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Link:
http://www.thestraights.com/reports/hasStraightClosed.htm
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Has Straight really closed?
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Straight gives
its official date of closing as July 1 - 2, 1993. So why do so many
view that date with skepticism.
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Significant dates associated with the Straights |
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Camp |
Actual location |
opened |
closed |
Notes |
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Saint Petersburg,
Florida, known today as the Drug Free America
Foundation |
Saint Petersburg |
April 22, 1976 |
Active |
Straight, Inc. was
incorporated on April 22, 1976 but did not start
operating a treatment camp until September 1, 1976.
After Straight lost its appeal for falsely imprisoning
Fred Collins and had to pay him $220,000, mostly in
punitive damages, Straight officers became very alarmed
that they could be personally sued, so they made an
astonishing maneuver. On September 26, 1985 they
changed the by-laws for Straight, Inc. by changing its
mission to one of educating the public on the dangers
of adolescent substance abuse. The name was changed
from Straight, Inc. to
Straight Foundation, Inc. An article was
added that said foundation funds could be used to hire
attorneys to defend board members in case they were
sued. An article stated that in the event a legal
judgment was made against a board member, then
foundation money could be used to pay the judgment!
Then they created a brand new organization whose mission
it would be to treat adolescents from drug addiction
just like the old Straight, Inc. had done. This brand
new treatment organization was also incorporated on
September 26, 1985 and was named Straight, Inc.!!!
Through the years the old Straight, Inc., now called
Straight Foundation, Inc., had managed to buy up
property--and had amassed some cash. It now leased
this property back to the new Straight, Inc. and even
made grants to penniless Straight, Inc. to operate.
Physically the foundation and the national headquarters
for the drug rehab program ran out of the same facility
until April of 1993 when the headquarters for Straight,
Inc. transferred to Atlanta, Georgia. On July 2 - 3
1993 Straight, Inc. formally ceased to exist, but not
Straight Foundation, Inc.--the education arm. In an
effort to distance itself from the name Straight which
today is synonymous with "child abuse", on December 5,
1995 Straight Foundation, Inc. changed its name once
again to its current name--the
Drug Free America
Foundation, Inc. |
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Saint Petersburg,
Florida |
Saint Petersburg |
September 26, 1985 |
April 24-25, 1993 |
Survived multiple
state health investigations, warnings and probations;
civil suits including a $720,000 judgment for abusing
former client Karen Norton; and criminal investigations
before finally transferring its remaining clients to
Straight-Atlanta and closing. Was investigated by FBI
for fraud after closing but no indictments ever isued.
Was investigated by state health department after
closing for allegations that Mel Sembler had interfered
with a state health team which had wanted to close
Straight-St Pete in 1989 for repeatedly failing to
comply with state health regulations. |
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Sarasota, Florida |
Sarasota |
November 1980 |
July 19, 1983 |
Closed after state
prosecutors produced a report of multiple counts of
violent criminal acts substantiated by Straight
counselors who had been granted immunity for their
testimony, and after several former clients sued. |
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Atlanta |
Marietta |
August 1981 |
July 1-2, 1993 |
Straight - Atlanta
was founded in Marietta, Ga. in August 1981 as the
second Straight expansion program. In April 1993
Straight - St Pete closed its flagship program in Saint
Petersburg, Florida and transferred its clients to
Straight - Atlanta. The national corporate office was
also transferred to Straight - Atlanta . Straight -
Atlanta (the last Straight operating facility) closed on
July 1 - 2, 1993. But on June 21, 1993, just 11 days
before closing, Straight official Kathleen M. Cone
incorporated a Straight-like program called Phoenix
Institute for Adolescents 4 ½ miles from Straight’s
facility. |
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Cincinnati |
Milford |
March 22, 1982 |
1987 |
In 1987 the state
of Ohio took Straight to court to close it down for
criminal child abuse. The day the trial was to start
Straight voluntarily closed and transferred its clients
to Atlanta and Detroit. In 1990 Kids Helping Kids of
Hebron, Ky.--a Straight-like program co-founded by
former Straight officer George Ross--changed its name
and moved into the old Straight facility in Milford,
Ohio where it operates today as Kids Helping Kids of
Cincinnati. |
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Washington, DC 1 |
Springfield,
Virginia |
October 28, 1982 |
July 26, 1991 |
Straight was under
criminal investigation in Virginia when the state health
department decided not to renew its license. Straight
demanded a hearing before a judge, but voluntarily
closed the day before the hearing and just "popped" open
three days later in Maryland taking its clients with
it.. |
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Washington, DC 2 |
Columbia, Maryland |
July 29, 1991 |
February 28, 1992 |
Straight-Columbia
officials just walked off the job leaving their clients
to fend for themselves when this Straight closed in
Maryland. |
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National
Headquarters in St Petersburg |
Saint Petersburg |
January 30, 1983 |
May 1993 |
Ground was broken
for construction of the facility on 1-30-83. Actual
operational start date not known. |
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National
Headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia |
Marietta |
May 1993 |
July 1-2, 1993 |
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Orlando |
Orlando |
January 1984 |
August 14, 1992 |
On August 14, 1992
Straight - Orlando officially closed and on that very
day Michael Scaletta, the executive director of Straight
- Orlando, incorporated SAFE, Inc. taking Loretta
Parrish, Straight - Orlando's marketing director, and
Straight's clients with him. He leased his facility
from Straight. Today Ms. Parrish is the owner and
executive director of SAFE. |
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Dallas, Texas |
Dallas |
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October 31, 1991 |
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Detroit |
Plymouth |
February 23, 1986 |
1993 |
On June 18, 1993,
three days before Straight official Kathleen M. Cone
created a Straight-like program named Phoenix Adolescent
Institute in Marietta, Ga. 4 ½ miles from the Straight
facility in Marietta, former Straight official Helen
Gowanny, helped found Pathway Family Center only 15
miles from the old Straight facility near Detroit. |
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Boston,
Massachusetts |
Stoughton |
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July 1991 |
Straight closed
when the state of Massachusetts pulled Straight's foster
care license. |
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Southern
California |
Yorbi Linda |
July 1989 |
August 1990 |
Straight's former
national clinical director, Dr. Miller Newton, ran one
of his KIDS programs in Yorbi Linda. KIDS closed in
1989 under criminal investigation and Straight moved
into the facility and took over KIDS' clients.
California closed Straight down for child abuse in 1990
and Straight transferred its clients to
Straight-Dallas. The failure of Straight-Southern
California probably stopped the formation of
Straight-Seattle. |
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Reverend Doctor
Doctor Miller Newton and KIDS.
In 1983 after losing a court case for false imprisonment of a
college student which cost Straight a $220,000 jury verdict; and
facing a deluge of other civil suits (one ending in a $721,000
verdict against Straight for Dr. V. Miller Newton [then the national
clinical director for Straight] personally assaulting a teenage
girl); and having dodged at least two criminal investigations of
Straights Dr. Newton left Straight to form his own second generation
Straight which he called Kids of Bergen County in one of the
wealthiest counties in America--Bergen County, New Jersey-- just
outside New York City. (A summary of abuses under Dr. Newton at
Straight is
here.)
Oddly, Straight did not establish a treatment facility in the
largest American metropolitan center of all--New York City--but,
then Miller Newton did. Being a Florida-based corporation, almost
all Straight board members lived in Florida as one might expect, but
there were a few exceptions. Two exceptions were the two Straight
board members who lived in New Jersey.
Soon after fleeing Florida and setting up shop in New Jersey in
1984, Dr. Newton started his own chain of second generation
Straights which he called Kids Centers of America. In 1986 Straight
did a very strange thing. Remember that most Straight board members
were from Florida. But in 1986 the board for Straight Foundation
selected a board treasurer, not from Florida, but from Los Angeles!
Straight did not even have a treatment program in that giant
metropolis, but two years later Kids Centers of America did. Kids of
Southern California signed a lease for a property at 3780 Prospect
Ave., Yorba Linda, California about 40 miles out of Los Angeles
commencing March 1, 1988. Kids of Southern California was quickly
closed under a state investigation for child abuse. The day Kids of
Southern California closed, Straight moved into 3780 Prospect Ave.
and took over its child clients. [The day Straight - Orlando closed,
Michael Scaletti, Straight - Orlando's director, opened SAFE out of
the former Straight facility and began treating Straight's former
clients. In similar ways Pathway Family Center in Detroit and
Phoenix Adolescent Institute in Atlanta were created by former
Straight officials upon closings of Straights in Detroit and
Atlanta.] California authorities soon closed Straight of Southern
California for alleged child abuse and Straight shut down in
California on Sept 28, 1990. Kids also opened franchises in Salt
Lake City and El Paso, Texas. Both those programs were also closed
under state investigations for alleged child abuse.
In 1993 three Kids of North Jersey counselors were convicted of
beating a client. Three years later a complaint was filed against
one of the previously convicted counselors for assault. Another
counselor was convicted of assault in 1999. In 1996 Dr. Newton
agreed to pay the federal government $45,000 in return for not being
prosecuted for 254 counts of insurance fraud. In 1993 the Prudential
Insurance Company stopped paying insurance claims to Kids when its
own independent investigation determined that health-care
professionals were not being employed to treat clients at Kids. [The
Bergen Record, Sept 24, 1996, p. A4] On June 9, 1997, as Dr.
Newton's reputation for fraud and child abuse continued to grow, he
was the keynote speaker at the Houston Drug Free Business Initiative
meeting. Later Calvina Fay, the director of the Houston Drug Free
Business Initiative, would become the director of Straight
Foundation, Inc. which today calls itself Drug Free America
Foundation (DFAF). In 2000 Newton finally closed Kids of North
Jersey after settling for $4.5 million with a former client for
abuse she sustained there. Newton is currently being sued for
abusing another teenager at Kids. He moved back to Florida and
became a professor at Saint Petersburg Junior College which is where
the federal government headquarters the Multijurisdictional
Counterdrug Task Force Training program, a program to train police
officers on an international level in drug interdiction.
On November 1, 1988 Straight, Inc. added a "sales" office at 104th
Street, Suite 114 Edmonton, Alberta, Canada to its insurance
coverage and on January 13, 1989 Straight added "Straight
Association of Edmonton" to its insurance coverage. Meanwhile Miller
Newton was recruiting so many Canadian teens from Calgary, Alberta
(173 miles from Edmonton) into his New Jersey program that he opened
Kids of the Canadian West--a support center to aid kids who had been
through his New Jersey program in integration back into society; but
also Newton hoped to make KCW his Canadian franchise treatment
program. Before opening Kids of Salt Lake City, its director, W.
Kimball DeLaMare, trained under Newton at Kids in New Jersey. That's
how Kids' franchises work. Such was the case with Kids of the
Canadian West. Dean Vause learned of Kids while working as a
guidance counselor at North Battleford High School which was a
source for sending many Calgary kids to Newton. Vause took a job at
Kids with the intention of directing KCW. But in 1989 CBS's West
57th Street (the week night edition of 60 Minutes) aired a damaging
segment on Kids of Bergen County. Case after case of fraud and abuse
was reported. After that Newton changed the name of his program to
Kids of North Jersey. In August 1990 Bergen County prosecutors
stormed his program looking into allegations of false imprisonment
and child abuse. By then Kids of Bergen County had 40 Canadian
clients and the Canadian government was paying $25 for each or
$1,000 a day. It was then Canadian authorities learned that they had
not been paying for psychiatric or physician services and thus
stopped payments to Kids. But not until they had paid Kids $250,000
[The Bergen Record, Aug 16, 1990, p. B1] After the raid by Bergen
County prosecutors Newton moved operations to neighboring Hudson
County and set up shop in Secaucus. (One of the two Straight board
members from New Jersey was in Secaucus.)
According to the Vancouver Sun of January 23, 1999, Vause claims
that in 1990 he was invited to take over KCW, but he "had
reservations about the treatment offered" in Kids and so he
convinced the planners that the $1 million that had been raised by
the Rotary Club could be better used by starting a brand new program
which he called AARC--Alberta
Adolescent Recovery Centre. [Sandy Levy Barbero is another person
who applied for a position with Kids around the time Dean Vause was
there. She was so shocked by what she saw that she wrote this
report to
state health authorities and to the ACLU to try to close them. If
Dean Vause had "reservations" with Kids why did he not do something
more pro-active like Barbero had done--or did he not see any abuse?]
One of the problems with any Straight-legacy program is start-up.
Synanons or confrontational-style therapeutic communities like
Straight and Kids frequently employ program graduates as counselors.
Vause would have had this problem too. He took at least one former
guy from Kids--Brian Neal--to be an AARC counselor. Tragically,
Brian Neal hung himself in 1996.
While clinical director at Straight Miller Newton got a PhD from
Union Graduate School (AKA Union Institute) in Cincinnati. At the
time Union was a non-accredited, alternative college. He did not
have to attend classes or take tests. He did attend some seminars
called colloquiums. Newton had to write a paper which was his
project to demonstrate excellence or PDE. In 1981 he received a
Doctor of Philosophy for his paper "The Organization and
Implementation of Family Involvement in Adolescent Drug-Use
Rehabilitation." Essentially this paper described the six new parent
raps which he implemented at Straight. [See Newton's education
background
here.] Sharon Wegscheider is a woman Newton met who was also
attending Union. Newton had her visit Straight and give an
independent evaluation of Straight. According to Case # 584418 filed
3-9-89 with the Superior Court of Santa Ana, California it was
alleged that an official from Kids of Southern California claimed
that he or she had also attended Union Graduate School. In 1993 Dr.
Newton was an Adjunct Professor of Neuropsychology at Union where he
taught colloquiums in Cincinnati (December 8 - 12) and in Boston
(June 23 - 28 and July 6 - 10). Vause received a degree in physical
education and history from the University of Saskatchewan and later
got a masters in educational psychology. In 1994 Vause got a PhD
from Union in Educational Psychology. His project demonstrating
excellence is titled: "The Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre: A
Treatment Centre for Chemical Dependent Youth and Their Families."
In his Union PDE, Newton writes that Straight is "kids helping
kids." Today Kids Helping Kids of Cincinnati is a Straight-legacy
program running out of the old Straight - Cincinnati facility.
While this editorial makes no claim of abuse at AARC, it should be
remembered that Straight's predecessor program was accused of child
abuse. That there has never been one Straight that has not been
accused of child abuse. That SAFE, a Straight legacy program in
Orlando, has been accused of abuse as has been Growing Together,
another Straight legacy program in Florida. That Newon's
Straight-legacy programs in Texas, Utah, California and New Jersey
all closed under allegations of child abuse. Listen to what former
AARC clients are saying about their AARC experience
here.
There are at least two Canadian drug addiction experts who have
written about Straight's brutal and ineffective methods. It needs to
be stressed that AARC's methods are not "groundbreaking" as stated
on the Nature of Things (a Canadian TV program which aired a segment
called Krystal in 2002). The idea of treating the whole family is
one AARC feature that is not new. For a parent to place a wayward
kid into a treatment program only to find out that the parent
himself necessarily also has a problem is ludicrous and without
merit. As I viewed the brief CDC segment on Krystal, one thing that
immediately struck me that was right out of Synanon Church and
Straight is confidentiality. AARC has no problem revealing Krystal's
picture though I'm sure Krystal has signed a waiver. Straight and
Kids does this all the time when clients portray Straight in a good
light. But as soon as Straight is asked about specific abuse,
Straight claims that it can not respond due to federal
confidentiality laws.
Straight parents are forbidden from talking with their children
until their child earns back that privilege. After a few weeks or
months their child may earn TALK. The parents finally meet their
child who is always accompanied by a program official for a staged 5
minute session. Each parent recites, as he has been trained to do,
from a rote script about a time in his child’s "druggie past" and
how it "made him feel." Each parent must chose one of the 99
possible feeling words found on page 53 of Dr. Newton's
graduate thesis. There are no other possible ways to feel.
Next the child recites his own script about an incident in his
"druggie past" and "how it made him feel." And that’s it. The
meeting is over. Even if the child has been beaten or raped he can
not report it during TALK--his only time to speak to his parents.
Even if their child has a black eye, has lost considerable weight,
or has sores on his face from receiving "spit therapy," the parents
are not allowed to ask about his present condition. It is forbidden
to ask about current events.
During Straight synanons
clients and parents indict one another or tell on themselves for
committing various offenses. The rest of client Group or parent
Group go around the room blasting each other for these indictments.
But each indictment is closed with, "but I love you" to the
point that the word love ceases to have meaning. Time and
time again one will observe a Straight client or parent breaking
down, flooded with tears and emotions only to be interrupted by some
juvenile counselor asking, "so how did it make you feel?" And
he would not let go until the indicted person had picked an
accepted feeling word from Newton's list. Words like love
and feel become robotic in Straight. They lose any emotion
or feeling. Let's listen to them counsel Krystal to see how she
feels from this
segment from Recovering Krystal.
Newcomers at Kids live in a foster home provided by parents further
along in treatment. In his Union thesis on Straight Dr. Newton calls
these foster homes "host" homes. The concept was actually developed
in 1970 at Straight's predecessor, The Seed, which was accused of
brainwashing by the US Senate. [According to the Saint Petersburg
Times, the founder of The Seed had a degree in psychology from a
mail order college.] AARC calls host homes "recovery" homes. AARC's
web page speaks of "peer" staff. "Peer" staff at Straight/Kids are
teens further along in their treatment who tend to newcomers which
is how "synanons" or confrontational-type therapeutic communities
operate. According to AARC's web page it is funded through a
combination of "user fees, private and corporate donations,
government grants, service group donations, third party
fundraisers," and AARC's own fundraisers. AARC is a tax exempt
charity and got a $1 million gift from the Rotary Club. It has been
reported that it got $600,000 from the Canadian government (though
Newton and Kids may have gotten that). There is a classroom and two
teachers, so that is a cost. But AARC clients are boarded in host
homes. Though there is a medical doctor for clinical work when a
child gets sick, there appears to be no medical doctors on the
actual drug rehabilitation staff with their high salaries, and it
sounds like at least some of the kids further along in treatment
serve as "peer" staff (perhaps unpaid). Other counselors may be
program graduates (perhaps not demanding high salaries). This is
drug recovery and requires no specialized medical equipment. So why
does AARC charge $50,000 a year for treatment?
Straight co-founder Betty Sembler who lives in Saint Petersburg,
Florida where Straight was also headquartered is also on the board
of the MCTFT. DFAF helped sponsor the Canadian Drug Conference in
May 2002 in Vancouver where AARC is trying to expand its $50,000 /a
year per person program.
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