
Taking a beating
by John S. Adams
June 22, 2006
Parents want answers from Spring
Creek
A Florida couple wants to know who beat up their son at a private
residential boarding school in Sanders County…and they’re willing to
pay $5,000 to find out.
Scott and Deanne Hopp sent their 16-year-old son Jordan off to
Spring Creek Lodge Academy near Thompson Falls last September in
hopes the school could reverse his defiant behavior in a safe
wilderness setting.
“We sent Jordan there out of concern for his safety,” says father
Scott Hopp. “Jordan wasn’t making good decisions and Spring Creek
was touted as the right place for him.”
For nearly seven months Jordan hewed to the straight and narrow,
working through Spring Creek’s program and advancing to the
program’s penultimate Level Four. He’d earned “junior staff” status,
a leadership role that gave him limited oversight of lower-level
Spring Creek students, and was on his way to graduating from the
program. He seemed to be doing so well at Spring Creek that his
parents sent their 15-year-old son Seth there to join his older
brother in January.
But things started to go wrong last month when Jordan was dropped
from Level Four to Level One after Spring Creek staffers caught him
with a cigarette lighter and uncovered the teenager’s “run plans.”
A few weeks later, faced with the prospect of starting the
program over at Level One, Jordan says he tried to flee. He managed
to escape Spring Creek’s 100-acre campus 13 miles northwest of
Thompson Falls and successfully eluded searchers for 36 hours in the
woods without shoes or a coat before hunger and cold got the best of
him and he found the road and flagged down a car that returned him
to Spring Creek.
After the escape attempt, Jordan’s parents made arrangements to
bring their son home to Anna Maria Island, Fla.
The night before his scheduled return home, Jordan walked into
the bathroom of his cabin at Spring Creek, where he says he was
attacked by five of his “family members”—the designation given to
student groupings at Spring Creek.
Jordan, now back in Florida, says he went into the restroom
around 8 p.m. to use the toilet. When he was finished and opened the
curtain to leave the toilet stall, five of his family members were
standing there waiting for him.
“Everyone around me had their fists clenched except for [one of
the boys], who held the shower pole,” says Jordan.
The boy holding the plastic PVC shower pole shut the door to the
bathroom and then one of the boys punched Jordan in the face, he
says.
“The rest [of the boys] charged me into the stall,” says Jordan.
“Before I turned in the corner of the stall to protect my face, I
was hit in the face with the shower pole.”
Jordan says the boys then continued punching and kicking and
hitting him for about two minutes before a Spring Creek staffer
barged in and broke up the fight.
Jordan was taken to the staff offices, authorities were called
and Jordan was taken to the Clark Fork Valley Hospital emergency
room for treatment.
Scott Hopp says when Spring Creek shift supervisor Cliff Payne
contacted him shortly after midnight on June 6, he was told that his
son had been “severely beaten.”
“When they first called me, they said he was bleeding, possibly
had a broken nose, his faced was bruised up and he has scratches and
bruises on his back,” Hopp says.
The initial dispatch narrative from the Sanders County Sheriff’s
office’s case report for the incident indicates “a shower rod…was
used as a weapon.” The Clark Fork Valley hospital emergency room
physician’s comments also note that a weapon was involved, stating
that Jordan was “hit with shower rod (PVC) repeatedly in the face
and upper back…”
This isn’t the first report of a shower rod being used as a
weapon at Spring Creek. According to a September 2003 story in The
New York Times, a teenage girl was beaten with a shower-curtain rod
in June of that year by fellow Spring Creek students.
But Sanders County Sheriff Deputy Joseph Brown stated in his
investigative report that he was “not able to confirm the use of the
curtain rod due to the fact that the shower-curtain rods were moved
and placed in the showers for hygiene time.”
According to Brown’s report, “all possible evidence in the crime
scene had been destroyed.”
However, Brown determined he had enough information to cite two
of the alleged attackers for simple assault.
Hopp, who immediately pulled both his sons from Spring Creek in
the early-morning hours of June 6, says he’s frustrated by the lack
of responsibility the school has so far taken for the attack on his
son, and the lack of investigative interest exhibited by the Sanders
County Sheriff’s Department. Scott says Deputy Brown told him he
wouldn’t be able to follow up with the investigation for at least
five days because Brown’s wife was expecting a baby.
“I couldn’t believe it. My son was just brutally beaten in the
school with a shower-curtain rod and nobody was around to take care
of an investigation,” Hopp says.
Hopp says Spring Creek officials ignored his repeated requests
for information about the circumstances surrounding the attack
(Spring Creek officials did not respond to requests for an interview
for this story), and says he’s gotten similar results from law
enforcement officials. According to Hopp, Sanders County Attorney
Robert Zimmerman said his office would look into the incident, but
at press time Hopp says it’s been more than a week and he still
hasn’t heard from Zimmerman.
Zimmerman told the Independent that because the incident involves
juvenile offenders, the case has been referred to Chief Juvenile
Probation Officer Barbara Monaco in Polson.
“She reviews the report and makes an initial determination if the
matter should be dealt with formally (filing a petition) or
informally by her office,” Zimmerman stated in an e-mail to the
Independent. “If she believes it should be handled formally she
requests the county attorney to file a petition alleging delinquency
in District Court. Many times she will refer the matter to the
jurisdiction from which the juvenile came for the authorities there
to handle.”
As of press time Zimmerman had not received Monaco’s
recommendation.
In the meantime, the Hopps hope the incentive of a $5,000 cash
reward will help bring some clarity to their son’s case.
“Every hour that passes by we’re getting further away from the
truth,” says Hopp.
jadams@missoulanews.com
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