Current:Home > ScamsChainkeen|Ex-youth center worker testifies that top bosses would never take kids’ word over staff -Prime Money Path
Chainkeen|Ex-youth center worker testifies that top bosses would never take kids’ word over staff
Chainkeen Exchange View
Date:2025-04-07 10:40:08
BRENTWOOD,Chainkeen N.H. (AP) — A man who oversaw staff training and investigations at New Hampshire’s youth detention center testified Monday that top-level administrators sided with staff against residents, while lower-level workers wanted to punish kids for speaking up.
Virgil Bossom returned to the witness stand Monday, the fourth day of a trial seeking to hold the state accountable for child abuse at the Sununu Youth Services Center, formerly the called the Youth Development Center, in Manchester. David Meehan, the plaintiff, argues the state’s negligence in hiring and training led him to be repeatedly beaten, raped and locked in solitary confinement for three years in the late 1990s, while the state argues it is not responsible for the actions of a few “rogue” employees.
Eleven former state workers — including those Meehan accuses — are facing criminal charges, and more than 1,100 other former residents have filed lawsuits alleging abuse spanning six decades. That has created an unusual dynamic in which the attorney general’s office is both prosecuting alleged perpetrators and defending the state in the civil cases.
Bossom, a training development manager and later interim ombudsman during Meehan’s time at the facility, described speaking with the facility’s superintendent about his investigation into what Bossom considered a founded complaint.
“We talked about it and he said I can not take a kid’s word over a staff’s word,” he said. “That was very upsetting.”
An even higher-level administrator who oversaw not just the Manchester facility but a pre-trial facility in Concord held the same view, said Bossom. Other staffers, meanwhile, took discipline action against teens if their complaints were later deemed unfounded, he said.
Lawyers for the state, however, pushed back against Bossom’s suggestion that administrators didn’t take complaints seriously. Attorney Martha Gaythwaite had Bossom review documents showing that an employee was fired for twisting a boy’s arm and pushing him against a wall.
“The management, the leadership at YDC, terminated the employment of employees who violated the rules back in the mid-1990s,” Gaythwaite said.
“On this one, they did,” Bossom acknowledged.
He also acknowledged that he never raised concerns that Meehan was being abused, nor did he draw attention to broader problems at the time.
“You told the jury you suspected there was heavy handedness going on, potential abuse going on. You could’ve gotten to the bottom of what you testified about back then,” Gaythwaite said. “If there was a culture of abuse … it was your responsibility as ombudsman, the eyes and ears of the leadership, to let leadership know about it.”
Though Bossom testified last week that he found the practice of putting teens in solitary confinement troubling, he said Monday it was appropriate in some circumstances. Gaythwaite questioned him at length about incidents involving Meehan, specifically, including one in which Meehan was accused of plotting to take another resident hostage and then escape.
Meehan’s attorney, David Vicinanzo, later said the intended “hostage” actually was in on the plan. Given that Meehan was enduring near-daily sexual assaults at the time, Vicinanzo said, “Is it surprising Mr. Meehan wanted to escape?”
“Isn’t that a normal human thing?” he asked Bossom. “Especially if you’re 15 and have no power in this situation?”
“Yes,” Bossom said.
The youth center, which once housed upward of 100 children but now typically serves fewer than a dozen, is named for former Gov. John H. Sununu, father of current Gov. Chris Sununu. Since Meehan went to police in 2017, lawmakers have approved closing the facility, which now only houses those accused or convicted of the most serious violent crimes, and replacing it with a much smaller building in a new location. They also created a $100 million fund to settle abuse claims.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- The world's insect population is in decline — and that's bad news for humans
- An unexpected item is blocking cities' climate change prep: obsolete rainfall records
- How to keep yourself safe during a tornado
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- A new Iron Curtain is eroding Norway's hard-won ties with Russia on Arctic issues
- Unprecedented ocean temperatures much higher than anything the models predicted, climate experts warn
- Yellowstone's northern half is unlikely to reopen this summer due to severe flooding
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Ariana Madix Called Out Tom Sandoval for Acting Weird Around Raquel Leviss Before Affair Scandal
Ranking
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Vanderpump Rules to Air New Specials With Alums Jax Taylor and Brittany Cartwright
- Dozens of former guests are rallying to save a Tonga resort
- Iran's morality police to resume detaining women not wearing hijab, 10 months after nationwide protests
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Gigi Hadid Shares Insight Into How She Bonds With 2-Year-Old Khai
- Climate-driven floods will disproportionately affect Black communities, study finds
- Accusations of 'greenwashing' by big oil companies are well-founded, a new study finds
Recommendation
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
TikToker Dylan Mulvaney Speaks Out Amid Criticism of Her Brand Partnerships
Love Is Blind’s Bartise Bowden Shares Adorable New Footage of His Baby Boy
We never got good at recycling plastic. Some states are trying a new approach
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Should Big Oil Pick Up The Climate Change Bill?
Proof That House of the Dragon Season 2 Is Coming
Biden declares disaster in New Mexico wildfire zone