COALITION AGAINST INSTITUTIONALIZED CHILD ABUSE
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Omega Leach

 

Age 17
Restraint death
Chad Youth Enhancement Center
 


August 31, 2007 - Boy, 13, Arrested On Rape Charges Teen Accused Of Raping Another Boy At Chad Youth Center

July 9, 2007 - Report Details Youth Center Patient's Death

June 24, 2007 - Philadelphia teen dies at Tennessee facility for troubled youth

June 24, 2007 - Another life lost on DHS's watch

June 11, 2007 - Former Chad Youth Center Employee Speaks Out

June 7, 2007 - Teen dies at local youth treatment center over weekend

June 7, 2007 - Civil Rights Group to Investigate Deaths at Montgomery County Youth Center

June 7, 2007 - Parents pull children out of center under investigation

June 5, 2007 - Police Investigate Death At Child Treatment Center

Additional news reports re Chad Youth Enhancement ...

2005 - Chad restraint death of 14-year old Linda Harris


Boy, 13, Arrested On Rape Charges Teen Accused Of Raping Another Boy At Chad Youth Center

August 31, 2007
By Nancy Amons

Video  Click here for video

More news reports re Chad Enhancement ...
 


CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. -- A 13-year-old boy who was a resident at the Chad Youth Center in Montgomery County has been charged with rape.

The boy is accused of victimizing another resident, who was also 13, on Sunday.

They family of the victim said they are not upset just because their son was allegedly the victim of a sexual assault by another teen, but because of how Chad officials reacted.

Her alleged victim and a Chad supervisor called the mother Sunday about 9:30 p.m. on Sunday to say the son had been sexually assaulted.
                                                                                                                     Click here to view video
A Kentucky family of the alleged victim has hired a lawyer because of the incident.

"The entire family is very upset about the entire incident and very concerned about the son's well-being," said the alleged victim's family attorney, Rebecca Blair.

"She asked if the police were notified. She was told their protocol was to contact child protective services," said Blair.

The mother asked if her son had been taken to the hospital, but Chad again said that was not their protocol.

“If a child has been raped, how are you going to prove it if you don't bring them for a physical exam to a hospital?" asked reporter Nancy Amons.

"I would agree with you," said Blair.

At the mother's insistence, her son was taken to Gateway Medical Center in Clarksville, where he was examined. It wasn't until after midnight that the police were called by the hospital, not the youth center.

"How does the family feel about the way Chad handled things?" asked Amons.

"They are very upset about it," said Blair. "They're certainly investigating their rights."

There are many unanswered questions. For example, where was the staff when the alleged attack occurred?

As Channel 4 has previously reported, Chad has been criticized by state officials for chronic understaffing and for failing to report incidents to the state.

The suspect who was arrested on Monday is from Philadelphia, which contracts with the youth center to treat children. Some of the children are accused criminals, some are neglected and some are mentally ill.

The teen who was the alleged victim in this case had not been accused of any crime. His parents had sent him to Chad for therapy, and he has returned home.

A Philadelphia 17-year-old died at Chad in June during a scuffle with the staff. The cause of death for Omega Leach has still not been released.


Report Details Youth Center Patient's Death

Doctor Says Teen's Injuries 'Traumatic'

July 9, 2007
By Nancy Amons


As time passes, more information is being learned about the second death at the Chad Youth Development Center.

Video: Chad Youth Center Death Detailed In Report

The identities of two men who were holding down 17-year-old Omega Leach in the moments before his death were revealed Monday.

Leach died after two staff members at Chad placed him on the floor because he was unruly, according to a Montgomery County report.

The report said that the two men, 31-year-old Milton Gerald Francis and 22-year-old Randall Dale Rae Jr., asked Leach if he was going to stop resisting.

The report said that Leach didn't answer because he was unconscious. Leach was later pronounced dead.

Francis is listed as a former sergeant at Fort Campbell.

Children who've been at Chad have told Channel 4 News that staff members would slam them on the floor or wall with their arms pinned behind their backs.

Edith Ruland took her 10-year-old out of Chad after finding him covered in bruises and personally witnessing staffers pin a child to the lunchroom floor for getting out of the food line.

"I saw one boy, he was yelling, ‘I can't breathe,’” she said.

The Tennessee Department of Health inspected Chad 10 days after Leach's death.

Its report concluded that the staff's restraint techniques resulted in death.

The doctor who treated Leach at Vanderbilt Children's Hospital described Leach's injuries as traumatic.

The doctor said the injuries included internal injuries and swelling to the brain.

The medical examiner's full report isn't finished yet.

Employees at Chad are supposed to be trained for how to properly restrain unruly children.

But Health Department inspectors found that in some cases, there was "no evidence" staffers took the training.

Another life lost on DHS's watch

June 24, 2007
By John Sullivan and Craig R.McCoy
Inquirer Staff Writers

The agency sent Omega Leach, a troubled 17-year-old, to a Tenn. youth facility in May. A month later, he was dead.

The City of Philadelphia decided a trip south was best for Omega Leach, an angry teenager who got in trouble for stealing a car. In May, the 17-year-old arrived at the Chad Youth Enhancement Center outside Nashville, a mental-health facility for troubled teenagers approved by the city's Department of Human Services.

His stay was brief.

Leach died after a physical confrontation with staff on June 3. He tried to choke one counselor, and another staffer pushed Leach facedown to the floor and pulled his arms behind his back, police said.

Investigators are checking whether the restraint was applied improperly, preventing Leach from breathing. He was pronounced dead the next day in a Nashville hospital, about 15 hours after the confrontation.

"There's no doubt that the kid had an attitude and probably needed to be locked up somewhere," said Sgt. Brian Prentice, of the Montgomery County, Tenn., Sheriff's Office. "It doesn't mean he has to be dead."

Leach's death was one more lost life on DHS's watch. As with other Philadelphia youths committed to such centers, his care was DHS's responsibility. The agency was paying Chad $285 a day for his treatment.

Questions have been raised about the center before. In 2005, a 14-year-old Long Island girl died there of heart failure as she was being escorted by a counselor.

Although Chad staff was not blamed in her death, Tennessee officials quit placing teenagers there. New York did, too.

But not Philadelphia.

On DHS's recommendation, judges and social workers continued to send children to Chad, even though the agency's own reports consistently criticized its performance, an Inquirer review shows.

After the newspaper began asking questions about Chad and the two deaths last week, officials in Philadelphia and Tennessee began to take action:

             Tennessee's child-welfare agency banned new placements at Chad and said it would force the
             facility to improve restraint procedures.

             Philadelphia's DHS also froze admissions to Chad. The department said it was putting into place "a
             contingency plan" for relocating 45 city children still at Chad, pending further investigation. Some
             of the children are delinquents. Others had been neglected or abused.

             A Philadelphia judge criticized DHS harshly for failing to inform the courts of the 2005 death and
             said he would insist on better communication.

"It's disturbing to the point that it's unacceptable," said Kevin Dougherty, administrative judge of Philadelphia Family Court.

Chad one of 110 behavioral-health facilities in 33 states

Chad and its corporate owner, Universal Health Services Inc. of King of Prussia, declined to respond to detailed questions. They did issue a statement defending the facility's record.

UHS owns more than two dozen hospitals and 110 behavioral-health facilities in 33 states. It bought Chad and 29 other facilities the month after the Long Island girl died. The deal was worth $210 million.

Chad's owner - Universal Health Services Inc. Respond

"We have a reputation and history of being a high-quality provider of behavioral health and substance-abuse services to troubled youth and their families," said Duwayne Glaser, Chad's chief executive officer.

He said Chad's training exceeded industry standards.

Chad helps "troubled kids to get better," the statement said. "We take the responsibility of their safety and care very seriously."

Philadelphia's child-welfare agency has been scrambling to remake itself since an Inquirer investigation last fall explored a string of deaths of children under DHS protection.

DHS has undertaken a host of reforms, including new procedures to evaluate the safety of children. Its workers visit the most vulnerable children more often and has hired more nurses to spot medical problems.

In a tough report released four days before Leach's death, an expert panel appointed by Mayor Street said "significant system failures" at DHS had let children die needlessly.

In particular, the report criticized DHS oversight of the private agencies that receive millions of dollars to work with the city's troubled children.

Although Philadelphia has sent scores of teenagers to Chad, paying it $6 million in the last three years, city and state social workers failed to closely monitor how it was treating those children.

For example, in 2006, Pennsylvania child-welfare officials sent out a directive strongly discouraging restraint techniques except as a last resort.

Through a bureaucratic oversight, that directive was never sent to Chad. On Friday, state officials said they would make sure Chad got the message.

In Philadelphia, DHS officials struggled last week to explain why Chad continued to earn their approval, even as DHS's own inspectors filed reports that found the center consistently failed to meet many standards.

For example, one 2005 report said teenagers at the center had complained that staff members had improperly used physical force to restrain them. They also complained that staff members had sex with residents and watched pornography with them.

Before releasing it, the city censored that section of the report, saying it was related to the ongoing investigation and needed to be kept secret. The contents were confirmed by sources familiar with the document.

Throughout last week, DHS released confusing, contradictory and, at times, incorrect information about its dealings with Chad, particularly what it knew about the earlier death.

On Tuesday, Arthur C. Evans Jr., the acting DHS commissioner, said in a statement:

"We were not informed of the previous death. It was the Chad facility's obligation to inform DHS of the 2005 death, but they did not do so."

By Thursday, DHS admitted that was not true.

The agency reversed course after learning that a former Chad executive disputed its account. The executive said in an interview that he had flown to Philadelphia to brief DHS officials about the girl's death.

A source at DHS said on Friday that Evans was initially misinformed by a senior staff member.

Last week, Evans acknowledged failures in DHS's oversight but said a new system would provide "a much more accurate picture" of the quality of outside contractors such as Chad.

Steven Oakman heads the contracting office at DHS. "I'll have to refer you to the commissioner's office," Oakman said on Thursday. "All of the statements are coming out of there."

After Leach died, investigators descended on Tennessee, including teams from from DHS, Family Court, and the Philadelphia public defender's office.

They joined local detectives, child-welfare advocates, and officials from two Tennessee state child-welfare agencies in touring the Chad grounds. The center is a 20-acre complex in Ashland City in rural Montgomery County, northwest of Nashville, with a main classroom building, a gym, and several dorms.

Prentice, who is supervising the criminal investigation, said the Sheriff's Office had fielded a number of allegations over the years that Chad residents had been assaulted, either by staff or by one another.

"There are reports all the time," he said. "There's a lot of runaways, stories [from children] that 'We're being abused out there.' We've had some broken arms, some separated shoulders."

Prentice said victims would stop cooperating with investigators, apparently because they feared retaliation from staff or other youths. No charges have been lodged in any incident, he said.

"They're mostly street kids," he said. "They think they're better off to keep their mouth shut."

Investigators from Philadelphia recently spoke with about 20 city children at Chad and heard allegations that raised "serious concerns," said Robert Listenbee, chief of the juvenile unit at the public defender's office.

"The general feeling is that there are a lot of restraints, daily, weekly and monthly," he said.

Before Leach died, Listenbee said, a child from Philadelphia sustained a broken arm; since the death, another Philadelphia youth has suffered facial injuries during a restraint, he said.

"We're concerned about how frequently they use restraints, the types they use, and the quality of training they have received," he said.

A troubled young man

Outside the Leach family rowhouse in a battered part of Southwest Philadelphia, the walls are adorned with posters with his photo and words of farewell for "Manny," as he was known to friends and relatives.

His mother, Paulette Dolby, cried when asked about her son. She referred reporters to a lawyer, Edith Pearce, who is investigating the death for a possible lawsuit.

Pearce described Leach as an ordinary teenager who loved basketball and video games and doted on his younger sister. He carried a grade point average of 2.7 at Daniel Boone disciplinary school.

"My career goal is to be a lawyer," he wrote recently, in words quoted in his funeral program. "I like helping people, so I plan to be an affordable lawyer, and in that case I will have to go to college."

His father, Omega Leach Jr., 50, has been arrested nine times in two decades and has served time for burglary and drug dealing.

The younger Leach also had a long history of problems. One psychological report called Leach a "deeply troubled and difficult young man."

According to official records, police arrested Leach at age 14 after he allegedly cursed and threatened students and teachers at his school, Tilden Middle. He told one teacher he would "shoot him full of shells," police said.

"His mother is very afraid of him and his behavior," police wrote. The teenager "is out of control."

The city tried to straighten him out. In January 2005, just before Leach turned 15, he was sent to a private facility in Virginia.

By the time he was 16, Leach was back in Southwest Philadelphia. In December, police arrested him for racing through his neighborhood in a stolen Nissan.

Family Court found that Leach was a delinquent, as social workers labeled him with this diagnosis: "conduct disorder."

This time, a judge sent him to Chad. He arrived May 2.

DHS had been placing children from neglectful or abusive homes there since 2001.

In 2006, Family Court judges began using the facility as a destination for a different class of children - those, like Leach, who had committed crimes.

Dougherty said his judges assumed that Chad was a good option because DHS had a long history of using it.

He said it was important that DHS and the courts "develop a protocol" to make sure judges know much more about the places where they are sending children.

Mediocre reviews

Even as the city accelerated its use of Chad, DHS continued to find problems.

Over the past four years, Chad's best evaluation found it met just 46 percent of DHS standards. Even so, DHS ranked the place "average" each year - and kept it on the approved list.

In 2005, Chad met only 34 percent of applicable standards. The reports found that Chad appeared clean, but faulted it for poorly documenting its service and for communicating inadequately with residents' families.

Estelle Richman, Pennsylvania public welfare secretary, said that performance was unacceptable.

"I would say 40 percent out of 100 percent is a problem," she said.

The DHS commissioner at the time of the death, Cheryl Ransom Garner, faulted Chad for not reporting critical incidents to DHS. "We were hearing about them from the kids," she said.

She said the agency checked out some of the reports but could not confirm them. On balance, she said, Chad appeared to be serving children well.

Nowhere in the thick stack of DHS reports on Chad is there a mention of the death of 14-year-old Linda Harris on Sept. 18, 2005.

At the time, Chad officials said she collapsed suddenly while being escorted to a "time-out room" after an emotional outburst.

Harris, who took antipsychotic medicines, had a history of going into rages.

The Nashville medical examiner later ruled she had died of natural causes brought on by a heart problem and asthma, aggravated by "morbid obesity." She was was 5 feet, 7 inches tall and weighed more than 300 pounds.

Michael G. Lindley, one of Chad's former owners, said the staff bore no blame for her death. He said Harris collapsed from a heart attack just moments after a counselor grabbed her arm.

While a Tennessee child-welfare investigation cleared the facility and its staff of any wrongdoing, the state nonetheless decided to stop placing its children there.

"We made a determination it was not worth the risk," said Randall Lea, assistant to the commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Children's Services.

Last week, Lea likened the decision to that of a restaurant inspector who gives a restaurant a 72, when passing is 70 - but then chooses not to eat there with his family.

"There's a gap between minimum acceptable standards and optimum practices, and every agency has to decide what they will settle for within that line," Lea said.

After Linda Harris' death, New York authorities also stopped sending juveniles to Chad and other out-of-state facilities.

"We generally like to have an extremely high confidence level on where we place children," said John Desmond, director of probation in Suffolk County, which had sent Harris to Chad shortly before she died.

"If we have questions about safety, we will not use that facility."

As for Philadelphia, it stopped sending youths to Chad for several months in 2005, but eventually resumed. Ransom Garner, who said she met frequently with Chad officials, said she did not recall discussing Harris' death.

At last count, DHS had 1,554 children in residential centers such as Chad. Of these, 233 were placed outside Pennsylvania.

Under agency procedure, DHS first tries to place all youngsters inside the state. Officials say they send them outside Pennsylvania only as a last resort.

A videotaped scuffle

As sheriff's investigators in Tennessee set out to figure out why Leach died, they caught a break: Part of the death struggle was caught on video.

An account of the staff's confrontation came from Prentice, who is supervising the probe.

A counselor confronted Leach about 2 p.m June 2 and told him to leave his dormitory room. Residents are not permitted to stay in their rooms all day.

Leach responded by shoving and trying to choke the counselor. A camera focused on the dorm hallway caught what happened next: "You see them fly out in the hall, with the juvenile actually being the aggressor."

The pair then tumbled back into the same room, out of the camera's view. Another counselor and a nurse run into the room, and the first counselor walks back into the hallway, visibly exhausted.

Inside the room, according to statements from Chad staff, the new counselor applied a restraint technique as the nurse slipped a piece of plastic under Leach's chin so he could breathe.

According to the statements, it appeared that the counselor, though not sitting on Leach, was putting his weight across him, while bowing his arms back, Prentice said.

That may have crushed Leach's diaphragm, he said.

According to a digital timer on the video, the counselor and the nurse stayed in the room with Leach for 20 minutes. Finally, they emerged and frantically began seeking a defibrillator.

Prentice said he could not say how long Leach was under restraint.

According to a 2006 report on restraint techniques issued by Pennsylvania child-welfare officials, "research indicates that most deaths occur within the first six minutes of restraint."

As yet, the medical examiner has not determined the cause of death. Toxicological results are not back.

An autopsy did find that Leach, like Linda Harris, had an enlarged heart. His body bore no bruises or signs of having been choked, Prentice said.

Prentice said he was deeply troubled at the second death of a teenager in the facility. He said he expected a long investigation that would focus in part on the training given the two counselors, both new hires.

"We have a a lot more to do," he said. "We've got to stop this. One is too many. Two is ridiculous."

Read a panel's report on DHS's failures, and recent news coverage, at http://go.philly.com/dhs 

Contact staff writer John Sullivan at 215-854-2473 or johnsullivan@phillynews.com.

Inquirer staff writer Nancy Phillips contributed to this article.


Philadelphia teen dies at Tennessee facility for troubled youth

June 24, 2007

PHILADELPHIA (AP) A teenager sent to a Tennessee facility for troubled youth by the city's social services agency died after a confrontation with the center's staff, prompting Philadelphia officials to consider relocating dozens of teens who were sent there.

Omega Leach, described by city officials as a 17-year-old whose many troubles included racing a stolen car, was sent last month to the Chad Youth Enhancement Center outside Nashville. The mental health facility for troubled teens was approved by the Philadelphia Department of Human Services.

But Leach got into a physical confrontation with the staff on June 3 and died the next day at a Nashville hospital. He tried to choke one counselor, and another staffer pushed Leach facedown to the floor and pulled his arms behind his back, police said.

Investigators are trying to find out whether Leach was restrained improperly, preventing him from breathing.

``There's no doubt that the kid had an attitude and probably needed to be locked up somewhere,'' Sgt. Brian Prentice, of the Montgomery County, Tenn., Sheriff's Office told The Philadelphia Inquirer for a story Sunday. ``It doesn't mean he has to be dead.''

Leach's care was the responsibility of Philadelphia's Department of Human Services. The department has come under harsh criticism and seen an administrative shake-up after reports in The Inquirer detailing the number of children who have died under its watch.

The agency was paying Chad $285 a day for Leach's treatment, even though questions had been raised about the center in the past. In 2005, a 14-year-old Long Island girl died there of heart failure as she was being escorted by a counselor.

Now, the Philadelphia agency has frozen admissions to Chad and says it is putting into place ``a contingency plan'' for relocating 45 city children still there, pending further investigation.

A Philadelphia judge criticized the agency for failing to inform the courts of the 2005 death. Judges had been sending children to Chad on the agency's recommendation.

``It's disturbing to the point that it's unacceptable,'' said Kevin Dougherty, administrative judge of Philadelphia Family Court.

Arthur C. Evans Jr., the city's acting human services commissioner, originally told The Inquirer that the agency had not been informed of the 2005 death. But officials reversed themselves after learning that a former Chad executive disputed their account, The Inquirer reported.

Evans acknowledged failures in agency oversight, but said a new system would provide ``a much more accurate picture'' of the quality of outside contractors such as Chad.

Chad and its corporate owner, Universal Health Services Inc. of King of Prussia, declined to respond to detailed questions. They instead issued a statement to the newspaper, defending their record.

``We have a reputation and history of being a high-quality provider of behavioral health and substance-abuse services to troubled youth and their families,'' Duwayne Glaser, Chad's chief executive officer, said in the statement.

Information from: The Philadelphia Inquirer, http://www.philly.com 


Former Chad Youth Center Employee Speaks Out

June 11, 2007 07:14 AM PDT

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. - The Chad Youth Enhancement Center for troubled youngsters has come under fire lately, as investigators try to figure out why a young boy in the Center's care died. Now, one former employee, who is on the Center's side, spoke out.

Mike Smith admitted that abuse does happen, but he said it's not the kids who take the beatings. According to Smith, the kids are what drove him from his short stint as a Center employee. Smith also said the kids, who often have arrest records, know the laws are designed to protect them.

 

"They can do whatever they want to, and they know there's nothing going to happen to them. There are no consequences for whatever they do. They can fight, which they do every day. I think one day there might have been one fight but most days two or three fights every, single day," Smith said.

In the wake of allegations of abuse, the Chad Youth Center is being investigated by at least three agencies. No one from the Center has ever publicly addressed the victims' claims.

 

Omega Leach, 17, of Philadelphia, Pa., died while staying at the Chad Youth Center. The initial autopsy has been completed with no definitive cause of death.

The Chad Youth Enhancement Center in Montgomery County is a treatment center for troubled teens.


Parents Pull Children Out Of Center Under Investigation

June 7, 2007
WTVF Nashville

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn.- A third agency is expected to join state and local agencies investigating a treatment center for troubled youth.

At least two children have died while in the care of the Chad Youth Enhancement Center, with the latest happening this past weekend.

Two more families now admit that they pulled their youngsters out, fearing for their safety.

 

The mothers said that their children have problems and that they welcome help in disciplining them.

But they claim the center operates more like a prison.

"I took her out," said parent Norma Davis.

Davis pulled her daughter from the center.

"That's it, we're signing him out," said another parent Edith Ruland.

Their accusation is that the center's staff is abusive.

"All of a sudden, I just remember going down to the ground. And I guess when I raised my head up she slammed it back down, and my mouth was pouring blood," said Davis' daughter, Atlanta Redman, who once stayed at the center.

According to Davis, the staff calls the maneuver a "safety hold" to restrain an out-of-control child.

Davis calls it criminal.

"Her face was black," she said, referring to pictures showing her daughter with bruises on her face. "Her whole left side of her face was black."

"It's like they broke her spirit," Davis said. "She wouldn't look at me the whole time. Her head was down. It's like she was ashamed and that really tugged at me."

Dennis Ruland's mother also took pictures to document alleged abuse against her son.

"I was very upset," Edith Ruland said. "I was crying. He was crying, 'Momma, please don't make me stay here. Please don't let me get whooped again.'"

The center is a residential treatment facility in Montgomery County now under investigation after the death of a 16-year-old boy.

"That this young man became unruly and that they tried to restrain him. During the course of their intervention, this young man may have suffered a heart attack," said Ted Denny of the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office.

This is the same way 14-year-old Linda Harris died a year and a half ago. She was forcibly taken out of a time-out room by staffers.

Even though the center, according to the families, did more harm than good, it might have been just enough to scare Redman straight, she said.

"Me doing the things I did wasn't worth me going down there," Redman said. "And I never want to go back."

Davis and Ruland said they asked about the marks on their children, but did not receive any explanations.

The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office is investigating the center as well as the Tennessee Department of Children's Services. An investigator from the Disability Law and Advocacy Center of Tennessee is expected to join the investigation.

NewsChannel 5 tried to interview center officials several times over the last two days, but the reporters' phone calls were never returned.

Visit NewsChannel5 for Photos and Video


Civil Rights Group to Investigate Deaths at Montgomery County Youth Center

June 7, 2007
By Terry McMoore

Civil Rights Activist and Director of the Urban Resource Center Mr. Terry McMoore has assembled an investigation team to look into the recent death of a 17 year old boy who allegedly, died this weekend of cardiac arrest after being restrained for unruly behavior. This marks the second time in little less than two years that a youth housed at the Chad Enhancement Youth Center has died under the same described circumstances.

 
   Terry McMoore

“I find it very strange that two healthy teen’s suddenly drop dead upon being restrained for unruliness by staff members at this facility. Something does not sound right about these deaths and we intend to do a full investigation to not only get to the bottom of the truth but to make sure that the current youths housed at this facility are not being subjected to physical or life threatening abuse at the hands of staff members.” - Terry McMoore.

The Chad Youth Enhancement Center is located at 1751 Oak Plains Road in Clarksville-Montgomery County TN. The Chad Youth Enhancement Center is a non-custodial placement, 50-bed residential treatment center for youth who have a significant history of emotional and behavioral problems.

Contact person for this press release is Mr. Terry McMoore (931) 552-9076 or (931) 378-1999
Email: terrymcmoore@hotmail.com


Teen dies at local youth treatment center over weekend

June 7, 2007
By Matt Rennels
The Leaf-Chronicle

A 17-year-old boy died Saturday at the Chad Youth Enhancement Center, 1751 Oak Plains Road, and authorities and the Department of Children's Services are investigating.

Buddy Turner, divisional vice president at the center, said they had chosen not to speak about the case while the investigation is ongoing. The child's name has not been confirmed, but Turner did say that he was not a resident of Montgomery County.

Montgomery County Sheriff's Office Spokesman Ted Denny said officials with the center told them the death occurred when the juvenile was being detained for unruly behavior and he went into cardiac arrest.

The Chad Youth Enhancement Center is a non-custodial placement, 50-bed residential treatment center for boys who have a significant history of emotional and behavioral problems.


Police Investigate Death At Child Treatment Center

June 5, 2007
WTVF Nashville

Montgomery County, Tenn.- Police are investigating the death of a teenager at a treatment center for troubled children. The 17 year old died over the weekend.

The teen was spending time at the Chad Youth Enhancement Center in Montgomery County.

Officials with the school told Montgomery County investigators the teenager became unruly on Saturday. They restrained the child and something apparently went wrong. An ambulance took the child to Vanderbilt Children's Hospital. He died on Sunday.

"I know we've interviewed those involved. There's not been any dispositions made from the sheriff's office whether there was any wrong doing. Our investigation is still on going right now," said Montgomery County Spokesman, Ted Denny.

No one from the youth center will comment about what happened. The initial autopsy has been completed with no definitive cause of death. Sources close to the investigation have identified the teen as Omega Leach,17, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
 


Additional news reports re Chad Youth Enhancement:

 

 

 

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