Tranquility Bay | |
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Location | |
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Coordinates | 17°52′14″N77°45′04″W / 17.87056°N 77.75111°W |
Information | |
School type | private |
Motto | "Working for the future of the world" |
Established | 1997 |
Closed | 2009 |
Director | Jay Kay |
Accreditation | Northwest Association of Accredited Schools |
Tuition | $40,000 [1] |
Affiliation | World Wide Association of Specialty Programs |
Tranquility Bay was a residential treatment facility affiliated with World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools (WWASPS), located in Calabash Bay, Saint Elizabeth Parish, Jamaica. [2] [3] The facility operated from 1997 to 2009 and received notoriety for its harsh and often abusive treatment of its students, eventually shutting down in 2009 after allegations of child abuse came to light through lawsuits and highly publicized student testimonies. [4] [2] The adolescents reported violence to their parents, only to be ignored. [5]
The director was Jay Kay, a college dropout with no training in child development who ran a mini-mart in San Diego, [4] [6] and who is son of WWASPS president Ken Kay. The cost for one child ranged from $25,000 to $40,000 a year. [7] Tranquility Bay was generally acknowledged as the toughest of the WWASPS schools. [8] As with other WWASPS facilities, Tranquility Bay has been the subject of much controversy, including allegations of torture, unsanitary living conditions, unqualified employees, and denial of medical care; [9] these claims have been the subject of multiple lawsuits from former Tranquility Bay residents. [10]
In 1998 was the focus of a legal case after neighbors of a family reported parents to police for kidnapping and false imprisonment by sending him to Tranquility Bay. [11] Judge Ken Kawaichi denied the writ of habeas corpus due to lack of evidence of abuse at Tranquility bay. [12]
Tranquility Bay stated that it was dedicated to helping parents who are having difficulty with their children, whether they are doing drugs, breaking the law, or being disobedient or disrespectful. In 2003, Kay said "if I have kids, and they start giving me a problem, well, they are going straight in the program. If I had to, I'd pull the trigger without hesitation"; [4] however, in 1999, Kay (who at that time was not working for WWASPS) said that the Tranquility Bay staff were "untrained", without "credentials of any kind", and that Tranquility Bay "could be leading these kids to long-term problems that we don't have a clue about because we're not going about it in the proper way". [13]
Children as young as 12 were admitted to Tranquility Bay, for reasons ranging from drug use to conflicts with a new stepmother. [13] From 2002 to 2005 the Government of the Cayman Islands sent some delinquent youth to Tranquility Bay; the government funded the students as they were located in Tranquility Bay. [14]
On the 7th of December 2004 the British Broadcasting Company aired a program on BBC Two called Locked in Paradise. [3]
Tranquility Bay was shut down in January 2009, [2] after the case of Isaac Hersh gained national media and political attention and years of alleged abuse and torture came to light. [15] Many politicians, including Hillary Clinton, were involved in Isaac's release.[ citation needed ]
Observation Placement was a punishment that could demote any student to level one and take away all their points. During Observation Placement, people were forced to lay down on their faces. Some people spent 18 months in this punishment. [16]
Tranquility bay used teen escort companies to facilitate the transportation of youths from the United States of America to their facility in Jamaica. This would normally take place in the early hours of the morning and often involved the use of handcuffs. [17]
The "Cassie" episode of the A&E program Intervention , first shown in January 2011, features a young woman addicted to prescription painkillers who had been sent to Tranquility Bay as a child and blamed her father for not rescuing her. [18] In the episode, Cassie alleged that her fellow residents consumed "chemicals" so they would be sent to the hospital and would be able to talk to their parents regarding the abuse they were enduring. However, she alleged that when they vomited in response to the poison, rather than being sent to a hospital, they were restrained by staff face down in their own vomit. [19]
The World Wide Association of Specialty Programs and Schools was an organization based in Utah, in the United States. WWASPS was founded by Robert Lichfield and was incorporated in 1998. WWASPS stated that it was an umbrella organization of independent institutions for education and treatment of troubled teenagers. Many outside observers believe, however, that the WWASPS-affiliated institutions were actually owned through limited partnerships, many of which have used the same street address by WWASPS or its principal officials or their close relatives. WWASPS is connected to several affiliated for-profit companies. These include Teen Help LLC, the marketing arm of WWASPS and the entity that processes admissions paperwork; Teen Escort Service, a teen escort company that transports teenagers to WWASPS facilities; R&B Billing, which does tuition billing and payment processing; and Premier Educational Systems, LLC, which conducts orientation and training workshops for parents whose children are in WWASPS facilities. WWASPS claims to have "helped" over 10,000 students with issues related to personal behavior. Some participants and parents give positive reports of their experiences, but others say that WWASPS programs were abusive. WWASPS has faced widespread allegations of physical and psychological abuse of the teenagers sent into its programs, resulting in a lawsuit filed against the organization in 2006. WWASPS officials report that the organization is no longer in business, and the facilities originally under it no longer associate with the name, but because of ongoing litigation, it has not been dissolved.
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Sure, he complained like hell at first,' he recalls fondly. 'Typical case of manipulation, just like they said in the handbook. He said the staff were mean and violent, they beat you, the food is terrible.
At a cost of between $25,000 (£13,000) and $40,000 (£20,800) a year, parents of unruly teenagers send their children here to learn how to behave.
After a neighbor filed a police report claiming that David had been kidnapped and falsely imprisoned, the Alameda County District Attorney's office petitioned to have David returned to California as a witness in his own case.
On Jan. 20, Alameda County Superior Court Judge Ken Kawaichi denied the writ of habeas corpus, noting that no evidence had been presented that David had been abused at Tranquility Bay.