Female
Student Mistreated in Utah and Jamaica
By Lyndsay Wise
(This is an Auto-Biography written by this young girl that spent almost
3 Years in a "Specialty Program" that her parents placed her in.)
Student Names in Lyndsay's story have been changed since they are
minors. Lyndsay welcomes anyone to write her personally.
1) I spent 14 months at
Cross Creek Manor (WWASP) in Utah, and an additional
18 months in Tranquility Bay,
in Jamaica. I was at Cross Creek when there was a violent incident
between two girls... a girl, level 5, 15, named April, stabbed another
girl, Karen, a level 6, 16... with a 6 - inch steak knife. Karen
suffered a punctured lung and was hospitalized. There was widespread
fear throughout the facility that copycats would follow. Also during my
stay there, self-mutilation was a very popular trend. Every day there
were girls in Isolation for cutting themselves or attempting suicide.
During my entire 14 months there, this trend was ignored and treated as
if it were nothing. Once I was in class and a girl began crying, and
broke her pen and started to dig the broken plastic into her arm.
Another girl reported this to the teacher to which she replied, "Get on
task". No measures were taken to ensure the girls safety and nothing was
done until she dripped blood on the floor and smeared it on the desk.
She was taken to isolation, but only after she cleaned up her mess upon
the insistence of the staff. The Nurse told the girl that since she had
done this to herself she would be denied medical attention. No bandages,
and there nothing was used to clean the gauges in her skin.
2) I came to Tranquility Bay on July
17th 2000. Before that I had been at Cross
Creek Manor in Utah for 14 months. When I saw the blatant
disrespect the staff showed the students and me, I was shocked. It
literally took me several days to understand it. They lacked entirely a
sense of compassion and shouted orders at the students and I. I observed
that a failure to comply was treated with brutal restraint. After a
weeks stay there I was sent to staff watch and restrained several times
for such things as not asking permission to talk, taking too long in the
restroom, and making religious statements contrary to the staff's
personal beliefs. One of the staff, upon my questioning, admitted that
she loved to restrain students. Also a staff told me that she beat her
children when the misbehaved, and that physically hurting a child was
the "best way to teach them".
3) In August of 2000, I was in staff watch with several other students,
and we were having breakfast in the study hall room. I remember having a
conversation about what we would do if we were "free"… at this point a
male staff walked in. he got behind me, grabbed both of my wrists and
slammed me into the floor. Then he sat on top of me and ground his knee
into my back. When he got off of me, he got up and said that we were not
to talk. I remember showing an indifferent nurse the bruises the
following day. She told me "Don't come to me with any restraint
injuries, if you were restrained, you deserve it."
4) I was at Tranquility Bay on
August 10th 2001 when Valerie Herron committed suicide by jumping off of
the third story of the female facility building. She had recently
arrived at the program. At exactly 6:00pm, I heard a series of
horrifying sounds. First, a sound that sounded like a crack of thunder,
a crunch, and an earthquake. Then the screams came. I rushed out onto
the second story balcony with Carol and Cindy. There in the courtyard
lay Valerie in a pool of blood. Immediately after the incident our staff
informed us that if any of the girls discussed this we would be sent
straight to staff watch. This order was made by supervisors and carried
out by the family staff. This particular incident was only one of many
in which supervisors made rules before asking Mr. Kay. About a month
after the incident, I was working in transitions with Karen and Sherry,
cleaning out the supply closet (this closet held hygiene supplies for
students as well as uniforms for new students) and I found 4 of
Valerie's uniforms, folded neatly, ready for a new girl to adopt. Only 1
was missing, the one she died in. It shocked me and reminded me of books
I have read about concentration camps, where the dead peoples uniforms
are reused and passed on. We talked to the staff in charge of supplies,
and he said there was nothing wrong with the uniforms, they had only
been used once, and that we needed to "chill now man".
5) A few girls in my family had severe yeast infections from the climate
and lack of air conditioning and malnourishment. She told my case
manager several times in-group that she needed to see a doctor, and the
response was "Please, keep your nasty girl problems to yourself." In
turn, nothing was done. The rules by which students at Tranquility Bay
are to abide by are for the most part unnecessary and irrelevant to
their recovery and or growth. Literally, the program at Tranquility bay
has nothing to do with recovery, only compliance and total structure.
When I arrived at TB, I had Alcoholics Anonymous Step-work from my
previous program, and I was told to keep it in storage because I
wouldn't need it nor would I ever have time to use it. This was
step-work my therapist recommended that and that my parents bought and
sent to me upon his request. During my entire stay at TB, I did not
write one word in the step-work handbooks. This is something that
surprised me and still does. WWASP is a sick organization whose LAST
concern is the children it claims to help and love. It sucks parent's
bank accounts dry with no regard to the families it may be affecting. As
it draws you in with lies of your child's salvation, it financially
rapes you.
Written by Lyndsay Wise, CA.
Email Lyndsay at:
Lyndzeralus@aol.com