15-year-old died at facility for troubled teens in 2004
Thayer home to pay $1 million in death
Steve Rock
Kansas City Star
March 10, 2006
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — More than 16 months after their son died at a northwest Missouri boarding school, Victor and Gracia Reyes settled their wrongful-death lawsuit on Thursday.
Thayer Learning Center, a home for troubled teens in Kidder, Mo., about 50 miles north of Kansas City, agreed to pay the Reyeses slightly more than $1 million. In addition, Thayer will establish a scholarship fund in memory of Roberto Reyes at Reyes’ California high school.
The two sides agreed to the settlement during a 30-minute hearing in Buchanan County Circuit Court.
Neither John nor Willa Bundy, who own Thayer, were at the hearing. Neither were the Reyeses, who live in California.
A prepared statement handed out by the Reyeses’ attorney after the hearing said: “Victor and Gracia Reyes have decided to resolve their claims for the wrongful death of their son, Roberto Reyes, the terms of which address concerns the Reyeses had about health and safety, and provide for a scholarship fund to be set up in Roberto’s local community.”
It is not clear how those health and safety concerns have been addressed, and attorneys for both parties refused to answer questions.
Court files suggest $1 million of the $1,050,000 settlement will be paid by a Thayer insurer.
During the hearing, the Reyeses’ attorney, James Thompson, told the judge that his clients thought the settlement was “fair and reasonable.”
“At a jury trial,” he said, “they realize they may have received more or may have received less.”
Roberto was 15 when he died in November 2004. He had been at Thayer for less than two weeks.
Roberto’s death has been attributed to a probable spider bite. A state child-welfare team conducted a lengthy investigation and concluded that Thayer apparently “failed … to provide access to appropriate medical evaluation and/or treatment” for Roberto. That report also said “interviews and evidence also suggest significant contradictions and possible deliberate falsification of written records.”
In court records, Thayer officials denied culpability in Roberto’s death and denied altering any records.
The Reyeses filed the wrongful-death suit in February 2005 and alleged that Roberto was subjected to physical exertion and abuse that caused or contributed to his death. The lawsuit alleged that Roberto would have lived had he received competent medical care in a timely manner and that he was dragged, hit, placed into solitary confinement and “forced to lay in his own excrement for extended periods of time.”
In court records, Thayer officials denied those and other allegations.
The lawsuit named seven defendants: Thayer, two affiliated businesses and four persons who were Thayer employees at the time of Roberto’s death.
The case file swelled almost immediately and, as of Thursday, contained hundreds of pages. It is clear from court filings that the plaintiffs were trying to establish a pattern of medical neglect at Thayer, saying in one filing that Thayer’s “historical denial of appropriate medical care and treatment to students” would likely be the case’s “central issue.”
Some allegations from a September 2005 filing:
A student was put in isolation with a sandbag tied or taped to each hand for approximately 11 hours. He never saw a doctor, despite deep gouges in his flesh.
After a boy drank a gallon of bleach in a suicide attempt, he was not allowed medical care.
A student had a fever of 102 degrees and then 104.7 degrees but was never taken to a doctor.
Plaintiffs’ attorneys wrote: “There can, perhaps, be no more tragic event than the failure to provide adequate care and medical treatment to minor children. Thayer engaged in such conduct before and after Roberto Reyes’ death. Other incidents … are both relative and probative of the issues in plaintiffs’ petition.”
Thayer attorneys called such allegations “sensational” and “unsubstantiated.”
The case had been scheduled to go to trial in June.
To reach Steve Rock, call (816) 234-4338 or send e-mail to srock@kcstar.com .
Prosecutor: Boot camp won’t face charges
Steve Rock
Kansas City Star
October 2, 2005
KIDDER, Mo. — Eleven months after the death of a 15-year-old
resident of a home for troubled teens, the local prosecutor said he
doesn’t expect to file criminal charges.
Yet questions persist about the death of Roberto Reyes and
previous unrelated allegations of child abuse at Thayer Learning
Center.
Caldwell County Prosecutor Jason Kanoy said he’s not convinced
any criminal abuse or neglect was involved in the death of Roberto,
a Californian who had been at the northwest Missouri military-type
boarding school for less than two weeks. His death was attributed to
a spider bite.
“The question boils down to: ‘Did somebody commit a crime to
cause his death?’ … As of right now, I just haven’t seen that
sticking out like a sore thumb,” said Kanoy, who admits his
investigation was hampered by lack of access to the private
facility.
In a response to a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Roberto’s
parents, Thayer’s owners, John and Willa Bundy, denied wrongdoing.
In a statement submitted to The Kansas City Star shortly
after Roberto’s death, Thayer officials said general allegations of
abuse were “ludicrous and false.”
The Bundys, who opened Thayer in mid-2002, have not responded to
several recent interview requests. But an attorney for Thayer,
Rhonda Smiley, said in a Sept. 22 letter faxed to The Star
that “Thayer chooses to try the facts of this lawsuit in the
appropriate forum, not in the newspaper.” She called the allegations
unsubstantiated.
Despite Kanoy’s reluctance to file charges, he said it “sounds
like there’s (civil) negligence all over the place” in Roberto’s
case.
A five-month investigation by The Star found that:
■ According to a state investigative report, a former Thayer
student said that Roberto had been “almost lifeless” for several
days before his death. Two former students told The Star that
Roberto had barely moved when they saw him in the days before he
died. And a business owner who installed surveillance equipment at
Thayer told The Star that Roberto had been unable to climb a
short staircase the day before he died.
■ A state investigative team said “it appears that those
responsible for the safety and well-being of Roberto Reyes failed to
recognize his medical distress and to provide access to appropriate
medical evaluation and/or treatment.” A panel of county and state
officials previously had determined that earlier medical treatment
“may have prevented this fatality.”
■ Two local experts in spider-bite care told The Star
that, in a combined 51 years of experience, they had never seen
a spider bite induce the condition that killed Roberto.
■ Police reports reviewed by The Star show that since
April 2003 at least seven persons had reported more than a dozen
allegations of child abuse at Thayer to the Caldwell County
sheriff’s office.
■ Kanoy has asked the attorney general’s office to assist in a
criminal investigation of the alleged abuse of more than a dozen
students.
After looking at police reports and portions of the state
investigative report on Roberto’s death, Johnson County District
Attorney Paul Morrison said, “If half of what some of these people
say is true, then there are some serious problems there that I think
would probably allow for some criminal justice system
intervention.”
Kanoy said he hasn’t filed charges against anybody at Thayer
because some allegations don’t rise to abuse, some can’t be proved
and others simply aren’t credible. And investigations at Thayer are
difficult, he said, because under state law, private facilities that
provide care “in conjunction with an educational program” are exempt
from state licensing and regulation.
“We can’t get in the front door,” Kanoy said.
Since Roberto’s death, The Star has spoken with 14 former
Thayer employees, 18 former students and the parents of 10 other
former students.
Many of those students have troubled pasts, but their
descriptions of life at Thayer generally were consistent.
Many of those students, as well as many parents and former
employees contacted, noted a reluctance by Thayer officials to seek
medical attention for sick or injured children. Many characterized
the rigorous exercise regimen as capricious at best, sadistic at
worst. Some described painful punitive measures.
Anjani Vyas, 18, of Pennsylvania, who attended Thayer from
December 2003 until November 2004, said she had suffered through a
stomach virus without getting medical care and had been forced to
stand with her legs bent and her back against a wall for long
periods.
“My right knee still hurts to this day,” Vyas said. “I hated
being there.”
Roberto’s death
A state social services investigative team spent more than four
months examining Roberto’s death, then sent its findings to
Kanoy.
The team’s report criticized the lack of medical treatment in
Roberto’s case and included written testimony from a 16-year-old
former student who currently lives in Florida. According to the
report, he told a state investigator that Roberto sometimes couldn’t
stand on his own to clean up after he had defecated on himself, that
Thayer officials had dragged Roberto up steps and that he had seen
dark bruising all over Roberto’s upper body before he died.
That student wrote that Roberto had been so lifeless he could not
get off the floor to lie on a nearby cot. He also wrote that he had
told a Thayer employee that the school “would be in a lot of trouble
if a cop saw this.”
“I will be happy to speak to you anytime about more details,” the
student wrote.
The student’s mother, Carol Rickless, asked that her son’s name
not be used. She said she had contacted the state investigator, but
her family has not been questioned since then by law enforcement or
state officials.
In their wrongful-death lawsuit, filed in Buchanan County Circuit
Court, Victor and Gracia Reyes alleged that Roberto’s failing health
“would have been present for a significant period of time prior to
his death” and that he would have survived had he received
competent, timely medical care.
In court records, Thayer officials denied those and other
allegations. The case is scheduled to go to trial in June.
The autopsy report identifies “complications of rhabdomyolysis”
as the cause of death. It says the rhabdomyolysis, a breakdown of
muscle fibers, probably was due to a spider or insect bite.
But Steven Simpson, a pulmonary and critical care physician at
University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kan., and an expert in
spider-bite care, said the mortality rate for spider bites is
“exceedingly rare.” He said that if a bite was life-threatening, the
person likely would be unusually sick within 24 hours.
Simpson also said that, in 16 years of practice, he had never
heard of a spider bite inducing rhabdomyolysis. From his experience,
the primary cause of rhabdomyolysis is lying motionless or even
comatose for a lengthy period.
Another less-common cause of rhabdomyolysis is dehydration and
over-exertion triggered by excessive physical activity, he said.
Gary Wasserman, a physician and chief of medical toxicology at
Children’s Mercy Hospital, has written chapters on brown recluse
spider bites for three toxicology textbooks. He wouldn’t discuss
Roberto’s case specifically, but speaking in general terms, said he
had dealt with hundreds of spider-bite cases in 35 years and
couldn’t recall a single one in which a bite had triggered
rhabdomyolysis.
“It’s not impossible,” Wasserman said. “But it would be very
unusual.”
Miguel Laboy, the physician who performed the autopsy for the
Jackson County medical examiner’s office, said the diagnosis was
based on toxicology tests and other factors. He said he identified
“an area of ulceration on the skin with infection, with
inflammation” that was the likely location of the spider bite.
Police and autopsy reports also referred to several abrasions and
bruises on Roberto’s body.
The state’s investigative report quoted witnesses who said
Roberto had struggled to keep up with the rigorous exercise regimen
during his short stay at Thayer. Some witnesses said he had
complained of sore muscles or needed assistance walking and at times
used other people as “a crutch.” It also said that, according to one
witness, Roberto was forced to carry around a 20-pound bag of sand
shortly after he had gotten to Thayer.
Two former students told The Star that Roberto looked
normal shortly after his arrival. His parents sent him to Thayer
after he had struggled with grades and run away from home.
Erik Ayers of South Carolina said Roberto had “looked horrible”
as long as five days before he died.
“You could tell something was wrong,” said Erik, 15. “He really
needed help.”
James Young, 17, of Oregon, said he had seen Roberto “probably
three times” over two or three days.
“He was just lying there, like sleeping, all day,” James
said.
Bill Sanders, who operates Security Protection Systems and
Sanders Private Investigations in Paola, Kan., said he was hired by
Willa Bundy in October to install surveillance equipment at Thayer.
Sanders said he was paid more than $100,000, and that he and Willa
Bundy have a dispute about an outstanding balance of about
$3,000.
Sanders remembered seeing Roberto after he had collapsed at the
bottom of some stairs. As school officials ordered him to get up,
Sanders said, “Roberto was literally trying to climb up the stairs
on his arms. He just couldn’t do it.”
Roberto was helped to the top of the stairs, Sanders said,
collapsed again, then was walked to the dining hall by fellow
students and school officials.
The next day, Sanders said he saw Roberto lying on the floor as
three or four school officials berated him shortly before lunch.
Roberto was eventually picked up and placed on a cot in a small
room, Sanders said. Sanders walked into the room at least twice to
work, he said, and “never saw him move once.”
Police reports said that on Nov. 3, Thayer officials found
Roberto unresponsive and began performing CPR. They called 911 at
3:32 p.m., and Roberto was pronounced dead on arrival at Cameron
Regional Medical Center about an hour later.
In interview excerpts in the state’s investigative report, the
Bundys and some Thayer employees said they didn’t know or didn’t
think Reyes had been sick before he died. One witness said Roberto
appeared lazy, and another said he had had a bad attitude.
Records questions
The investigative report also said that interviews and evidence
“suggest significant contradictions and possible deliberate
falsification of written records” by Thayer officials. In court
records, Thayer officials denied altering any written records, which
were kept by Thayer staff about various students and their
activities.
Kanoy said there were some “alarming” elements in the state
report.
“I think we have a decent idea of how this child spent the last
five or six days of his life. … I think he was in a world of hurt,”
Kanoy said. “I think he was in an unfamiliar place with unfamiliar
people who may not have been treating him as nicely as he would
like. I think he may have been in pain. I certainly think he was
uncomfortable.
“ … Do I think there’s all kinds of fodder for a lawsuit? You
bet.”Both Morrison and Kent Gipson, a criminal defense attorney and
adjunct professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School
of Law, were alarmed at reports that Roberto hadn’t received prompt
medical attention.
“That’s particularly troubling,” Morrison said.
Gipson said, “My impression is: It looks like there is certainly
enough there that a prosecutor could file charges if he wanted
to.”
But he added that prosecutors “have almost unfettered discretion.
Obviously, there are some disputed things. … It would be hard for me
to categorically or unequivocally criticize a guy for not filing
charges based on what I know.”
For former Thayer employee Kim Gertz, who has some fond memories
of Thayer, it wasn’t just Roberto’s death that he found so
unsettling. According to the state report, he didn’t witness any
physical abuse of students but wrote in a statement: “What strikes
me most about my experience at Thayer is that after Roberto’s death,
no one seemed particularly concerned, and policy was not changed.
…
“I am convinced that I was terminated because of my raising the
issue of (inadequate) medical care.”
Other allegations
Allegations of abuse and medical neglect began trickling out of
Thayer long before Roberto died, according to police reports.
They came from students like Brittany Herrmann, who wrote in a
complaint to the sheriff’s office in April 2003: “I have been
dragged outside on the ground by my wrists after being pushed down
by a sergeant. I have scrapes and bruises all over me, particularly
on my arms and legs. … I am very scared in writing this, for fear of
further abuse. … There’s much more going on with other kids.”
Herrmann, now 18 and living in Texas, said recently by phone, “It
totally blows my mind that a place like that can continue to run
despite the complaints that have been filed.”
Theodore Rights, a Hamilton, Mo., doctor who saw Herrmann for a
possible urinary tract infection, wrote in a statement to sheriff’s
deputies: “(Herrmann’s) hysterical cries were that she was afraid of
what they would do to her if she went back. She wanted protection.”
Rights told The Star he had seen no signs of physical abuse
on Herrmann but he wrote to sheriff’s deputies, “I have witnessed
evidence of neglected medical problems in two other cases.”
In January 2005, former Thayer student Elizabeth Ramirez, 15, of
California faxed to the sheriff’s department several allegations,
including:
■ A student was “taken down” and said, “I can’t breathe,” as her
face turned red and purple.
■ A girl’s gums began to bleed because she was forced to brush
her teeth for four hours.
■ Students were denied medical attention for things such as
infections.
She also sent the allegations to a state investigator.
Reached recently by phone, Ramirez said, “(Thayer) didn’t help me
at all. I think it’s evil.”
Some allegations have come from employees.
According to the state report, former Thayer Director Gail
Ledesma said she once got into trouble with John Bundy for having a
student with a swollen and infected knee taken to a doctor. Another
time, she was denied permission by John Bundy to take three girls to
the doctor because, Bundy told her, the students would run away if
they got the chance.
Kris Kessinger and two other Thayer employees went to the
sheriff’s office in May 2004 and outlined an array of allegations
involving more than a dozen students:
■ A drill sergeant was “helping” a student do push-ups, causing
the student’s head to bounce off the concrete.
■ A student was tied up and dragged around a sand track behind an
all-terrain vehicle.
■ Students weren’t allowed to use the rest room and,
consequently, suffered bladder infections, kidney infections and
constipation.
Two of the three women said they were fired almost immediately,
and they thought it was because they had contacted law enforcement.
They said the third woman also was fired, but she could not be
reached for comment.
Sheriff’s Deputy Donald Fuller said he found the women’s reports
credible.
Fuller asked Kanoy to subpoena medical records that might
substantiate the allegations. In a report he submitted to Kanoy,
later included in the Reyes lawsuit, Fuller wrote, “I have a
reasonable belief … the crime of abuse of a child has been committed
at Thayer Learning Center.”
Kanoy said he subpoenaed records of Thayer students from Renee
Claycamp, a Hamilton, Mo., physician. It’s in connection with those
allegations that Kanoy, 31, the sole prosecutor in his office, asked
for assistance from the state attorney general.
“We’ll work with the prosecutor in determining whether there’s
sufficient evidence to file charges,” said Scott Holste, a spokesman
for Attorney General Jay Nixon. “But that decision will rest with
Mr. Kanoy, ultimately.”
Claycamp’s office referred calls to attorney Ed Proctor in
Liberty. Proctor, who previously represented Thayer, said Claycamp
was cooperating with the investigation.
Kanoy said his office takes abuse allegations at Thayer
seriously. But some allegations don’t name the victims or are
second- or third-hand reports. He’s not sure others constitute
criminal behavior. One report, for example, says a girl was forced
to sit in a plastic tub of urine for at least 2½ hours.
“That’s disturbing,” Kanoy said.
But is it child abuse?
“I don’t know,” he said.
There are also reports about kids being pushed and dragged.
“When you’re trying to motivate somebody who’s very obstinate,
very anti-establishment, is pushing them and dragging them abuse?”
Kanoy asked. “Personally, I don’t think so.”
Kessinger though is haunted by the memories of what she saw at
Thayer. Now a full-time nursing student, she worked at Thayer from
November 2003 until May 2004.
“I knew in my heart I’d be having this conversation one day about
a child dying,” Kessinger said.
Lax regulation
Some provisions in Missouri law allow certain individuals to
safeguard children if abuse is suspected. But other laws are so lax
that it’s difficult for state agencies to afford protection to
children in private facilities such as Thayer.
For example, law enforcement officials and physicians who have
reasonable cause to suspect that a child is suffering from illness
or injury or is in danger of personal harm may request that a
juvenile officer take a child into protective custody. A law
enforcement official or a physician also can take temporary
protective custody of a child but only if there is reasonable cause
to believe the child “is in imminent danger of suffering serious
physical harm or a threat to life as a result of abuse or
neglect.”
The Department of Social Services, however, cannot make
unannounced visits to private facilities or remove children without
a court order. And the Department of Elementary and Secondary
Education has no oversight over private schools.
State social-service workers don’t have the authority to speak to
students on demand, and they can’t shut down an unlicensed
facility.
Officials with the Division of Children’s Services investigate
allegations of child abuse and neglect with law-enforcement agencies
and officers of the juvenile court. But even sheriff’s deputies have
been turned away at Thayer, Caldwell County Sheriff Kirby Brelsford
said.
Kanoy said, “There has to be a search warrant to get in the front
door, or consent.” He’s been inside Thayer on one occasion, he said,
but “consent has never been given” pursuant to any investigations.
He said state officials “kind of get stonewalled” at Thayer, and
that he’s never had sufficient evidence to pursue a search
warrant.
In a statement submitted to The Star in December 2004,
Thayer officials said, “No state agency or law enforcement agency
has substantiated any improper activity at Thayer. These agencies
have scrutinized Thayer frequently over the past 2½ years and found
any and all allegations unsubstantiated or unfounded.”
Brelsford said that, most of the time, Thayer officials
eventually let officers see the students in question. But it’s often
several hours later, and sometimes he’s been told that the students
are no longer at Thayer.
He’d like to see legislation enacted that would force schools
such as Thayer to be licensed and regulated by the state.
“I’d love to be able to go to that door and walk in whenever I
need to,” Brelsford said.
But Missouri is hardly alone with its lax licensing
requirements.
U.S. Rep. George Miller, a California Democrat, is so concerned
about the troubled-teen industry nationwide that he has introduced
legislation that would provide more monitoring of facilities such as
Thayer. The End Institutional Abuse Against Children Act would,
among other things, provide $50 million to states to support the
licensing of child residential treatment programs. A spokesman in
his office estimated that there were hundreds of unlicensed
facilities throughout the United States and that only about a dozen
states — Florida, Michigan and Pennsylvania, among them — have any
type of licensing requirements.
The Washington, D.C.-based Child Welfare League of America
submitted a letter to Congress in August urging the Government
Accountability Office to conduct a nationwide investigation. It
urged Congress “to take action to ensure the safety of the children”
and said “allegations of neglect and abuse at many of these programs
include … the employment of vigorous physical means of restraint or
individual seclusion or isolation.”
The letter also said, “Since there is little public oversight of
these residential programs and camps for troubled children and
youth, we do not yet know the full scope of the problem.”
The Child Fatality Review Panel, composed of county and state
officials and charged with looking into all child deaths in the
state, addressed the lack of state oversight in its final report on
Roberto’s death: “The panel feels appropriate legislation dealing
with access to the facility by juvenile authorities, social services
and law enforcement should be enacted to help remedy the lack of
cooperation.”
State Sen. Pat Dougherty, a St. Louis Democrat who has proposed
legislation in the past that would regulate schools such as Thayer,
said he doesn’t expect Roberto’s death to be a catalyst for
legislative change “unless there’s a lot of public outcry.”
“Missouri legislators should step up to the plate and engage this
and find a solution,” Dougherty said. “But it’s so easy to push it
back and to ignore it, because people jump up and cry, ‘Here’s big
government again.’ ”
Sen. Matt Bartle, a Lee’s Summit Republican, said state
intervention wasn’t necessarily a cure-all. “A lot of times, I
think, state licensing gives the appearance of oversight, and the
reality is: There’s very little,” he said.
Sue Warner of Connecticut, whose son attended Thayer for four
months in 2003, said Missourians needed to wake up. She submitted a
lengthy letter to the Missouri attorney general’s office two years
ago, outlining various complaints:
■ Her son hadn’t received medical care for his injuries.
■ She hadn’t been advised that Thayer and Parent Help, the
referral service that recommended Thayer, were both owned by the
Bundys.
■ The academics of the program were “inaccurately and
inconsistently communicated.”
Nothing ever came of her complaints, she said.
“I’m far away, obviously, but it’s become obvious to me that
people (in Missouri) almost have their hands over their ears and
their eyes and don’t want to know,” Warner said. “I think that’s a
travesty.”
The Star’s Scott Canon contributed to this
report.
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