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Justice Department opens investigation into Kentucky juvenile detention centers / Public News Service

The U.S. Department of Justice is launching an investigation into reports of physical and sexual abuse at Kentucky’s eight juvenile correctional facilities — along with inappropriate use of isolation and lack of access to appropriate mental health care and services for children with disabilities.

U.S. Justice Department Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Kristen Clarke said the investigation will be independent and thorough.

“We are committed,” Clarke said, “to ensuring that children in juvenile detention centers are not abused, abused, or deprived of their constitutional rights.”

A federal lawsuit filed earlier this year alleged that two teenage girls were kept isolated in unsanitary conditions and had no access to a toilet.

Terry Brooks, Ph.D., executive director of Kentucky Youth Advocates, said a decade ago the General Assembly passed comprehensive juvenile justice reforms. But since then, the situation in prisons has steadily worsened and become a full-blown crisis that is largely ignored by state leaders.

“If the Beshear administration and the General Assembly were to address this issue,” Brooks said, “we would not have Washington, D.C. joining the Commonwealth to resolve this issue.”

Brooks added that he is confident that the Justice Department’s investigation will result in safe, positive and responsible rehabilitation for Kentucky children that will help them get back on the right path in life.

“They have obviously done in-depth research into the state of detention centers in Kentucky,” Brooks said. “And I’m optimistic that they will provide Kentucky with a roadmap moving forward.”

According to the Justice Department, nearly 200,000 children are admitted to detention centers nationwide each year – about 16,000 youth are held each night.

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