Popular on TelAve
- Conexwest: Shipping Containers Are Powering the Next Generation of Bitcoin Mining Infrastructure
- Quadcode Acquires Significant Stake in Game 7, LLC - The Parent Company for FPFX Tech and PropAccount.com
- New Book Warring From the Standpoint of the Throne Room Calls Believers to Pray From Victory
- At 25, She Became One of the Youngest AAPI Female Founders to Win One of the World's Most Prestigious Design Awards for a Lamp That Makes You Smile
- $6 Million Funding Secured as Retail Expansion, Operational Streamlining, and Asset-Light Strategy Position the Company for Accelerated Growth $SOWG
- Pager Call Systems Joins The Brighton Technologies Group Family
- Simpalm Staffing Services Launched its Refreshed Website for Remote Staffing Services
- HRC Fertility to Celebrate Grand Opening of New Beverly Hills Location During National Infertility Awareness Week
- Revenue Optics Launches Talent Infrastructure Platform for SaaS Revenue Hiring and Appoints Sabz Kaur to Lead Growth
- Custom Wooden Token Manufacturer Celebrates 10 Years of Helping Brands Stay Top of Mind
Similar on TelAve
- purelyIV Launches Lab Testing Services in Metro Detroit
- NRx Pharmaceuticals Could Be on the Verge of a Breakout Year as AI, FDA Catalysts, and Mental Health Demand Converge
- CCHR: Psychiatric Drugs Fuel Rising Death Toll: National Adverse Drug Event Awareness Day Confronts America's Medication Crisis
- SelfCare is now HealthCare across America
- LiposoMore™ Redefines Bioavailability: Joyful Nutritional Launches High-Performance Liposomal Vitamin C and Iron for the Global Supplement Market
- The Inner Power of Emotional Self-Leadership
- Understanding Unexpected Death: Why Independent Autopsies Matter in Cases Without Clear Cause
- Epic Pictures Group Sets North American Release Date for the Thriller NO ORDINARY HEIST
- Newborn Care Network Introduces Clinical Standard to Bridge the Six-Week Postpartum Gap
- Compliance Alert: Maryland, Texas Regulate Use of Artificial Intelligence in Utilization Reviews
Paris Hilton, Congress Praised for Teen Behavioral Treatment Abuse Prevention
TelAve News/10850065
Congress passed the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act, championed by Paris Hilton. CCHR says the law sets a precedent for protecting youth from psychiatric-behavioral restraints and other abuses, using strong oversight.
LOS ANGELES - TelAve -- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, a mental health industry watchdog based in Los Angeles, praised media personality, businesswoman and mother, Paris Hilton, her movement exposing "troubled teen" abuse, and members of Congress for the recent passage of the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act. The federal law, championed by Ms. Hilton and supported by CCHR and many other groups, passed unanimously through the U.S. Senate and by a vote of 373 to 33 in the House. On Christmas Eve, the President signed into law the much-needed oversight measures aimed at protecting children from behavioral and psychiatric abuse in institutional care.[1] It marks a monumental children's human rights achievement for 2024.
Representatives Ro Khanna (CA), Earl L. "Buddy" Carter (GA), along with Senators Jeff Merkley (OR), John Cornyn (TX), and Tommy Tuberville (AL), were joined by Ms. Hilton in celebrating the passage of the Act in the House. "Children across the country are at risk of abuse and neglect due to a lack of transparency in institutional youth treatment programs. The industry has gone unchecked for too long," said Rep. Khanna. "We need some more sunlight on these facilities so we can put a stop to the waste, and the fraud, and abuse in the system. I'm proud to support the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act and stand with our kids," said Senator Tommy Tuberville.[2] Senator Cornyn stated, "Some children in residential youth programs have faced unimaginable abuse and neglect, and I am proud to have introduced this legislation to help ensure institutional child abuse comes to an end."[3]
Hilton, who is vocal about the abuse she experienced while, as a teen, attending a Utah behavioral facility owned by a since bankrupted for-profit behavioral treatment company, shared a message about the news on Instagram. "After years of sharing my story and advocating on Capitol Hill, the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act has officially passed the U.S Congress," she said. "This moment is proof that our voices matter, that speaking out can spark change, and that no child should ever endure the horrors of abuse in silence. I did this for the younger version of myself and the youth who were senselessly taken from us by the Troubled Teen Industry."[4]
More on TelAve News
She added, "To the countless survivors who shared their stories, to the families who stood with us, and to the coalition, thank you from the bottom of my heart for standing with me. To the legislators who chose courage over complacency and fought for me: you've made my dream come true."
The act aims to study and ultimately help prevent child abuse in youth residential programs. Not later than 45 days after the date of enactment, the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall seek to enter into a contract with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to conduct a study to examine the state of youth in youth residential programs and make recommendations. A report on the findings is to be issued within three years, identifying the "nature, prevalence, severity, and scope of child abuse, neglect, and deaths in youth residential programs, including types of abuse and neglect, causes of abuse, neglect, and deaths, and criteria used to assess abuse, neglect, and deaths." There is also to be identification of all Federal and State funding sources for youth residential programs, with recommendations for the improvement of oversight of youth residential programs receiving Federal funding.[5]
CCHR is particularly encouraged by the study's focus on determining the "best practices to eliminate the use of physical, mechanical, and chemical restraint and seclusion," especially in light of the numerous horrific child and teen restraint-related deaths reported in recent years. In the U.S., 37.5% of child or adolescent inpatients in mental health facilities have been subjected to seclusion or restraint.[6]
Other celebrities such as Paris Jackson, Kat Von D, Collin Gosselin, and Chet Hanks, have spoken out about the trauma of being held against their will in behavioral facilities during their teens. Many residential treatment hospitals, owned by for-profit behavioral companies, have become a gravy train for investors in a $23 billion-a-year "child abuse" industry.[7]
In 2020, Hilton's compelling documentary, This is Paris, raised crucial public awareness about the industry. She, the #Breaking Code Silence movement, and others, including CCHR, have demanded reforms. As a teenager in 1999, Hilton spent 11 months in the Utah behavioral residential facility, where she alleges she was forced to take psychotropic drugs, placed in solitary confinement, and beaten—an experience that caused long-term trauma for her.
CCHR was instrumental in investigating and exposing the facility in the late 1990s. A year after Hilton left the facility, another for-profit behavioral company took ownership, which has since been plagued with allegations of abuse. Between 2003 and October 2020, CCHR reported at least 32 abuses in such facilities that related to sexual abuse, including several convictions of staff responsible. Other reported cases included 18 instances of abuse involving seclusion rooms or restraints use on children as young as six, three deaths, wrongful deaths, assaults, breaking a patient's arm and fracturing the nose of another, and at least six suicides that may have been preventable.[8]
More on TelAve News
"The multibillion-dollar troubled teen industry has been able to mislead parents, school districts, child welfare agencies and juvenile justice systems for decades," said Hilton. "The reason is a systemwide lack of transparency and accountability," which the new law would address.[9] Ms. Hilton also stated: "I want these places shut down."[10]
CCHR, established by the Church of Scientology and the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, professor of psychiatry, says the enactment of this federal law is vital to initiating stronger oversight and protections, ensuring that those who abuse children and youths in institutions are held accountable both criminally and civilly. CCHR also calls for tougher penalties, including the closure of institutions where systemic abuse is found. The 55-year advocacy group has received state and federal government resolutions and recognitions for its children's rights actions leading to protections against psychiatric abuse.
Sources:
[1] www.aol.com/biden-signs-50-bills-including-004152255.html
[2] khanna.house.gov/media/press-releases/khanna-merkley-cornyn-tuberville-and-carter-joined-paris-hilton-celebrating
[3] buddycarter.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=15293
[4] www.harpersbazaar.com/celebrity/latest/a63237313/paris-hilton-congress-passes-stop-institutional-child-abuse-act/
[5] www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/118/s1351/text/enr; www.today.com/popculture/paris-hilton-says-she-was-abused-boarding-school-teen-new-t190213
[6] www.crisisprevention.com/CPI/media/Media/Blogs/adverse-effects-associated-with-physical-restraint.pdf
[7] www.cchrint.org/2022/12/16/cchr-reviews-a-year-of-child-abuse-allegations-against-troubled-teen-behavioral-institutions/ citing www.breakingcodesilence.org/
[8] www.cchrint.org/2022/12/16/cchr-reviews-a-year-of-child-abuse-allegations-against-troubled-teen-behavioral-institutions/
[9] www.cchrint.org/2022/05/13/cchr-encourages-support-for-paris-hilton-congressional-child-abuse-reforms/, citing www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/paris-hilton-bill-troubled-teen-facilities-rcna3349
[10] people.com/tv/paris-hilton-opens-up-about-the-secret-terrifying-abuse-she-suffered-as-teen/
Representatives Ro Khanna (CA), Earl L. "Buddy" Carter (GA), along with Senators Jeff Merkley (OR), John Cornyn (TX), and Tommy Tuberville (AL), were joined by Ms. Hilton in celebrating the passage of the Act in the House. "Children across the country are at risk of abuse and neglect due to a lack of transparency in institutional youth treatment programs. The industry has gone unchecked for too long," said Rep. Khanna. "We need some more sunlight on these facilities so we can put a stop to the waste, and the fraud, and abuse in the system. I'm proud to support the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act and stand with our kids," said Senator Tommy Tuberville.[2] Senator Cornyn stated, "Some children in residential youth programs have faced unimaginable abuse and neglect, and I am proud to have introduced this legislation to help ensure institutional child abuse comes to an end."[3]
Hilton, who is vocal about the abuse she experienced while, as a teen, attending a Utah behavioral facility owned by a since bankrupted for-profit behavioral treatment company, shared a message about the news on Instagram. "After years of sharing my story and advocating on Capitol Hill, the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act has officially passed the U.S Congress," she said. "This moment is proof that our voices matter, that speaking out can spark change, and that no child should ever endure the horrors of abuse in silence. I did this for the younger version of myself and the youth who were senselessly taken from us by the Troubled Teen Industry."[4]
More on TelAve News
- NRx Pharmaceuticals Could Be on the Verge of a Breakout Year as AI, FDA Catalysts, and Mental Health Demand Converge
- DC Accounting Firm Offers Free Business CRM to Small Business Clients Alongside Weekly Bookkeeping Model
- CCHR: Psychiatric Drugs Fuel Rising Death Toll: National Adverse Drug Event Awareness Day Confronts America's Medication Crisis
- Explosive $10 Billion Counter-Drone Market with AI-Powered Defense Ecosystem: ZenaTech, Inc. (N A S D A Q: ZENA)
- High-Value Execution Phase Begins: Bitcoin Bancorp Ignites Texas Rollout of Digital Asset ATM Network: Bitcoin Bancorp (Stock Symbol: BCBC) $BCBC
She added, "To the countless survivors who shared their stories, to the families who stood with us, and to the coalition, thank you from the bottom of my heart for standing with me. To the legislators who chose courage over complacency and fought for me: you've made my dream come true."
The act aims to study and ultimately help prevent child abuse in youth residential programs. Not later than 45 days after the date of enactment, the Secretary of Health and Human Services shall seek to enter into a contract with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to conduct a study to examine the state of youth in youth residential programs and make recommendations. A report on the findings is to be issued within three years, identifying the "nature, prevalence, severity, and scope of child abuse, neglect, and deaths in youth residential programs, including types of abuse and neglect, causes of abuse, neglect, and deaths, and criteria used to assess abuse, neglect, and deaths." There is also to be identification of all Federal and State funding sources for youth residential programs, with recommendations for the improvement of oversight of youth residential programs receiving Federal funding.[5]
CCHR is particularly encouraged by the study's focus on determining the "best practices to eliminate the use of physical, mechanical, and chemical restraint and seclusion," especially in light of the numerous horrific child and teen restraint-related deaths reported in recent years. In the U.S., 37.5% of child or adolescent inpatients in mental health facilities have been subjected to seclusion or restraint.[6]
Other celebrities such as Paris Jackson, Kat Von D, Collin Gosselin, and Chet Hanks, have spoken out about the trauma of being held against their will in behavioral facilities during their teens. Many residential treatment hospitals, owned by for-profit behavioral companies, have become a gravy train for investors in a $23 billion-a-year "child abuse" industry.[7]
In 2020, Hilton's compelling documentary, This is Paris, raised crucial public awareness about the industry. She, the #Breaking Code Silence movement, and others, including CCHR, have demanded reforms. As a teenager in 1999, Hilton spent 11 months in the Utah behavioral residential facility, where she alleges she was forced to take psychotropic drugs, placed in solitary confinement, and beaten—an experience that caused long-term trauma for her.
CCHR was instrumental in investigating and exposing the facility in the late 1990s. A year after Hilton left the facility, another for-profit behavioral company took ownership, which has since been plagued with allegations of abuse. Between 2003 and October 2020, CCHR reported at least 32 abuses in such facilities that related to sexual abuse, including several convictions of staff responsible. Other reported cases included 18 instances of abuse involving seclusion rooms or restraints use on children as young as six, three deaths, wrongful deaths, assaults, breaking a patient's arm and fracturing the nose of another, and at least six suicides that may have been preventable.[8]
More on TelAve News
- UK Financial Ltd Tokenized LTNS 1, A $1.1 T Asset-Backed ERC-3643 Security Token with 11 On-Chain Contracts Verifying, Compliant Real-World Value
- SelfCare is now HealthCare across America
- Homeowner Prep Announces Strategic Language Shift: Replacing "Renters" with "Future Homeowners" to Inspire Wealth-Building Mindsets
- LiposoMore™ Redefines Bioavailability: Joyful Nutritional Launches High-Performance Liposomal Vitamin C and Iron for the Global Supplement Market
- GDE Tree Services Expands Operations into Sydney, NSW
"The multibillion-dollar troubled teen industry has been able to mislead parents, school districts, child welfare agencies and juvenile justice systems for decades," said Hilton. "The reason is a systemwide lack of transparency and accountability," which the new law would address.[9] Ms. Hilton also stated: "I want these places shut down."[10]
CCHR, established by the Church of Scientology and the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, professor of psychiatry, says the enactment of this federal law is vital to initiating stronger oversight and protections, ensuring that those who abuse children and youths in institutions are held accountable both criminally and civilly. CCHR also calls for tougher penalties, including the closure of institutions where systemic abuse is found. The 55-year advocacy group has received state and federal government resolutions and recognitions for its children's rights actions leading to protections against psychiatric abuse.
Sources:
[1] www.aol.com/biden-signs-50-bills-including-004152255.html
[2] khanna.house.gov/media/press-releases/khanna-merkley-cornyn-tuberville-and-carter-joined-paris-hilton-celebrating
[3] buddycarter.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=15293
[4] www.harpersbazaar.com/celebrity/latest/a63237313/paris-hilton-congress-passes-stop-institutional-child-abuse-act/
[5] www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/118/s1351/text/enr; www.today.com/popculture/paris-hilton-says-she-was-abused-boarding-school-teen-new-t190213
[6] www.crisisprevention.com/CPI/media/Media/Blogs/adverse-effects-associated-with-physical-restraint.pdf
[7] www.cchrint.org/2022/12/16/cchr-reviews-a-year-of-child-abuse-allegations-against-troubled-teen-behavioral-institutions/ citing www.breakingcodesilence.org/
[8] www.cchrint.org/2022/12/16/cchr-reviews-a-year-of-child-abuse-allegations-against-troubled-teen-behavioral-institutions/
[9] www.cchrint.org/2022/05/13/cchr-encourages-support-for-paris-hilton-congressional-child-abuse-reforms/, citing www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/paris-hilton-bill-troubled-teen-facilities-rcna3349
[10] people.com/tv/paris-hilton-opens-up-about-the-secret-terrifying-abuse-she-suffered-as-teen/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- Compliance Alert: Maryland, Texas Regulate Use of Artificial Intelligence in Utilization Reviews
- Colony Ridge Communities Celebrates Successful Soccer Season Kickoff with Families and Youth
- Blackfoot Communications Expands Into New Rural Digital Opportunity Fund With netElastic vBNG and CGNAT Networking Software
- NYC Composer/Educator Launches Debut Children's Book to Fantastic Reviews
- EFA Announces 2026 Editorial Rate Chart
- Red5 Taps PubNub to Power the Next Era of Real-Time Interactive Streaming
- Shoutout Joseph Neibich aka Nybyk
- Meet Joseph Neibich aka Joseph Nybyk of Beachwood Canyon
- LARUS Launches Business Continuity Framework for IPv4-Dependent Networks
- KeysCaribbean Offers 'Skip-the-Crowds' Savings With 15 Percent Off April Stays
- Supply & Demand Chain Executive Names Puga Sankara as Recipient of 2026 Pros to Know Award
- AI Disruption Meets Marine Scale: Off The Hook YS, Inc. (N Y S E American: OTH) Targets Breakout Growth with NextBoat Launch and Aggressive Expansion
- Targeting the Billion-Dollar U.S. Countermeasure Market With AI-Driven Biodefense Platform: Lunai Bioworks (N A S D A Q: LNAI)
- New Global Standard for Transparency Across Critical Resources and Energy Markets: SMX (Security Matters) PLC (N A S D A Q: SMX)
- Forced Psychiatric Hospitalization Fails Vulnerable People: CCHR Urges Repeal Amid Rising U.S. Policies
- Surging Into High-Performance AI With $AMD Partnership, Patent Expansion, and Strengthened Balance Sheet: Avalon GloboCare Corp. (N A S D A Q: ALBT)
- Kiko Nation Launches Mobile App to Modernize Livestock Management and Digital Animal Registry
- NEW MANAGEMENT BOOK: Creating a Joy-Centric Culture
- QuickTrack by Datalex Transforms Retail Promoter Management with Claude AI and Real-Time Insights
- Kaltra Introduces Seasonal Discounts on Replacement Coils for Carrier, York, and Trane Chillers
