Paris Hilton advocates for federal law to end institutional child abuse - That's NOT hot, says Paris of her harrowing experience

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'I’m still processing the trauma':
Paris Hilton advocates for federal law to end institutional child abuse


Institutional abuse survivors are on Capitol Hill this week to continue educating lawmakers about how badly children placed in the troubled teen industry are treated.

Paris Hilton [Opinion contributor]

In my 2020 documentary, "This is Paris," I revealed a secret I had kept for more than 20 years: When I was 16, I was taken from my home in the middle of the night and spent almost two years at a series of residential treatment facilities. My parents had been conned into believing that my diagnosed attention deficit disorder behavior would be fixed with “tough love.”

I’m still processing the trauma, doing the hard work it takes to tell the whole story in a memoir that will be published next year. It takes all my courage to talk about it, but I couldn’t stand knowing that children as young as 8 years old are being sent to these “troubled teen” programs by parents who don’t know and government agencies that don’t care.

Sexual assaults of children​

The last stop on my terrible journey was Provo Canyon School, a lockdown facility where I was sent after I escaped from a couple boot-camp type places. On my first day, I was forced to remove all my clothes, squat and cough, and submit to a gynecological exam – all watched closely by male staff. Although it was an extremely uncomfortable experience, I was led to believe it was a legitimate, routine check for contraband. But what I couldn’t understand as a 16-year-old girl was why that internal exam would be done to me frequently during my time at Provo, and only during the middle of the night.

I was repeatedly awakened by staff shining a bright flashlight in my face, pulled out of bed and told to be quiet as I was ushered down my dorm’s hallway to an “exam room.” Sleep-deprived and heavily medicated, I didn’t understand what was happening. I was forced to lie on a padded table, spread my legs and submit to gynecological exams. I remember crying while they held me down. I kept saying, "No!" and asking, "Why?" They just said, "Shut up. Be quiet. Stop struggling or you’ll go to Obs."

Obs – short for observation – was solitary confinement in a tiny cinderblock room with nothing but a drain and a roll of toilet paper. The room was freezing cold, and I was almost naked. I paced until I couldn’t stand up anymore. Then I huddled on the floor and rocked back and forth, forcing myself to think about the life I would create for myself after I got out.

So many kids around me were just gone. No hope. No light. This was especially true for girls who got dragged to those sham medical exams and the ones whom adult male staff leered at as we showered. If we tried to protest or question anything, they said it was a bad dream. They told us to stop making things up. But looking back on these experiences as an adult woman, I can recognize these exams for what they were: the sexual assault of children.

That experience, and the physical, emotional, and sexual abuse I suffered, led to years of trauma-induced insomnia and complex post-traumatic stress disorder that I and countless other survivors of institutional child abuse have struggled with for years.

This isn’t treatment; it’s torture​

The troubled teen industry has been allowed to thrive without transparency or accountability for decades, raking in tens of billions of dollars while preying on vulnerable families. Private equity firms are increasingly investing. Medicaid, special education and Title IV-E funding for foster kids continues to flow.

Our tax dollars help pay for more than 120,000 youth pipelined each year into these facilities, even though studies have confirmed widespread abuses and fatalities.

Fourteen years ago, members of Congress heard testimony from federal investigators who found that “staff hog-tied and shackled youth to poles in public places, and girls were forced to eat their own vomit if they threw up while exercising in the hot sun. Staff routinely broke and wired shut the jaws of youth who showed disrespect in another facility. … Youth were sexually assaulted and threatened with sexual assault by other youth in some facilities, all without effective intervention from management.”

Anyone can recognize this isn’t treatment; it’s torture.

Institutional abuse survivors are on Capitol Hill this week to continue educating lawmakers about how badly children placed in the troubled teen industry are treated. We will continue to make our voices heard to rally national support in this important election year to urge Congress to finally stop institutional child abuse.

We all need to make it clear that Americans expect bipartisan leadership and cooperation to address this tragically overlooked children’s human rights crisis immediately. Further inaction is inexcusable.

Paris Hilton is an entrepreneur, model, singer, actress, DJ and survivor of institutional abuse.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opin...provo-canyon-school-troubled-teen/9664329002/

Adults placed in charge of teen children sexually exploit them; more at 11.
 
Place is ludicrously expensive so the kids sent there are of course from mega wealthy families. So I don’t think they were used to being forced to do anything. I think many were at Provo for legal reasons as it’s an alternative to juvenile detention centers or military school.

I know someone who went to this specific place and his worst complaint was the other kids wanting to watch Johnny Quest. Visited too and looked pretty ordinary.
Edit: If I remember right, with insurance the place cost at least $8k a month.

The thing about Utah is they had/have some kind of odd laws that allow them to force kids to come back to these juvenile detention centers if they run away. Whereas in most states it'd just be if you ran away from your parents that they could have the police(?) retrieve them or whatever. So Utah became this special state for centers like this.

With Provo in particular, I know there were some kids that did just leave and felt like they could skip town. Only to be shocked when they were retrieved and forced to come right back. So they were wealthy, entitled, and forced into what looked like normal college dorm rooms where they otherwise went to school and did normal stuff like watching Cartoon Network.

So I'd take some of these people's accounts of Provo with a grain of salt. Since often, they were court ordered to go to such a place with the alternative being something like a military school or juvenile detention center, where they probably would have had a dramatically less fun time than Provo where they could do some character building chore like cleaning a hotel room so they could go play laser tag.
 
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Paris, what you say parents should do instead? If a child is out of control, like it sound you were, what do option are you giving beyond letting them continue being absolute shits that will hurt themselves or others?

Sure parents shouldn't let kids to get to that point but let's face it mistakes happen and some kids have pretty large personality shift during puberty. We need something to deal with those horrible situations, we can't just expect the ideal world where they won't.
 
probibly late 90's (reruns of the og we're also on at this time)
ah okay, Real adventures wasn't too bad. Thought they wanted to watch old ass JQ.

but shit even during the time of Real Adventures, way better shows to watch were out...Batman: TAS, Superman: TAS, Spider-Man, X-men, etc
 
As someone who read some article 14 years ago about some religious boarding school that was meant for rebellious teens and was supposed to straighten them up but abused them instead, I did find this to be believable. What did strike me as less believable though was this idea which she espoused in her YouTube documentary that she was this deep thinker that was pretending to be a bimbo because of her boarding school trauma. I feel that if this were true, then all of the home videos, photos, and diaries that were stolen from her storage locker and then later posted on the Internet would show proof of that, but they don't.

EDIT: They were from her storage locker, not house.
 
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As someone who read some article 14 years ago about some religious boarding school that was meant for rebellious teens and was supposed to straighten them up but abused them instead, I did find this to be believable. What did strike me as less believable though was this idea which she espoused in her YouTube documentary that she was this deep thinker that was pretending to be a bimbo because of her boarding school trauma. I feel that if this were true, then all of the home videos, photos, and diaries that were stolen from her house and then later posted on the Internet would show proof of that, but they don't.
I agree, wouldn't be shocked if she did play it up for the camera like pretty much anyone on reality TV does but far cry from that to what she is now trying to say.
 
Then I huddled on the floor and rocked back and forth, forcing myself to think about the life I would create for myself after I got out.
"I'm going to suck SO MANY DICKS! Fuck you, Dad!"
 
What's this referring to?

I made a gigathread detailing the literal torture and rape these places inflict on children. Also, Paris recently flew herself to Jamaica to rescue American kids who were languishing after Jamaica pulled them from Tranquility Bay 2.0. On the flipside, Jamaica actually closed a program and already charged 4 staff, so that's cool.

These places are legit rape camps at times.

Her story recounts things that are generally accepted to have happened.

Provo Canyon School was, and is, notoriously and extremely abusive, and was how Robert "Bob" Lichfield got his start before setting up the WWASPS network. OP of my gigathread talks about this.

PCS also loved to shoot kids up with thorazine:

1712464016078.png

The Salt Lake Tribune even came out talking about what this place does, back in 2020 when Paris first came out about this shit (Archive):
1712464169148.png

Also, Paris walks her talk, she led a protest march all over Provo:
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These places are legit rape camps at times.

Her story recounts things that are generally accepted to have happened.
I see. I don't doubt that.


I made a gigathread detailing the literal torture and rape these places inflict on children. Also, Paris recently flew herself to Jamaica to rescue American kids who were languishing after Jamaica pulled them from Tranquility Bay 2.0. On the flipside, Jamaica actually closed a program and already charged 4 staff, so that's cool
I'm surprised Jamaica would give a shit, that's good news.
 
I see. I don't doubt that.


I'm surprised Jamaica would give a shit, that's good news.

Because people fucking suck, nobody cared until the Netflix documentary dropped. Now that Netflix says you can care people care. There's also a shit ton of momentum now, and everyone learned from the last time we thought it was over (The 2007 GAO report, which is in OP of the gigathread) so we're going full retard war against this shit.

On that note I look forward to Null posting C&D letters from these assholes.

EDIT: JUST found this. https://www.unsilenced.org/program-archive/us-programs/utah/provo-canyon-school/ If you want to read reams and reams of shit about this, well, hang on to your butt and click away. Not sure how to archive all the linked to files. Might just write a scraper lol.
 
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