Current:Home > InvestHundreds sue over alleged sexual abuse in Illinois youth detention centers -VitalWealth Strategies
Hundreds sue over alleged sexual abuse in Illinois youth detention centers
View
Date:2025-04-13 14:25:54
CHICAGO (AP) — More than 200 men and women were sexually abused as children while in custody at juvenile detention centers in Illinois, according to lawsuits filed Monday, the latest in a string of complaints alleging decades of systemic child sex abuse.
Three lawsuits filed Monday detail abuse from 1996 to 2021, including rape, forced oral sex and beatings by corrections officers, nurses, kitchen staff, chaplains and others.
“The State of Illinois has caused and permitted a culture of sexual abuse to flourish unabated in its Illinois Youth Center facilities,” one lawsuit said, adding that Illinois has “overwhelmingly failed to investigate complaints, report abusive staff, and protect youth inmates.”
Overall, 667 people have alleged they were sexually abused as children at youth facilities run by the state and Cook County in lawsuits filed since May.
They’re part of a wave of complaints with disturbing allegations at juvenile facilities across the U.S., including in Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, New Hampshire, California and New York. Few cases have gone to trial or resulted in settlements; arrests have been infrequent.
Illinois stands out for the magnitude of its problem.
“Of all the states in which we’ve been litigating, we are seeing some of the worst and highest numbers of cases of staff perpetrating sexual abuse compared to anywhere in the country,” said Jerome Block, a New York-based attorney whose office brought the lawsuits in Illinois and several other states.
Monday’s complaints, based on the accounts of 272 people, name several repeat offenders. A handful have been convicted of sex crimes but not stemming from the accusations in the lawsuits. At least one employee accused in a lawsuit filed Monday still works for the state, according to state records.
The lawsuit with the largest number of plaintiffs, 222 men and women who are mostly Illinois residents, details abuse at nine state-run youth detention centers, of which five have since closed. The accounts documented in the complaint’s more than 400 pages are hauntingly similar.
Many said their abusers threatened them with beatings, solitary confinement, transfers to harsher facilities and longer sentences if they reported the abuse. Others were given extra food, cigarettes and rewards like the chance to play videos games if they kept quiet.
Most abusers are identified only as the survivors remembered them, including by physical descriptions, first names or nicknames.
Several plaintiffs independently described sexual and physical abuse from a chaplain at state facility in the Chicago suburb of St. Charles.
The chaplain would isolate children — including in his church office, their rooms or the gym — before forcing oral sex and other abuse, according to the lawsuit. In one instance, he told a teenager that “his friends ‘wouldn’t look at him the same’ if they knew.”
Most accusers are identified by initials in the complaints, though several have spoken out publicly. A news conference featuring survivors was planned for Tuesday.
The lawsuit covering state-run facilities names the state and the Illinois Department of Corrections and Department of Juvenile Justice as defendants. A spokesman for Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker declined to comment Monday, citing pending litigation. State agency officials didn’t immediately return requests for comment Monday.
The lawsuit, filed in the Illinois Court of Claims, seeks damages of roughly $2 million per plaintiff, the most allowed under law.
Another lawsuit, focusing on a troubled Chicago youth detention facility, was filed in Cook County court and names the county.
It covers allegations from 50 men and women who were in custody at the Juvenile Temporary Detention Center. It said many instances of abuse took place during unlawful strip searches.
Children were as young as 11 when they were abused, according to the lawsuit, which seeks damages of more than $100,000 per plaintiff. Some of the 50 plaintiffs are seeking more damages in a third lawsuit filed Monday in the Illinois Court of Claims.
The Juvenile Temporary Detention Center, where children are held before their cases are adjudicated, has faced issues for years and calls for closure. A class-action lawsuit in 1999 alleged a lack of medical care, dirty conditions, overcrowding, understaffing and excessive use of room confinement. In 2007, state law stripped the county of its authority to run the center and gave it to the Office of the Chief Judge.
One person said he was 15 when he was sexually abused nearly every night during his 90-day stay.
“Cook County has had notice of such abuse for decades and nonetheless neglected to protect its confined youth from sexual abuse and failed to implement policies necessary to ensure such protection,” the lawsuit said. “It furthermore employed individuals it knew or should have known would sexually abuse juveniles in its care and custody.”
Officials with the Office of the Chief Judge and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle declined to comment Monday, citing pending litigation.
veryGood! (111)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Sentencing postponed for Mississippi police officers who tortured 2 Black men
- North West Proves She's Following in Parents Kim Kardashian and Kanye West's Footsteps in Rare Interview
- Two Missouri men accused of assaulting officers during riot at the U.S. Capitol charged
- A New York Appellate Court Rejects a Broad Application of the State’s Green Amendment
- North West, Penelope Disick and Their Friends Bring Girl Power to Halloween as the Cheetah Girls
- 'Live cluster bomblet', ammunition found in Goodwill donation, Wisconsin police say
- Senior Chinese official visits Myanmar for border security talks as fighting rages in frontier area
- Your Wedding Guests Will Thank You if You Get Married at These All-Inclusive Resorts
- Vikings trade for QB Joshua Dobbs after Kirk Cousins suffers torn Achilles
Ranking
- Olympic disqualification of gold medal hopeful exposes 'dark side' of women's wrestling
- 3-month-old found dead after generator emitted toxic gas inside New Orleans home, police say
- Hate crime charges filed in death of Sikh man after New York City fender bender
- Live updates | Foreign passport holders enter Rafah crossing
- How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
- Closing arguments next in FTX founder Sam Bankman’s fraud trial after his testimony ends
- Prosecutors: Supreme Court decision closes door on criminal prosecutions in Flint water scandal
- In 'White Holes,' Carlo Rovelli takes readers beyond the black hole horizon
Recommendation
British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
'The Voice': Niall Horan gets teary-eyed with Team Reba singer Dylan Carter's elimination
Henry Winkler on being ghosted by Paul McCartney, that 'baloney' John Travolta 'Grease' feud
See Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt’s Incredible Halloween Costume With Sons Gunner and Ryker
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Eerie new NASA image shows ghostly cosmic hand 16,000 light-years from Earth
20-year-old Jordanian national living in Texas allegedly trained with weapons to possibly commit an attack, feds say
Sam Bankman-Fried took a big risk by testifying in his own trial. It did not go well