Talk:Fells Acres Day Care Center
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This entire article is blatantly POV in support of the convicted.—Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.127.57.62 (talk • contribs)
- I strongly disagree. CWC 01:26, 14 July 2007 (UTC)
- I agree that the POV is too pro-Amirault. Someone should make it more neutral by considering the POV of the fire-breathing clowns and the biting robot. Mayorcurley 03:12, 8 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Mind Control
The new articles added by Abuse Truth (AT) all appear to come from an AOL website called "Stop The Mind Control". They don't appear anywhere else online in news archives. Wikipedia says that "convenience links" that cannot be verified should be deleted. --Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) 04:22, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
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- They should be easily verifiable from the original sources. Will find actual urls by this weekend or replace the quotes with more easily verifiable ones.Abuse truth 02:34, 16 November 2007 (UTC)
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- You said you used the originals, was that a lie? --Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) 04:58, 16 November 2007 (UTC)
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- No it wasn't. I will even provide the prior urls for the pages if they are no longer available at the original cites in archives. Abuse truth (talk) 22:48, 16 November 2007 (UTC)
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- Did you use the paper versions or did you use the etext version? --Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) (talk) 05:11, 17 November 2007 (UTC)
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- Please excuse the length of this. Below you will find all of the articles, past and present urls if available and a slightly updated edit will appear on the page with the new text. All links are now easily verifiable.
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- My wikipedia article previously on page
- Years later, the victims went public and revealed "their pain." Gelzinis, Peter. "Amirault's accusers reveal their faces, and their pain", Boston Herald, August 7, 2001. (English) A victim stated "So many times....hovered over me, touched me and hurt me and committed many disgusting acts of abuse." Miller, Leslie. "Mass. Victims Fight Commutation Plea", Associated Press, August 2, 2001. (English)
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- data deleted - url for this article is no longer available at http://www.telegram.com
- The Amirault's lead prosecutor, Mr. Hardoon, blamed "media spin" for the theories that police fabricated the story and that the social workers were "naive and stupid." According to Hardoon, these arguments were rejected by the jury. Quadros Bowles, Sandy. "Amiraults' lead prosecutor Hardoon blames media spin. Hardoon: "the most amazing manipulation and media spin"", Sunday Telegram - Worcester, MA, July 22, 2001, pp. B1. (English)
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- new article edit with easily verifiable urls
- Years later, the victims went public and revealed "their pain." Gelzinis, Peter. "Amirault's accusers reveal their faces, and their pain", Boston Herald, August 7, 2001. (English) A victim stated "So many times....hovered over me, touched me and hurt me and committed many disgusting acts of abuse." Miller, Leslie. "Mass. Victims Fight Commutation Plea", Associated Press, August 2, 2001. (English) The “chief prosecutor of both of the Amirault cases” stated that “the children testified to being photographed and molested by acts that included penetration by objects” and “the implication...that the children's allegations of abuse were tainted by improper interviewing is groundless and not true.” Hardoon, Larry. "Letters to the Editor: The Real Darkness Is Child Abuse", WALL STREET JOURNAL, 02/24/95. (English)
original url http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/gelzinis08072001.htm
Amirault's accusers reveal their faces, and their pain by Peter Gelzinis
Tuesday, August 7, 2001
Almost a year before the world ever heard of the Fells Acres Day School, Barbara Standke sought out psychiatric help for her 4-year-old son, Brian.
During that lonely summer, no one was speaking of group hysteria, or interview techniques that amounted to ``brainwashing.
All this nurse knew was that the little boy she dropped off at day care was acting very strangely.
``He'd begun to touch me in ways that were inappropriate, Standke recalled, ``or he'd try to kiss me with his tongue. Her son's behavior had become so aberrant she phoned her ex-husband to ask if he'd been watching pornographic movies in front of the child. Brian's father was justifiably outraged.
When Barbara confided her concern about the scratches on her son's groin to Violet Amirault, proprietor of Fells Acres, she was told such things happen to kids. Both Vi and her daughter, Cheryl, she said, ``laughed and told me not to worry.
``When I went to that first meeting at the Malden police station, Standke said, ``they never said a word about charges or anything like that. The police simply ran down a list of child abuse symptoms. My son had every one of them: the stomach aches, the night tremors, the obsession with secrecy . . . everything.
Harriet Dell'Anno did not attend that initial meeting. But she did call after reading about it in the newspapers. The police told her to mention three things to her daughter, Jamie.
``So, I sat on the floor with Jamie, Harriet recalled. ``We were coloring together. As matter-of-factly as I could, I asked her about the first thing on the list - a secret room. To the day I die, I will never forget the look on my daughter's face.
``She jumped up and literally tried to hide in the corner. `Mommy, how did you know!' she kept screaming. `It's supposed to be a secret! Nobody's supposed to know!' My daughter was 5 at the time. But the terror on her face came from someplace else. Children don't look that way, even when they're scared.
Even after she went to the Malden police station, Rosemarie Hopkins said she went back home to Melrose murmuring the same three words over and over: ``Not my child. Not until she watched her 4-year-old daughter Phaedra do unimaginable things to an anatomical male doll, did she realize she was part of a nightmare.
``I did not know these other parents, Rosemarie was saying yesterday. ``I had never visited their homes. All of this stuff we've had to live with over the years . . . about brainwashing our children, about coaxing them to say such awful things . . . I understand there are vicious parents in the world, parents capable of selling their children. But to think we would fill our own children's tiny minds with such poison? For what?
``How could people come to believe that of us? she asked, her voice breaking. ``You can't begin to understand the guilt I live with. The guilt so many of us live with. I picked Fells Acres over five or six other (day-care) places. They talk about the lack of physical evidence in this case.
``Phaedra was my blessing, my baby. She was barely 4 when I had to take her over to Children's (Hospital) for a GYN exam. I had to listen to my baby screaming as they placed a needle in her arm . . . to check for disease.
``So nobody's ever found a Polaroid picture, Rosemarie said. ``I have the report of my daughter's GYN exam at the age of 4. I know what was found.
Now, the victims of Fells Acres have faces. Now, they have names. The utter dread of a schoolmate figuring out their identity no longer exists. Gone is the fear of having a friend say, ``I know that was your mother I saw on TV, even though they covered up her face. I know that was her.
One day after Rosemarie Hopkins and her daughter, Phaedra, stepped before the cameras last week, a co-worker of Rosemarie's husband whispered in his ear, ``Tell Phaedra not to be afraid. I know what she's going through, because I was abused as a kid.
During all the years spent in anonymity, Barbara Standke watched her son, Brian, grow up in pain, in therapy, in a self-destructive search for his identity as a man. ``My hope has always been that he gets his self-esteem back.
Last Thursday, when her son stepped forward to reveal his darkest secrets, Barbara Standke said she felt the kind of joy and pride other parents feel at graduations, or weddings.
``I didn't even ask him to speak, she said. ``He wanted to do it. He needed to do it. That's what I hope people like Governor Swift can begin to see. Fifteen years after a jury convicted Gerald Amirault for the terrible things he did to my son, for stealing his happiness, we're still here. And we still hurt.
original url http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20010802/us/preschool_abuse_3.html
Mass. Victims Fight Commutation Plea By LESLIE MILLER, Associated Press Writer
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Victims in the Fells Acres child abuse case broke down Thursday as they described their pain publicly for the first time in hopes of keeping the last person convicted in the case behind bars.
Gerald Amirault has served 15 years of a 30- to 40-year sentence. Last month, the parole board recommended commutation of his sentence, saying there is ``substantial doubt about his conviction.
Acting Gov. Jane Swift has indicated she'll decide the case by fall.
Victims urged her to keep Amirault in prison.
``During counseling meetings as a child, I would speak of a tall man touching me and taking pictures of me, Phaedra Hopkins, 20, said at an emotional news conference. ``So many times, Mr. Amirault hovered over me, touched me and hurt me and committed many disgusting acts of abuse.
Amirault was convicted in 1986 of molesting and raping eight children at the family-operated day care center in Malden, the Fells Acres Day School. His sister, Cheryl Amirault LeFave, and his late mother, Violet Amirault, were convicted in a separate trial.
LeFave and Violet Amirault were freed in 1995 on appeal after claiming they were denied the right to confront their young accusers. After several more appeals, LeFave was released last year when the state did not oppose a motion to have her sentence reduced. Violet died in 1997.
The Amiraults said they were victims of sex abuse hysteria that swept the country in the 1980s and questionable testimony from child witnesses. No corroborating physical evidence and no testimony from a teacher or visitor at the school supported the allegations.
The children said they were tied to trees, sexually penetrated with knives and tortured by a ``bad clown in a ``secret room.
``They are victims, but they're not victims of the Amiraults, said James Sultan, Gerald Amirault's lawyer. ``They're victims of terribly flawed interviewing techniques that were used then and would never be used today.
Those children, now adults, stood by their testimony Thursday.
``This family raped me, molested me and totally ruined my life, said Jennifer Bennett, who was 31/2 years old when she started at Fells Acres.
``We weren't coaxed. We weren't lying. We're telling the truth and we always will, said Bennett, 22. ``I was there. None of you were there. We weren't coaxed, nor were we ever ever ever brainwashed.
Brian Martinello, 21, said he was sexually abused by Amirault. His mother, Barbara Standke, claims her son came home from the day care with sores on his genitals and other people's underwear.
``I think it's an absolute disgrace to let anyone out of prison for such a disgusting crime, Martinello said.
If Swift agrees with the parole board, the Governor's Council would have to vote to commute Amirault's sentence. Middlesex District Attorney Martha Coakley said she and the victims plan to meet with Swift.
url for this article is no longer available at http://www.telegram.com Amiraults' lead prosecutor Hardoon blames media spin.
Hardoon: "the most amazing manipulation and media spin."
SUNDAY TELEGRAM (Worcester, MA) 22 July, 2001 page B1
Amirault prosecutor decries media spin Hardoon shares insight on abuse cases
by Sandy Quadros Bowles
Sexual offenders who prey on children can pose a danger their entire lives, according to a high-profile prosecutor of several well- known child abuse cases.
"Once a predator, always a predator," said Laurence E. Hardoon, who works for the firm of Brody, Hardoon, Perkins and Kesten in Boston. "Sexual predators remain threats indefinitely."
In 1989, Mr. Hardoon founded the child abuse unit in the Middlesex County District Attorney's office. He also prosecuted the defendants in the controversial Fells Acre day care case.
Mr. Hardoon was an assistant district attorney in the case of John C. Leavis, a former Hudson teacher who was convicted in 1978 of kidnapping, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, and seven counts of sexual contact with minors.
In 1982, Mr. Leavis was released from the Massachusetts Treatment Center for the Sexually Dangerous in Bridgewater after a judge deemed he was no longer sexually dangerous, according to a spokesman for the Massachusetts Department of Corrections.
Last month, Mr. Leavis, who legally changed his name to Samuel J. Leavis, was arrested in Mobile, Ala., on charges of possession of child pornography and failing to register as a sex offender. A Mobile judge turned down his request for bond and a motion to dismiss the case.
Mr. Leavis had been working as an assistant principal at a school in Mobile.
Because of his prior record, Mr. Leavis could face life in prison on the Alabama charges, Assistant District Attorney Steven Giardini said.
Between his arrests in Massachusetts and Alabama, Mr. Leavis was arrested in Florida in 1986 under the name Christopher John Allyn for lewd and lascivious acts involving a child. He was sentenced to five years in prison.
Mr. Hardoon said he does not remember Mr. Leavis' case in Massachusetts, but said he is not surprised that someone with a history of sexual offenses would be a repeat offender.
"It happens all the time," he said.
It's also not unusual for convicted sex offenders to repeat their crimes in new locations, he said. "They go somewhere else and set up shop."
Sentences handed down for such crimes vary widely, depending on the judge, he said.
"There's such a lack of consistency from judge to judge, let alone from state to state," he said.
Mr. Hardoon supports a national registry of convicted sexual offenders who prey on children.
"These people should probably have dispositions the rest of their lives," he said. "Every day we wait, we're just victimizing more children."
He said people don't always realize -- maybe because they don't want to realize -- that there are predators in society who victimize children.
"There are just too many people that just don't get it," he said. "They don't want to believe there are people out there doing that to children."
Mr. Hardoon was closely involved in the Fells Acre day care case, one of the most controversial child sexual abuse cases in state history.
In the mid-1980s, Mr. Hardoon was the lead prosecutor in the case against Gerald "Tooky" Amirault, his sister Cheryl Amirault LeFave and their mother, Violet Amirault. The three were accused of sexually abusing children at the Fells Acre Day School in Malden, which was owned by Ms. Amirault.
In July 1986, Mr. Amirault was convicted and sentenced to 30 to 40 years in prison. In June 1987, Ms. Amirault and Ms. LeFave were convicted on all counts and given 8- to 20-year sentences.
In May 1997, a judge granted a new trial for Ms. Amirault and Ms. LeFave, saying their lawyer had failed to represent them effectively at their trial and during later appeals. The two women were freed on bail.
Ms. Amirault died of cancer in September 1997. Ms. LeFave's conviction was overturned in 1998 when a Superior Court judge said research showed prosecutors' suggestive and leading interview techniques made it impossible to tell if the children were telling the truth. In 1999, the Supreme Judicial Court overturned that decision, reinstating Ms. LeFave's conviction and denying her bid for a new trial.
In October 1999, she was freed after a judge allowed the time she had served on the sentence to stand.
Earlier this month, the state Board of Pardons unanimously recommended that Mr. Amirault's sentence be commuted. Gov. Jane M. Swift and the Governor's Council must now decide on the recommendation.
In the years since the three were convicted, their supporters and many in the public have questioned the veracity of the children's stories. There have been claims that the children were asked leading questions and that the children told fanciful stories.
Mr. Hardoon, who still supports the convictions, described this response as "the most amazing manipulation and media spin."
He said this theory presumes that the social workers were "naive and stupid" and that the "police had nothing better to do than to fabricate this enormous web" and were "able to get the kids to tell the same false stories."
Those same arguments were offered by the defense during the original trials, Mr. Hardoon said, but were rejected by the jury because they didn't make sense, he said.
"That's why it never flew," he said.
As a parent, Mr. Hardoon said, he knows how frightening the specter of sexual predators can be.
"Maybe more than others, I'm constantly anxious," he said. "All you can do is be vigilant and keep your fingers crossed and not have your head in the sand."
Despite all the publicity about the issue of sexual abuse cases and the importance of speaking out, Mr. Hardoon said, victims are often reluctant to talk.
He pointed to the case of Christopher Reardon, who pleaded guilty earlier this month in the largest child sexual abuse case in state history.
Mr. Reardon had been facing 130 charges, including rape, molestation and disseminating pornography, involving 29 boys. He pleaded guilty to 75 different charges, including unlawful unnatural sexual intercourse with boys and distribution of pornography. He will be sentenced Aug. 17.
Mr. Hardoon said that if victims had spoken up sooner, there wouldn't have been so many.
"Kids still don't talk," he said.
[edit] Scanned documents
If AT would cite the ORIGINAL source, then I might accept the citations with a really bizarre citation template of disputed scanned reprint of reprint, with the original being the published court case itself, if that's really the case. He would be better off ignoring both his website and the book, and inserting a quote with a citation to the actual court case. We can use primary sources, once the relevance is clearly established. — Arthur Rubin | (talk) 02:55, 13 December 2007 (UTC)
- Original source (Massachusetts Reports Volume 424 1996 - 1997) and case citation (424 Mass. 618) are now in the reference. "COMMONWEALTH vs. VIOLET AMIRAULT (and eleven companion cases)...COMMONWEALTH vs. GERALD AMIRAULT. Middlesex from Massachusetts Reports Volume 424 1996 - 1997 - Case Citation 424 Mass. 618" (scanned reprint), October 9, 1996. - March 24, 1997.. Retrieved on 2007-12-09.Abuse truth (talk) 01:56, 14 December 2007 (UTC)