Reform Schools
Find a Haven Here
By Matthew Franck of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
November 17, 2002
Teens are sent to religious reform schools in Missouri from all over the nation by the hundreds, but no one knows exactly how many.
They are confined for months or years on at least a half-dozen remote, rural
campuses, but no one knows the precise number of schools that dot the state's
woods and farmlands.
The teens are plunged into a regimen of Bible discipline - where some say they
are paddled daily for misbehavior, where several schools ban them from dialing
a phone, and where workers screen all outgoing mail.
Many have emerged years later to recount stories of mistreatment and ridicule;
others praise the ministries for reclaiming them from the despair of street
life.
But state authorities can't know how all these teens are treated. And that's
how Missouri lawmakers want it.
Missouri is one of a handful of states that do not require faith-based child
residential facilities to get a state license. So unless officials are
investigating a report of child abuse, state authorities cannot inspect the
reform schools, monitor their quality or know how many they enroll or where
they are.
As a result, Missouri has become a magnet for a breed of strict schools that
could not operate in most other states. In fact, several of the reform schools
have come to Missouri after being exiled elsewhere.
Chief among them is Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy near Patterson, Mo.,
a ministry that shut down in Mississippi in 1986 after years of abuse
allegations, legal proceedings and a court order to remove all of its students.
More than two dozen former students interviewed by the Post-Dispatch say they
were mistreated by the ministry. Some - particularly those who attended in
Mississippi - recount heavy paddlings, and many women say their menstrual
cycles were interrupted at the school, presumably because of stress.
"Your inner self is destroyed from the moment you walk in the door,"
said Collin Poetting, who attended Mountain Park from 1994 to 1996.
Still, Mountain Park has prospered in Missouri. Parents praise the school's
strict approach for rescuing their children when no one else could.
"Our child met Christ at this institution," said David Schock of
Grand Haven, Mich., whose son attends the school. "In terms of changing
his life, it was close to a miracle - no, it was a miracle."
Mountain Park and similar schools have for years been able to defeat
legislative efforts to regulate them. By citing religious freedom, the schools
have counted on the support of a legislature that is hesitant to interfere with
faith-based institutions.
That hands-off approach stood even after a student at Mountain Park was killed
in 1996 by three others, apparently in a plot to take over the school.
Since then, the unregulated teen reform industry has boomed in Missouri.
In the past six years alone, at least four rigid reform schools have opened in
the state, attracting hundreds of teens from across the country.
Among the larger new schools are Agape Boarding School, which enrolls 125 boys
near Stockton; Thanks to Calvary Boarding School, with 65 boys and girls near
Devil's Elbow; and Heartland Christian Academy, with about 150 boys and girls
near Bethel. And judging from the expansion plans of several ministries, the
state's faith-based teen reform industry is thriving.
Thriving, because the schools have tapped into a niche market of desperate
parents, many of whom got results and spread the word.
Thriving, because those parents are willing to gamble as much as $14,000 a year
on the hope that strict discipline will rescue their uncontrollable children.
But thriving most of all because year after year Missouri lawmakers have
rejected legislation that would require the schools to obtain state licenses.
Here, the schools have friends in the Legislature who passionately defend the
ministries and their religious rights amid continued allegations of abuse.
Here, the schools have found a safe harbor.
A shared formula
If Missouri's unregulated reform
schools have anything in common, it's seclusion.
The schools are set up in the far corners of rural Missouri, and many can be
found only by traveling down obscure gravel roads. Mountain Park, for example,
is so remote that even the postal worker in nearby Patterson struggles to give
meaningful directions.
The isolation is intentional, and the schools' low profiles are protected under
state law. An unlicensed program in Missouri is not required to register with
the state or even present proof that it is a faith-based institution that
should be exempt from regulation.
"Even knowing where these homes are would be a start," said Carmen
Schulze of the Missouri Coalition of Children's Agencies. "But I can't
even get a list."
Several of the unlicensed schools are founded on a simple premise: the radical
separation of teens from their lifestyles.
It's an approach that appeals to religious and nonreligious parents.
Administrators of the schools say only a portion of their clients are actively
religious. More often, they say, they cater to parents who simply want a form
of discipline that they cannot find at traditional treatment centers.
Some already have tried professional counseling. Others cannot afford
professionally licensed residential programs, which often cost more than
$30,000 a year.
Four of the larger unlicensed schools - Heartland, Mountain Park, Agape and
Thanks to Calvary - follow a remarkably similar formula.
Each requires that parents enroll children for a minimum of a year.
Students adhere to a strict schedule that includes hours of worship and chores.
They are told that their problems are rooted in sin, not diagnosable illnesses.
And they are punished for failing to memorize passages of Scripture or for
having the wrong attitude.
They can receive phone calls only from their parents, and even then only for a
few minutes every two weeks. Letters they write are screened by staff, though
many former students of Mountain Park say they also were censored.
Those tactics are at odds with the way most faith-based children's group homes
operate. Numerous religious homes for youths in Missouri have willingly sought
state licenses and complied with standards on treatment.
For example, administrators of the Evangelical Children's Home in north St.
Louis County and the Missouri Baptist Children's Home in Bridgeton say state
standards are sensible and do not infringe on their desire to mix therapy with
religion.
Only licensed homes can get state funding and serve children in state custody.
But Mountain Park and other strict reform schools are a separate breed of
faith-based program - one that has no interest in state funding or regulations.
They are supported by tuition and donations. And because the schools are
unregulated, they can operate almost entirely on their own terms.
The schools hire whomever they want, regardless of credentials. They shun
modern psychotherapy and require that children empty bottles of Ritalin and
Prozac before enrolling. They control a youth's mode of worship, communication
and behavior in a way that no licensed program or even juvenile detention
center could.
But that's not to say the schools have completely skirted government
involvement. Because the schools are still subject to child abuse laws,
officials have the authority to investigate reports of mistreatment. And
several schools have been stung by allegations.
A limited view
At Hope Baptist Church and Boarding Academy, a small school that had enrolled
fewer than a dozen boys in St. James, a pastor is facing felony abuse charges
for repeatedly paddling a student.
And at Heartland Christian Academy, several workers were charged with criminal
child abuse for forcing youths to shovel in deep manure as a punishment and for
excessive paddling. But nearly all those charges have been dropped or dismissed
by juries.
Administrators of the schools say the abuse inquiries illustrate that even
though their operations are not licensed, the state has enough authority to
keep their ministries in line.
"The state has every law it needs to inspect a school like this,"
said Jim Clemensen, who operates Agape Boarding School.
Heartland founder Charles N. Sharpe is more critical of the state's
intervention. He describes those who have investigated him as "evil."
And like many pastors at the state's reform schools, Sharpe blames society and
its public institutions for destroying youths. He said he's merely trying to
clean up the mess.
"Abuse is kids on drugs and alcohol, and it's 13-year-olds getting
pregnant," Sharpe said.
Heartland, along with Agape and Thanks to Calvary, allowed a reporter to visit
and interview students recently. Inside, numerous teens praised the ministries
and could be seen hugging and laughing with school leaders.
"I know I'm changing, but when I first got here I was at my worst,"
said Leigha, who has attended Heartland for over a year.
The visits also turned up signs of the reform schools' rigor.
At Heartland, several boys said they have been paddled nearly every day for bad
behavior. Others said they would escape if they could, even if it meant being
sent to the harshest juvenile detention facility.
Getting a complete picture of how reform schools truly operate is impossible.
Because the newer schools have been open for less than six years, they have few
graduates who can speak freely of their time there. Some of the schools are so
young, in fact, that most of their original students still are enrolled in the
program.
But Mountain Park is different.
Mountain Park has hundreds of alumni who have sorted through experiences for
years.
Mountain Park has a history.
A troubling history
The school's past is relived today by numerous former students who say they
were mistreated at the school.
Mountain Park administrators would not grant interviews or allow the
Post-Dispatch to tour their facilities and meet with students. The school did
provide a list of supportive parents and alumni who in interviews dismissed
critics as a vocal minority.
But the school's detractors have congregated by the dozens in Internet support
groups. Their accounts are consistent with one another and span decades of the
ministry. They also are backed by numerous former students who are quoted in
court documents and news articles.
Each attended either Mountain Park, which opened in Missouri in 1987, or Bethesda
Home for Girls and Redemption Ranch for Boys, which were operated by Mountain
Park founders Bob and Betty Wills from the early 1970s to 1987 in Hattiesburg,
Miss.
Some former students told the Post-Dispatch of severe corporal punishment,
including so-called "board parties," where they said several students
received as many as 50 swats. There is some evidence the school has curtailed
its use of the paddle in the past few years, but the school's tactics continue
to come under fire.
This summer, a suit filed by Jordan Blair, an Arkansas teen, claimed the school
abused him by cutting off communication to his lawyer, limiting him to two
bathroom visits a day, and administering various forms of corporal punishment
on boys at the school.
Those kinds of allegations date nearly to the ministry's inception in
Mississippi.
In 1982, civil rights lawyer Morris Dees, founder of the Southern Poverty Law
Center, became aware of a pregnant 19-year-old who claimed she was being
swatted and denied the right to leave.
In the court proceedings that followed, several students would testify of
abuse. A medical expert also testified that nearly half of the female students
had menstrual complications because of intense stress.
Court documents include accounts of a girl who was reportedly swatted 25 to 30
times. Her offense: slashing her wrists in an apparent suicide attempt.
Dees' efforts resulted in a court settlement in which the school agreed to tone
down its use of corporal punishment, allow students to communicate freely
through mail and telephones, and report any menstrual problems to parents. The
agreement came with no admission of wrongdoing by the ministry, and no
employees were charged with criminal child abuse.
But Bob Wills refused to abide by the settlement and was convicted of contempt
of court.
Ultimately, the state decided in 1986 to remove from the home 117 teens, dozens
of whom described some form of mistreatment.
That final act sent the Willses to Missouri, where friendly laws gave the
ministry a new start.
Dan Wise was the interim youth court judge who ordered the state to remove
teens from the Mississippi schools. When he learned that the schools' founders
planned to move to Missouri, he sent documents to Missouri officials warning of
the schools' history.
But Wise and others say Missouri had no interest in the information. "We
were told real quick that Missouri can take care of itself," said Erik
Lowrey, a lawyer who worked for years to close the Mississippi ministry.
A haven
Today, Mountain Park and similar reform schools are flourishing in Missouri.
And they have the support of federal and state courts, which have historically
supported parents in their right to raise and educate their children almost
entirely as they see fit.
Parents pick the school and pick the church, and when their child gets out of
control, they decide whether to turn to a therapist or to a member of the
clergy.
That fundamental principle has long been a key legal defense of religious
reform schools like those in Missouri.
Lawyer David Gibbs III has defended numerous religious teen programs
nationwide. He said the fact that teens at the schools are compelled to worship
a certain way or spend hours memorizing the Bible isn't relevant. If society
didn't allow parents to make decisions against their children's wishes, few
would attend school.
But Gibbs acknowledges that while a teen's rights are limited, a parent's
rights are not limitless. Parents, he said, cannot legally send children to a
place that abuses children.
The question is what constitutes abuse.
Bob Schwartz, who heads the Juvenile Law Association in Philadelphia, said
there's "no clear line" when it comes to determining how much liberty
can be taken away from a youth before he or she has been abused.
"Those boundaries are not precisely drawn," said Schwartz, whose
nonprofit group defends the legal rights of children.
What is clear is that teens at reform schools have far fewer rights than
children convicted of crimes by the courts. Teens in a juvenile detention
center have access to legal representation, and the system is structured to
make sure children are placed in the right kind of program.
University of Florida law professor Barbara Bennett Woodhouse, a leading
authority on juvenile law issues, favors legislative reforms that would give
children a right to a hearing before parents send them to a highly restrictive
reform school.
In most states, teens at a reform school would at least have the assurance that
a treatment program was licensed and inspected. Backers of such regulation say
the approach lets parents remain in control while allowing the state to make
sure children are safe.
For years, child advocacy groups and operators of licensed residential
facilities in Missouri have called for at least minimum standards for the
programs. And their concerns are amplified with each new allegation of abuse.
But in legislative hearings, pastors from the unlicensed homes have testified
of their programs' effectiveness, arguing that government interference would
force them to shut down.
Reforms have failed, most recently a bill that would have merely required the
reform schools to register with the state.
Some credit the political influence of Sharpe, who is one of the state's
leading political contributors.
But others say the resistance roots from a more general distaste for regulation
among Missouri lawmakers, especially when those regulations deal with
faith-based institutions.
"Something mentioned in the name of religion is held in high esteem and
sacred trust," said state Sen. Pat Dougherty, D-St. Louis, who has favored
regulation for years.
Mountain Park's legislative supporters include state Sen. Bill Foster, R-Poplar
Bluff, who was pictured in a recent school newsletter and defended the school's
track record in a Missouri Senate hearing this year.
Foster said in an interview last week that he has visited Mountain Park several
times and has spoken to numerous parents and students who praise the ministry.
"I would not try to protect anybody," he said. "I say it like I
see it."
Senate President Pro Tem Peter Kinder, R-Cape Girardeau, said he has yet to see
a reason why the reform schools should be licensed. "You would have to
make a compelling case for them to be regulated," he said.
But Kinder said he was unaware of Mountain Park's history in Mississippi. When
told of the allegations of abuse from former students, he said he would be open
to investigating the issue and would not rule out favoring some sort of
regulation.
A suit filed this summer seeks to change how Mountain Park does business by
asking a federal judge to mandate reforms.
That legal technique ultimately shut down the Mountain Park ministry when it
operated in Mississippi. But something else was happening in Mississippi that
ultimately led to the closure of Bethesda.
Over the years, as teens escaped the Mississippi home to tell of abuse and
mistreatment, local authorities grew suspicious.
So when runaways were picked up, the local sheriff eventually stopped taking
them back to the school. Instead, they wound up in Lowery's office, and the
lawyer often would win their release.
Students run away from Mountain Park, too, into the deep forest or toward the
neighboring small towns.
Wayne County Sheriff Larry W. Plunkett guesses his officers pick up a few a
year. They complain about the school, he said.
But he hasn't heard anything that would lead him to believe they are being
abused. Teens with their background, he said, are bound to complain about rules
and discipline.
So the runaways are rounded up in a squad car and hauled back up the long
gravel road to Mountain Park, leaving their stories of life inside to be told
another day.