother, Dawn Boyd of Salt
Lake City, received the letter from her youngest child during the
week before he died of an untreated staph infection. He was
participating in a court-ordered wilderness therapy program through
Alternative Youth Adventures near Montrose.
The program's license to operate
was suspended after the 15-year-old died May 2.
Boyd said she believes camp staff
ignored her son's assertions that he was sick and needed to go home.
She also believes the Utah Division of Juvenile Justice Services,
which placed her son in the rough and remote program, failed to take
into account his frequent problems with staph infections.
"He should have been cared for. He
should be alive today," a sobbing Boyd said during a telephone
conversation from her home. "I know my baby told them. He always
knew when he had a staph infection."
Boyd said her son's letters from
camp recently said he was feeling better about his life but badly
wanted to come home, "so he could get in his SpongeBob pajama pants
and his big slippers and curl up with me and his sisters to watch
TV."
Caleb described a different life in
camp. He wrote he had to climb mountains every day until he was
exhausted. He was able to wash only twice a week using tiny amounts
of water. He had to clean his dishes after meals by licking them and
then using dirt to scour them.
"That's not how he should have been
treated - like a dog or a lizard," said his grandmother, Ella Reese
of Troy, Idaho.
Caleb expressed some optimism along
with the complaints. "Mom, I think I'm going to make it this time,"
he wrote in a letter.
Caleb died of a methicillin-resistant
staphylococcus aureus infection. The bacterial infection
traditionally
(click to enlarge) is seen in
hospitalized or very ill or elderly patients. Caleb's mother said he
had been treated for numerous staph infections since he was a
toddler and suffered a related skin problem called impetigo. He was
treated for three infections while he was in other juvenile justice
programs in Utah before being sent to the camp, she said.
"When I saw my son in the casket
and looked at his little face, there was a sore on each side of his
mouth under the makeup. ... I knew," she said.
Actions at camp defended
Carol Sisco, a spokeswoman for the
Utah Department of Human Services that oversees the juvenile justice
programs, said Caleb passed a physical before he was sent to the
camp March 28. She said he had a physical in the field the week
before he died and a session with a therapist the day before his
death. No one reported that he was ill. His mother said he did not
report being ill in his last letter.
Caleb's family has been unable to
get much information about his death. Reese said they pieced
together information that shows Caleb was sitting on his sleeping
bag in the camp during a rest day on the day he died. Caleb, who had
been exhibiting behavioral problems for several days before his
death, told a counselor he didn't feel well and needed to go home.
After the counselor moved on, Caleb slumped over. Less than 10
minutes later when a counselor checked on him, he was dead, Reese
said.
Bill Palatucci, a spokesman for
Community Education Centers Inc., the Roseland, N.J.-based company
that created the youth camp, said complaints from troubled youths
are common.
"They hear a lot that youths want
to go home. The staff is taught to sort through those and determine
the genuine issues and the non," Palatucci said.
Palatucci would not reveal the
amount of medical training the four camp counselors have. He said
their training meets state licensing requirements.
Community Education Center is
contesting the Colorado Department of Human Services suspension of
its license to operate the camp. A hearing is expected to be
scheduled within the next month. The other 26 participants in the
camp have been moved to youth-detention facilities in Utah and
Colorado.
Mother gets few answers
Boyd said she is working with an
attorney to try to find out more about the death of a son who had
been in and out of state custody "for anger issues" since she and
her children moved to Salt Lake City in 2004.
She said a representative of
Alternative Youth Adventures phoned her to say her son was dead more
than five hours after his body was airlifted out of the remote camp.
She received few details and no offers of help. A week later she
received a two-paragraph letter of condolence.
It ended: "The memory of Caleb will
inspire us to continue our good work on behalf of all the juveniles
in our care."
Utah human services authorities
gave Boyd $1,500 to help with transporting Caleb's body to Utah and
with the cost of the funeral. She has not received her son's
belongings.
Sisco, of Utah's Human Services
agency, said officials there can't help Boyd without more facts.
"The hard part is that we don't know all the answers yet. We don't
know yet if there was staff negligence or if this was something that
couldn't be caught," she said.
Staff writer Nancy Lofholm can be
reached at 970-256-1957 or nlofholm@denverpost.com.

Utah teens back from wilds
after boy's death
May 12, 2007
By Angie Welling
Three Utah teenagers who had been
placed in the same youth wilderness program where a 15-year-old
Salt Lake City boy died earlier this month have returned home.
Staff members from Utah Juvenile Justice Services, which had
custody of all four boys, drove to southwest Colorado on
Thursday to pick up the teens, agency director Dan Maldonado
said. Two of the teens had recently completed the 60-day program
for at-risk youths and were ready to come home, while the third
will be placed in another program based on his needs.
On the orders of state officials, Caleb Jensen entered
Alternative Youth Adventures in Montrose, Colo., on March 28. He
died May 2 from what the Mesa County coroner has determined to
be natural causes.
Concerns about whether Jensen suffered from an untreated staph
infection, however, have led Colorado authorities to suspend the
facility's license pending an investigation by the Montrose
County Sheriff's Office.
Utah has a long history with
Alternative Youth Adventures, contracting with the facility when it
was located near Loa, Wayne County, and continuing the relationship
when it moved to Colorado, said Carol Sisco, spokeswoman for the
Utah Department of Human Services.
"We've had a very good track record
with them," she said.
The state has placed 20 youths in
the Alternative Youth Adventures program since July 1, 2006,
according to Maldonado. The facility is the only wilderness therapy
program with which Utah Juvenile Justice Services currently
contracts, though that three-year contract was set to expire on June
31.
The agency typically has custody of
about 1,300 youths under the age of 21 who have been referred to
them by the juvenile court system. It places the children in a
variety of programs, depending on an assessment of their individual
needs.
"We have a wide array of programs, and most of them are much longer
custody programs," Maldonado said. "Something like a wilderness
program is indicated for someone whose offense profile suggests that
we might be able to have a shorter-term custody arrangement."
In this case, staff members advised that Jensen be placed in the
wilderness program and a juvenile court judge accepted the
recommendation. The teen was placed with eight other at-risk youths
for a two-month "outing" with four AYA staff members to take part in
character-building exercises intended to build their self-esteem and
communication skills, said Bill Palatucci, senior vice president of
Community Education Centers Inc., which operates Alternative Youth
Adventures.
"This is a well-known, well-regarded program and so this incident is
really out of character and unprecedented for AYA Colorado,"
Palatucci said. "That makes it all the more difficult to explain."
Jensen passed a physical exam the day he arrived at the facility, as
well as a checkup the week before his death. He also visited with a
counselor the day before he died in the base camp, Sisco said.
Staff members are trained to identify medical conditions in the
youths, according to Palatucci, and medical assistance is always
available.
"They're very used to adolescents with behavioral problems, but also
with claims of medical conditions," he said. "They have to know how
to recognize symptoms and problems and the track record has been
that they've been able to do that very well.
"Our contention is that this medical condition was just something
that was not easily detectable."
Maldonado is in daily contact with Colorado authorities and is
awaiting the outcome of the investigation there before taking any
action in Utah.
"The nature and depth of our review will be contingent on the
results of the investigation that comes out of the county sheriff's
office," he said. "At this point, what we are waiting for are some
answers from Colorado about their judgment about staff error or
negligence."
The director has also been in contact with Jensen's family, who are
understandably struggling with the young man's death.
"They are not doing very well at all. My staff tell me that mom is
having a very difficult time with this," he said. "There are people
in our staff that are having a hard time and there are people in
Colorado having a hard time, too."
The Pueblo Chieftan
Wilderness program loses license
as result of boy's death
May 12, 2007
State human services officials
suspended the license of a wilderness-based program for at-risk
children after the death of a 15-year-old boy during a routine
outing.
Colorado Department of Human
Services spokeswoman Liz McDonough told The Salt Lake Tribune that
Caleb Jensen was showing ‘‘observable signs of staphylococcus
infection that were neglected.’’
Jensen died May 2 in a remote area
outside of Montrose during a ‘‘routine outing’’ with Alternative
Youth Adventures, program officials said. The boy had been ordered
by the Utah Division of Juvenile Services to enroll in the two-month
program, which aims to teach youths about the consequences of their
actions by forcing them to rough it in the woods.
The company is licensed through the
state as a child-care provider.
‘‘We suspended their license
(Wednesday),’’ said McDonough. ‘‘That obviously is very serious, and
we took what we believe is appropriate action.’’
A spokesman at the Roseland, N.J.,
headquarters for Alternative Youth Adventures told the Tribune that
the program’s staff had acted appropriately.
‘‘We are at a loss to explain this
at this point,’’ said William Palatucci. ‘‘We are cooperating fully
with the investigation. We know this is a good program. We’ve never
had any fatalities.’’
Chief Deputy Coroner Rob Kurtzman
said an autopsy determined the boy died after suffering a serious
bacterial infection. He forwarded the results to the 7th Judicial
District Attorney’s Office for review.
Scott Wagner, chief investigator
for the Montrose County District Attorney’s Office, said a
prosecutorial review is standard procedure and there had been no
request for prosecution.
Utah Juvenile Justice Services
spokeswoman Carol Sisco told the Tribune that Jensen passed a
physical exam when he entered the program on March 28.
In 2001, Colorado corrections
officials investigated an incident where campers cursed and
threatened counselors with sticks and rocks, saying the Alternative
Youth Adventures program was too difficult. Counselors called
sheriff’s officials for help.
The outcome of that investigation
was not immediately clear Thursday.

Son died in wilderness program
A mother seeks answers She says authorities in Utah and Colorado
remain vague on what happened to boy
May 12, 2007
By Nate Carlisle
Caleb Jensen was not an innocent
teenager, his mother admits, but he was supposed to get better.
A wilderness camp in Colorado was
supposed to improve the 15-year-old's behavior and make him more
respectful, said Dawn Boyd, Jensen's mother. That's why a Utah court
sent him there.
Now Boyd wants something else out
of the camp: answers as to how her son died.
"What's important to me is other
mothers don't ever have to go through this again," Boyd said,
"because this is the most horrible thing a mother can ever go
through, losing a baby they think is going to get better."
Colorado authorities say Jensen
died from a staphylococcus infection. Personnel at the camp,
Alternative Young Adventures, observed signs of the infection,
according to a state agency, but neglected to properly care for it.
The state of Colorado suspended the
company's license this week.
Boyd suggested the state of Utah
bears some responsibility, too. Speaking from her Salt Lake City
apartment, Boyd said Jensen had been susceptible to infections,
particularly on his face, ever since he was a toddler and contracted
impetigo, a common skin infection in young children.
The state of Utah had Jensen's
medical history, Boyd said, before it sent him to the camp. "He
would get [an infection on his face] one day and the next day his
face would just be swollen huge," Boyd said.
Boyd described her son as being
somewhat different than the average teenager. He could have a bad
attitude, the mother said, two or three times worse than other kids.
But the Bryant Middle School
student also was smart, Boyd said. He was a writer, composing
something between poetry and rap lyrics.
He was funny, too. "Maybe he
could have been a comedian," Boyd said. "Maybe he could have been a
lawyer. He could have been anything. He was so smart."
Boyd declined to give specifics
of what her son did to get in trouble with the law, but said it was
not violent, nor an egregious crime. "He was one of those kids that
wanted to fit in with everyone," Boyd said, "and he got in with a
group of kids and they dared him to steal something and he got
caught."
A juvenile court issued a sentence,
Boyd said, but Jensen did not follow the terms. The court then sent
Jensen to the Youth Adventures camp near Montrose, Colo. Boyd said
the court informed her of what was happening to her son but did
not give her a choice in the matter.
Jensen arrived at the camp on March
28. He wrote once a week to his mother or two sisters. "He just
mainly spoke of how they hiked up big mountains, and how tired he
was from hiking everyday," Boyd said. "He was so tired and he just
explained to us that he was optimistic to get out of the program and
do what he needed to do to come home and get back right with his
family," she added.
Then on May 2, Boyd received a
telephone call from someone at Youth Adventures. A man on the other
end told her Jensen had been placed on a helicopter to be flown to a
hospital and he died.
Boyd said she asked the man what he
was talking about. Then she realized what he was saying. "It was all
blurry," Boyd said in an interview. "I lost it.
I handed the phone to my fiance."
Her fiance, Boyd said, learned from the man Jensen had been on a
"down day," where the kids take a break from hiking to attend
lectures and counseling sessions.
Jensen was sitting on his sleeping
bag speaking to a staff member, the man said. Five or 10 minutes
later, Boyd said the man told her fiance, someone called out to
Jensen and he didn't answer. At some point, the boy slumped over.
The family does not know where her
son was pronounced dead. Boyd said she did not receive any
information from the coroner investigating her son's death until she
hired an attorney.
Then, Boyd said, she had to make
the arrangements to bring her son's body to Salt Lake City.
At some point she received $1,500
in checks, but in her confusion she didn't note whether they came
from the state or from Youth Associates.
Boyd said she saw her son's body
for the first since he left Utah on Tuesday, the day before his
funeral. He had sores on the outside of his mouth, Boyd said. "It
wasn't even until the day before my son's funeral that I was
overnighted a letter from [Youth Associates] with an apology," Boyd
said.
Boyd declined on Friday to say who
she holds responsible for her son's death. Instead, she just talked
about the answers she's seeking. "I don't know any of the details
[of Jensen's death]," Boyd said. "I'd like to know what my son's
last words were."
ncarlisle@sltrib.com

Utah teen's wilderness camp death
may have been due to staph infection
May 10, 2007
By Christopher Smart
A 15-year-old Salt Lake City boy
may have died from a severe staph infection while enrolled in a
youth wilderness program near Montrose in southwest Colorado.
Colorado authorities continue to
investigate the May 2 death of Caleb Jensen in a rugged, mountainous
area while at an Alternative Youth Adventures camp.
Autopsy results may not be
available for another week or more, said Scott Wagner, chief
investigator for the Montrose County District Attorney's Office. But
a spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Human Services said the
youth "showed observable signs of staphylococcus infection that were
neglected."
"We suspended their license
yesterday," said Liz McDonough of the outdoor program. "That
obviously is very serious, and we took what we believe is
appropriate action."
A spokesman at the Roseland,
N.J., headquarters for Alternative Youth Adventures said the
program's staff had acted appropriately. "We are at a loss to
explain this at this point," said William Palatucci. "We are
cooperating fully with the investigation. We know this is a good
program. We've never had any fatalities."
Preliminary indication from Mesa
County Coroner's Office is that he died of "natural causes,"
Wagner said, meaning his death was not homicide, suicide or due to
accident.
"That leaves it pretty wide open,"
Wagner said. "The cause of death has not been determined."
The youth died near the Montrose
County/Mesa County line. Mesa County authorities were first to
respond. It was later determined that Jensen died in Montrose
County.
Jensen's death is being
investigated by the Montrose County Sheriff's Office. But
Undersheriff Kevin Walters referred inquiries to the DA's Office.
The investigation is standard procedure, Wagner said. No "request
for prosecution" has been made, he said Thursday.
Utah authorities enrolled Jensen
in the two-month Alternative Youth Adventures program, according to
Carol Sisco, spokeswoman for Utah Juvenile Justice Services. "He
had gone through the courts in Utah and was ordered into our
custody," she said. "We placed him in the Colorado program."
Jensen passed a physical exam when
he entered the program on March 28, Sisco said. "This is a program
we've used in the past," she said. "And as far as I know, this is
the first fatality. According to the Web site for Alternative Youth
Adventures, the program "provides a healthy, protective environment
within which troubled youth will have the opportunity to achieve.

Utah teen's death has
wilderness therapy program under scrutiny
May 11, 2007
By Christopher Smart
A 15-year-old Salt Lake City boy who was ordered by Utah
officials into a wilderness therapy program, where he died last
week in southwest Colorado, may have been killed by a severe and
untreated staph infection.
Colorado authorities continue
to investigate the May 2 death of Caleb Jensen in a rugged,
mountainous area near Montrose while participating since March
28 in a course for troubled youth. Autopsy results may not be
available for another week or more, said Scott Wagner, chief
investigator for the Montrose County District Attorney's Office.
But a spokeswoman for the
Colorado Department of Human Services said the young man "showed
observable signs of staphylococcus infection that were
neglected."
"We suspended their license
yesterday," Liz McDonough of Alternative Youth Adventures said
Thursday. "That obviously is very serious. And we took what we
believe is appropriate action."
Utah authorities enrolled
Jensen in the two-month Alternative Youth Adventures program,
said Carol Sisco, spokeswoman for Utah Juvenile Justice
Services.
"He had gone through the courts
in Utah and was ordered into our custody," she said. "We placed
him in the Colorado program."
Some wilderness-based
teen-therapy programs have come under scrutiny in Utah during
the past several years as a result of a handful of deaths and
other incidents. State laws
now require
stricter licensing guidelines for such Utah-based operations.
A spokesman at
the Roseland, N.J., headquarters for Alternative Youth
Adventures said the program's guides and counselors had acted
appropriately.
"We are at a
loss to explain this at this point," said William Palatucci. "We
are cooperating fully with the investigation."
Alternative
Youth Adventures has been in operation in Colorado since 2000.
"We know this
is a good program," Palatucci said. "We've never had any
fatalities."
Preliminary indication from the Mesa County Coroner's Office is
that Jensen died of "natural causes," Wagner, the D.A.'s
investigator, said - meaning his death was not homicide, suicide
or caused by an accident.
"That leaves it
pretty wide open," he said. "The cause of death has not been
determined."
The youth died near the Montrose County/Mesa County line. Mesa
County authorities were first to respond. It was later
determined that Jensen died in Montrose County.
Jensen's death is being investigated by the Montrose County
Sheriff's Office. But Undersheriff Kevin Walters referred
inquiries to the district attorney's office.
The investigation is standard procedure, Wagner said. No
"request for prosecution" has been made at this time, he said
Thursday.
Jensen passed a physical exam when he entered the course on
March 28, said Utah Juvenile Justice Services spokeswoman Sisco.
"This is a program we've used in the past," she said. "And as
far as I know, this is the first fatality.
According to its Web site, Alternative Youth Adventures
"provides a healthy, protective environment within which
troubled youth will have the opportunity to achieve their full
potential through the use of treatment and education services
that focus on positive change."
csmart@sltrib.com

Colo. officials monitor probe of
Utah teen's death
May 5, 2007
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (Map, News) -
State officials were monitoring a two-county investigation into the
death this week of a Utah teen enrolled in a wilderness-based
program for at-risk children.
The Mesa County coroner ruled that
Caleb Jensen died Wednesday from natural causes.
He died in a remote area outside of
Montrose during a "routine outing" with Alternative Youth
Adventures, program officials said. The boy had been ordered by the
Utah Division of Juvenile Services to enroll in the two-month
program.
"There was nothing out of the
ordinary. It's just a very tragic incident," said Bill Palatucci, a
senior vice president of Roseland, N.J.-based Community Education
Centers Inc., which owns and operates Alternative Youth Adventures.
The state has a long-term contract
with Alternative Youth Adventures, and 26 Colorado teens currently
are enrolled in it, Colorado Department of Human Services
spokeswoman Liz McDonough said.
"We have great concern for the kids
in the program, and we're monitoring the investigation," McDonough
said.
Few details have been released of
what happened before Jensen's death.
Montrose County Sheriff Rick Dunlap
said his deputies got a call about a group of counselors performing
CPR on a boy Wednesday, but they were not able to revive him. Mesa
County sheriff's deputies also responded.
Three counselors and six youths
were at an Alternative Youth Adventures camp about two miles from
any road.
Alternative Youth Adventures has
worked in Montrose since 2000. It focuses on self-esteem and
team-building projects for Colorado and Utah youths ages 12 to 18,
Palatucci said.
Palatucci said the program has not
had any other deaths.

Teen died of staph infection while
on outing
May 4, 2007
Katharhynn Heidelberg
MONTROSE — Outdoor programs through
Alternative Youth Adventures are on hold after the state suspended
the organization’s licenses Wednesday.
The state human services department
said the staph infection that claimed 15-year-old Caleb Jensen
during a Montrose outing produced observable symptoms which AYA
staff allegedly neglected.
The program’s parent company,
Community Education Centers, Inc., denied negligence in the boy’s
death.
AYA, which runs wilderness therapy
programs for at-risk or adjudicated youths, was being investigated
by Montrose County authorities after Jensen’s death on Little Red
Mountain May 2, near the Mesa County line.
The Mesa County Coroner, to whom
Jensen’s autopsy was transferred while jurisdiction was being
determined, said in a Thursday news release the youth died from a
methicillin-resistant staph aureus infection.
The Colorado Attorney General’s
Office confirmed Thursday AYA’s therapeutic residential childcare
and residential childcare licenses were summarily suspended at the
request of the Colorado Department of Human Services.
“It’s the department’s belief the
child reported symptoms of observable signs of infection that were
neglected and he was denied proper medical treatment,” Liz
McDonough, Colorado Department of Health and Human Services
spokeswoman said Friday.
“That’s the basis for the summary
suspension. The kids have been removed and are being put in
alternative placements.”
The suspension means AYA is
prohibited from engaging in the practices its licenses permitted it
to undertake, AG spokesman Nate Stauch said.
AYA has the right to an expedited
hearing on the matter, but according to the suspension order, it had
to surrender its license immediately. Further proceedings will
determine whether the license should be revoked.
Jensen was participating in a
program run through the Montrose office when he died.
According to the Montrose County
Sheriff’s Office, AYA staff members tried to revive Jensen and
notified emergency dispatch. They brought him to an evacuation
point, and Mesa County deputies responded, but CPR efforts were
unsuccessful and Jensen was pronounced dead.
AYA Vice President Bill Palatucci
said the organization will fight for its licenses and its staff. “We
plan to contest the suspension. We firmly believe the staff did
everything appropriately and correctly and there were no obvious
signs that this juvenile was distressed,” he said.
“We’re very happy to work with the
department to review policies and procedures, but we don’t see the
need for suspension right now.”
District Attorney Myrl Serra said
previously the matter was still under active investigation.
Serra said Thursday he had no
information about the suspension.
Palatucci said the Little Red
Mountain outing included four staff members and nine youth clients,
which is typical. The program’s licensing allowed a ratio of one to
four, he said.
He would not say why Jensen was in
the program, citing confidentiality concerns, but did say the boy’s
enrollment had been court-ordered in Utah.
Program outings have ceased for
now, Palatucci said, and AYA has complied with the suspension.
“We’ll have to deal with the hearing procedure the suspension puts
in motion,” he said. “It adds to the difficulties of the staff and
clients. We will have to find alternative placements for youths in
programs that can accommodate them.”
He said AYA was going to stand
behind its employees. “While outings have been suspended, our staff
will remain in place,” Palatucci said.
“We don’t think anybody did
anything wrong. It was a very tragic set of circumstances. The
underlying cause (of death) was just undetectable.”
McDonough said the incident was
“disturbing.”
“This tragic death of this young
man is something we have to look at in terms of how our kids are
cared for and to ensure that, no matter what the nature of the
program, that appropriate medical procedures are in place to handle
what may come up. Our thoughts go out to the young man’s family in
Utah.”
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