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   alt.war.civil.usa      Discussing American civil war.. and 2.0      44,057 messages   

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   Message 43,661 of 44,057   
   It's Africoon Month Again! to All   
   Patient at Chicago area mental health fa   
   16 Feb 25 02:08:42   
   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns, chi.politics, alt.abortion   
   XPost: sac.politics   
   From: noreply@mixmin.net   
      
   LEMONT, Ill. (CBS) – A patient at a women's mental health facility in   
   southwest suburban Lemont was repeatedly raped by an employee while undergoing   
   treatment, a new lawsuit alleges.   
      
   The 24-year-old, listed as Jane Doe, sought treatment for bipolar disorder,   
   borderline personality disorder, and suicidal thoughts, according to the   
   lawsuit filed by firms Meyers & Flowers and Clark Frost Zucchi. She was a   
   patient at Timberline Knolls, a    
   nationally recognized residential treatment center for women and adolescent   
   girls over 12 with eating disorders, trauma, substance abuse disorders and   
   other mental health issues.   
      
   "She thought she could get help there, be in a safe environment, and be with   
   licensed therapists," attorney Pete Flower said.   
      
   Doe checked into Timberline Knolls in May 2024. Within days, an employee named   
   Erick Hampton, who was in charge of transporting her and other patients around   
   the facility, took advantage of that role and sexually assaulted her on three   
   different    
   occasions, according to the lawsuit.   
      
   Hampton would isolate her and told Doe to go into a private room where   
   patients use telecommunication devices to contact loved ones and raped her,   
   according to the suit. That same day, he forced her and attacked her again.   
      
   Doe said she told her roommate about the attacks, who reported it to a staff   
   member, who failed to act on that report promptly, said Flowers.   
      
   The lawsuit also alleged that a Timberline Knolls staff member woke Doe up in   
   the middle of the night and accused her of having a "secret affair" with a   
   staff member and that it was captured on security cameras.   
      
   Doe checked out of Timberline Knolls a few days later out of fear, according   
   to the lawsuit. She was at the treatment center for less than two weeks.   
      
   Flowers said Doe is worse off now than before seeking treatment at Timberline   
   and that the alleged assaults left her damaged.   
      
   On their website, Timberline Knolls claims that staff are trained to have a   
   "trauma-informed approach" and use "an approach to care that addresses deeply   
   rooted experiences that may have prevented you from healing."   
      
   "The trauma associated with this…it's going to take years of therapy for her   
   to ever trust anymore," Flowers said. "She didn't get the treatment she needed   
   for issues that existed before, and now she has a whole new set of issues."   
      
   Doe is now receiving treatment elsewhere.   
      
   "The state needs to intervene and figure out what's going on there," Flowers   
   said.   
      
   A record of 911 calls for service to the facility obtained by the CBS News   
   Chicago Investigators showed dozens of calls related to criminal sexual abuse   
   or sexual assault since 2018.   
      
   On at least eight occasions since 2020, the Lemont Police Department received   
   reports from patients saying they had been sexually assaulted or abused, many   
   of which involved juveniles.   
      
   It's not just allegations. In 2019, Timberline Knolls counselor Mike Jacksa   
   was charged with sexually abusing six different women at Timberline Knolls.   
   He's required to register as a sex offender.   
      
   Back in 2019, Timberline Knolls said the Mike Jacksa cases were isolated.   
      
   "This is a systemic issue at Timberline. It shows when private equity money   
   gets in to healthcare, all they're really concerned about is making money,"   
   Flowers said.   
      
   Hampton has not been charged criminally.   
      
   More victims have come forward since the lawsuit, according to Flowers.   
      
   Neither Timberline Knolls or its parent company, Acadia Healthcare, responded   
   to our multiple requests for comment on this story.   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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