11 SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN - 1 - 11 (09/2005) / Convicted: Adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle - Wakeman, OH
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11 SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN - 1 - 11 (09/2005) / Convicted: Adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle - Wakeman, OH
updated 12/7/2006 4:45:56 PM ET
Norwalk, Ohio— A couple accused of forcing some of their 11 children to sleep in cages cried Thursday when their adopted daughter testified that she missed her parents and still loved them.
The visibly frightened child spoke timidly, giving mostly one-word answers to questions posed by attorneys.
She testified during cross-examination that Michael and Sharen Gravelle were good parents to her and her siblings.
A couple of jurors teared up as well when the girl, one of the children who did not sleep in a cage, said she was upset that she no longer saw the Gravelles. Unlike many of the other adopted children, who suffered from problems such as fetal alcohol syndrome, she did not have special needs.
The Gravelles are charged with 16 counts of felony and eight misdemeanor charges of child endangerment. If convicted, they face one to five years in prison and a maximum fine of $10,000 for each felony count.
The children ranged from age 1 to 14 when authorities removed them in September 2005 from the home in rural Wakeman, about 60 miles west of Cleveland. The court has prohibited the media from identifying the children or referring to their ages.
The youngsters were placed in foster care last fall, and the couple lost custody in March.
Another daughter who did not sleep in a cage said Wednesday that she is still angry with the Gravelles, parents she said she once loved because they were all she had.
“Just the thought of them getting away with stuff that they shouldn’t get away with,” she said. “Everything they’ve done to us.”
She concluded her testimony Wednesday saying she believes that the Gravelles home-schooled them to keep them from telling others about the way they were treated.
She said some of the children would be sent to their cages — a term she said her parents occasionally used — when they misbehaved.
The Gravelles say they built enclosures to protect their special-needs children from themselves and each other. They deny abusing them.
Jamie Yanak / Pool via AP
Michael Gravelle, left, and his wife, Sharen, listen to testimony at their trial in Norwalk, Ohio, in this Nov. 30 photo. The Gravelles are charged with 16 counts of felony child endangering and eight misdemeanor child endangering charges.
The Gravelles are not accused of abusing the girls who testified Wednesday and Thursday.
A boy who had been adopted by the Gravelles admitted to being a violent child who used to throw objects and bully the other children.
He told the jury Wednesday that he was sent to a cage for weeks at a time for punishment.
The Gravelles have said the children were known for lying and exaggerating. During cross examination by defense attorneys, the boy at times became confused and would say something, only to change his mind a few minutes later.
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/16056985/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/t/emotions-emerge-ohio-caged-children-case/#.UxU5GYWD-Gw
Norwalk, Ohio— A couple accused of forcing some of their 11 children to sleep in cages cried Thursday when their adopted daughter testified that she missed her parents and still loved them.
The visibly frightened child spoke timidly, giving mostly one-word answers to questions posed by attorneys.
She testified during cross-examination that Michael and Sharen Gravelle were good parents to her and her siblings.
A couple of jurors teared up as well when the girl, one of the children who did not sleep in a cage, said she was upset that she no longer saw the Gravelles. Unlike many of the other adopted children, who suffered from problems such as fetal alcohol syndrome, she did not have special needs.
The Gravelles are charged with 16 counts of felony and eight misdemeanor charges of child endangerment. If convicted, they face one to five years in prison and a maximum fine of $10,000 for each felony count.
The children ranged from age 1 to 14 when authorities removed them in September 2005 from the home in rural Wakeman, about 60 miles west of Cleveland. The court has prohibited the media from identifying the children or referring to their ages.
The youngsters were placed in foster care last fall, and the couple lost custody in March.
Another daughter who did not sleep in a cage said Wednesday that she is still angry with the Gravelles, parents she said she once loved because they were all she had.
“Just the thought of them getting away with stuff that they shouldn’t get away with,” she said. “Everything they’ve done to us.”
She concluded her testimony Wednesday saying she believes that the Gravelles home-schooled them to keep them from telling others about the way they were treated.
She said some of the children would be sent to their cages — a term she said her parents occasionally used — when they misbehaved.
The Gravelles say they built enclosures to protect their special-needs children from themselves and each other. They deny abusing them.
Jamie Yanak / Pool via AP
Michael Gravelle, left, and his wife, Sharen, listen to testimony at their trial in Norwalk, Ohio, in this Nov. 30 photo. The Gravelles are charged with 16 counts of felony child endangering and eight misdemeanor child endangering charges.
The Gravelles are not accused of abusing the girls who testified Wednesday and Thursday.
A boy who had been adopted by the Gravelles admitted to being a violent child who used to throw objects and bully the other children.
He told the jury Wednesday that he was sent to a cage for weeks at a time for punishment.
The Gravelles have said the children were known for lying and exaggerating. During cross examination by defense attorneys, the boy at times became confused and would say something, only to change his mind a few minutes later.
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/16056985/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/t/emotions-emerge-ohio-caged-children-case/#.UxU5GYWD-Gw
Last edited by twinkletoes on Tue Mar 04, 2014 5:16 am; edited 1 time in total
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
Re: 11 SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN - 1 - 11 (09/2005) / Convicted: Adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle - Wakeman, OH
Two of 11 children kept in cages by Michael and Sharen Gravelle file lawsuit
Published: Monday, November 15, 2010, 6:38 PM Updated: Monday, November 15, 2010, 10:13 PM
Marvin Fong/The Plain DealerMichael and Sharen Gravelle listen to a judge's "guilty" verdict in Huron County Court on four felony counts of child endangering and seven other first degree misdemeanor counts for child endangering and child abuse in 2006.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Two more children who were kept in cages by their former adoptive parents Michael and Sharen Gravelle filed a lawsuit Monday in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court seeking damages for the abuse they endured from 1997 through 2005.
Their Cleveland-based attorney, Jack Landskroner, said the two girls, 11 and 12, are seeking costs for future psychological care they'll undergo "for what they've lived through in the past."
Landskroner said the lawsuit names as defendants Colin Myers and Fairhaven Counseling Inc. in Cuyahoga Falls, which performed an adoptive assessment of the Gravelles before fully approving them to serve as adoptive parents.
The lawsuit contends that the approval was given despite records showing that Michael Gravelle was an admitted child molester.
Landskroner also said the lawsuit says the Gravelles met in sexual abuse counseling, had four prior marriages between them, and were previously involved with the Lorain County Department of Children's Services because their biological children claimed to live like prisoners and had several times attempted to run away.
Two other children - the Gravelles' oldest adopted children - filed similar lawsuits in October 2009.
Michael and Sharen Gravelle gained worldwide notoriety in September 2005 when officials raided their Huron County home and removed 11 adopted children after receiving a tip that they were being kept in wooden and chicken-wire cages.
The Gravelles claimed they built the enclosures to prevent the children from destructive behavior. They lost custody of the adopted children in March 2006 and were convicted Dec. 22, 2006, on four felony counts of child endangering, two first-degree misdemeanor counts of child endangering, and five first-degree misdemeanors for child abuse.
"All 11 children were eventually placed in homes with people who really wanted them," Landskroner said. "But this was a tragic situation. No one in their right mind would have ever allowed the Gravelles, given their history, to take custody of one innocent child, never mind 11."
Landskroner also said that all the children, as they reach a level of stability, have told guardians who in turned have told his firm what issues were involved with the Gravelles.
Attempts to reach Myers and Fairhaven Counseling were unsuccessful, as was a call to the Gravelles' attorney, Ken Myers, for comment.
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2010/11/two_of_11_children_kept_in_cag.html
Published: Monday, November 15, 2010, 6:38 PM Updated: Monday, November 15, 2010, 10:13 PM
Marvin Fong/The Plain DealerMichael and Sharen Gravelle listen to a judge's "guilty" verdict in Huron County Court on four felony counts of child endangering and seven other first degree misdemeanor counts for child endangering and child abuse in 2006.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Two more children who were kept in cages by their former adoptive parents Michael and Sharen Gravelle filed a lawsuit Monday in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court seeking damages for the abuse they endured from 1997 through 2005.
Their Cleveland-based attorney, Jack Landskroner, said the two girls, 11 and 12, are seeking costs for future psychological care they'll undergo "for what they've lived through in the past."
Landskroner said the lawsuit names as defendants Colin Myers and Fairhaven Counseling Inc. in Cuyahoga Falls, which performed an adoptive assessment of the Gravelles before fully approving them to serve as adoptive parents.
The lawsuit contends that the approval was given despite records showing that Michael Gravelle was an admitted child molester.
Landskroner also said the lawsuit says the Gravelles met in sexual abuse counseling, had four prior marriages between them, and were previously involved with the Lorain County Department of Children's Services because their biological children claimed to live like prisoners and had several times attempted to run away.
Two other children - the Gravelles' oldest adopted children - filed similar lawsuits in October 2009.
Michael and Sharen Gravelle gained worldwide notoriety in September 2005 when officials raided their Huron County home and removed 11 adopted children after receiving a tip that they were being kept in wooden and chicken-wire cages.
The Gravelles claimed they built the enclosures to prevent the children from destructive behavior. They lost custody of the adopted children in March 2006 and were convicted Dec. 22, 2006, on four felony counts of child endangering, two first-degree misdemeanor counts of child endangering, and five first-degree misdemeanors for child abuse.
"All 11 children were eventually placed in homes with people who really wanted them," Landskroner said. "But this was a tragic situation. No one in their right mind would have ever allowed the Gravelles, given their history, to take custody of one innocent child, never mind 11."
Landskroner also said that all the children, as they reach a level of stability, have told guardians who in turned have told his firm what issues were involved with the Gravelles.
Attempts to reach Myers and Fairhaven Counseling were unsuccessful, as was a call to the Gravelles' attorney, Ken Myers, for comment.
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2010/11/two_of_11_children_kept_in_cag.html
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
Re: 11 SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN - 1 - 11 (09/2005) / Convicted: Adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle - Wakeman, OH
Sharen Gravelle released from jail
After serving nearly two years in prison, Sharen Gravelle is free - and Michael Gravelle will be out soon, too.
Annie Zelm
Norwalk
Mar 18, 2011
After serving nearly two years in prison, Sharen Gravelle is free — and Michael Gravelle will be out soon, too.
The estranged pair convicted of child endangering and child abuse have served their scheduled sentences, according to the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections.
Sharen Gravelle, 62, was admitted to prison April 7, 2009, and released Wednesday from the Northeast Pre-Release Center in Cleveland.
Michael Gravelle, 62, was admitted April 6, 2009, and is scheduled to be released Monday from the Hocking Correctional Facility in Nelsonville.
Both will be on parole for the next three years.
Their releases mark the end of a criminal case that dragged on for more than five years, starting in 2005 when social workers removed the adopted and foster children from their home after an investigation.
The Gravelles kept some of the special needs children in alarmed enclosures and used cruel and unorthodox ways to discipline them, according to court records.
Sharen Gravelle testified that she and her husband built the enclosed beds to protect the children, so they didn't wander during the night.
Huron County Court of Common Pleas Judge Earl McGimpsey sentenced the Gravelles to two years in prison in 2007, after a jury convicted them on four felony charges of child endangering, two misdemeanor charges of child endangering and five misdemeanor charges of child abuse.
They were both acquitted on 17 other charges, according to court records. Their sentences were postponed during a series of appeals, but they ultimately lost.
Huron County prosecutor Russ Leffler said the judge apparently felt the Gravelles were "basically good people," but he disagrees.
"They should have gotten a lot longer (sentences)," Leffler said. "Some of the children are doing well, some not as well."
The Gravelles' attorney, Kenneth D. Myers, did not return a call seeking comment.
The children ranged from 1 to 14 years old when they were taken from the Gravelles' home near Wakeman.
At least two of the children are now suing the Gravelles. They're also seeking compensation from Hamilton County, Adopt America Network, their social workers and Fairhaven Counseling.
Last March, Huron County awarded a $1.2 million settlement to be split among the 11 children, depending on their needs and the severity of the abuse they suffered.
http://www.sanduskyregister.com/article/470126
After serving nearly two years in prison, Sharen Gravelle is free - and Michael Gravelle will be out soon, too.
Annie Zelm
Norwalk
Mar 18, 2011
After serving nearly two years in prison, Sharen Gravelle is free — and Michael Gravelle will be out soon, too.
The estranged pair convicted of child endangering and child abuse have served their scheduled sentences, according to the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections.
Sharen Gravelle, 62, was admitted to prison April 7, 2009, and released Wednesday from the Northeast Pre-Release Center in Cleveland.
Michael Gravelle, 62, was admitted April 6, 2009, and is scheduled to be released Monday from the Hocking Correctional Facility in Nelsonville.
Both will be on parole for the next three years.
Their releases mark the end of a criminal case that dragged on for more than five years, starting in 2005 when social workers removed the adopted and foster children from their home after an investigation.
The Gravelles kept some of the special needs children in alarmed enclosures and used cruel and unorthodox ways to discipline them, according to court records.
Sharen Gravelle testified that she and her husband built the enclosed beds to protect the children, so they didn't wander during the night.
Huron County Court of Common Pleas Judge Earl McGimpsey sentenced the Gravelles to two years in prison in 2007, after a jury convicted them on four felony charges of child endangering, two misdemeanor charges of child endangering and five misdemeanor charges of child abuse.
They were both acquitted on 17 other charges, according to court records. Their sentences were postponed during a series of appeals, but they ultimately lost.
Huron County prosecutor Russ Leffler said the judge apparently felt the Gravelles were "basically good people," but he disagrees.
"They should have gotten a lot longer (sentences)," Leffler said. "Some of the children are doing well, some not as well."
The Gravelles' attorney, Kenneth D. Myers, did not return a call seeking comment.
The children ranged from 1 to 14 years old when they were taken from the Gravelles' home near Wakeman.
At least two of the children are now suing the Gravelles. They're also seeking compensation from Hamilton County, Adopt America Network, their social workers and Fairhaven Counseling.
Last March, Huron County awarded a $1.2 million settlement to be split among the 11 children, depending on their needs and the severity of the abuse they suffered.
http://www.sanduskyregister.com/article/470126
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
Re: 11 SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN - 1 - 11 (09/2005) / Convicted: Adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle - Wakeman, OH
Why in the world did they not throw the book at these monsters?
They were under charged and then let out of prison decades too soon.
Those poor children are scarred for life.
They were under charged and then let out of prison decades too soon.
Those poor children are scarred for life.
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
Re: 11 SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN - 1 - 11 (09/2005) / Convicted: Adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle - Wakeman, OH
Gravelle Adoptees
Victim of Attachment Therapy
Wakeman, Ohio
Rescued, 12 September 2005
Note: This account has been gleaned from personal interviews and published news reports. See the webography that follows for published sources.
The oldest of the former adopted children of Sharen and Michael Gravelle asked a judge “that they get as much time in jail for as long as my siblings had to be in cages.” She added, “They are grown adults who know the difference between right and wrong.”
The teenager was directing her comments to the judge about to sentence the Ohio couple who had been convicted of three counts of felony child-abuse for their use of Attachment Therapy on their 11 adopted children. It made national headlines for 18 months after authorities made the discovery that the Gravelles had for years been putting ten of their eleven adopted children, ages 1 to 14, in cramped, homemade cages, some totally lacking bedding and reeking of urine. Huron County Prosecutor Russell Leffler described the cages: “It’s about chicken wire and wooden boards, being literally cooped up, hotter than blazes in summer, an amazingly shrill alarm and little fingers trying to tear wire.” Former social worker Jo Ellen Johnson, who assisted the police in removing the children from the Gravelle home, said the stacked cages looked like “slave quarters.”
Michael and Sharen Gravelle
The parents posed next to their children’s cages
for “Good Morning America” in 2005.
They were convicted of felony child-abuse
in January, 2007. They remain free during appeal,
their lawyers predicting they will never
spend a day in jail.
The Gravelles faced a maximum of 15 years in prison, but despite their former children’s pleas for justice, they were given lenient sentences of six months to two years. Shortly afterwards, Attachment Therapist Elaine Thompson, pled guilty to related misdemeanor charges of failure to report the treatment as abuse and is awaiting sentencing.
The Gravelle’s oldest boy contrasted his present life in foster care with that under Attachment Therapy. “I don’t have to steal food,” he told the judge. “I can use the bathroom whenever I want. Never again will I have to sleep in a box.”
The oldest girl wasn’t forced to sleep in a cage, but nevertheless had years of experience with typical AT parenting: “I spent the most important years of my life being commanded like a dog, being told when to eat, when to sleep, when to go to the bathroom, when to get a drink of water, when to work, etc.”
One child tried to control his laughter during the first courtroom statement by his adoptive mother when she tried to blame her choices on a welfare system indifferent to the behavioral problems she supposedly had with her children.
Photo: People Magazine]
Despite the parents’ claims that they were overwhelmed by their eleven “special needs” children, the Gravelles were in the process of adopting a twelfth, an infant in foster care placed by an Illinois agency. By this time, neither Michael nor Sharen was working outside their home; they were collecting up to $99,000 a year in adoption subsidies and state aid, not counting medical and treatment expenses billed directly to the government, and they were demanding still more.
The Gravelles had turned their rural home near Wakeman, Ohio, 60 miles southwest of Cleveland, into a orphanage for minority children. Over the space of less than a decade, the couple — with no professional training or special qualifications (and despite the fact that the couple had first met in sexual-abuse counseling where Michael had been ordered for molesting his biological daughter in the 1980’s) — managed to convince government and private agencies from four Ohio counties and one in Illinois to place a dozen children in foster care with them. When they formally adopted their foster children, state oversight apparently stopped. Nonetheless, when a man being asked to provide respite for the Gravelle family reported child abuse to Job and Family Services, no action was taken.
County and state social services did not conduct any significant review of conditions in the Gravelle home until reports reached the Huron County Sheriff’s office in mid-summer, 2005. Investigators then discovered that the Gravelles had for some time been requiring most of the children to sleep in wood-and-chicken-wire cages wired with alarms to sound if the doors were opened at night. In September, deputies and social workers raided the home and removed the children. The children were put into foster care, along with the infant from Illinois. And the “caged children” then became a sensational, national story.
Subsequent investigations revealed other unorthodox, abusive treatment of the children than just the cages. The Gravelles had pulled all of the children out of school, and were “home-schooling” them, though evidence of any actual teaching was sparse to non-existent. Neighbors rarely saw the children out-of-doors, and never playing with or visiting children from other families. Conditions for the children were spartan, and toys were few. Unrefuted testimony from the children recounted a host of unusual circumstances and punishments:
a locked pantry and refrigerator;
stuffing a sock in the gaping mouth of a Down’s Syndrome child;
food deprivation;
eating only peanut butter sandwiches for weeks when caught sneaking food;
hosings with water in winter;
copying by hand a whole book of the Bible;
solitary confinements for months on end;
one child having her head dunked in a toilet;
and another forced to live in the bathroom for 81 days, sleeping in a bathtub, because of a bed-wetting problem
Many of these particular abuses have often been seen in cases involving Attachment Therapy (AT) and AT Parenting (ATP).
Sent by an agency to interview for provide respite care for the Gravelles, one man testified that Michael Gravelle regarded himself as a “Moses” to his children, and that Sharen Gravelle referred to her 11 black children as “monkeys.” He also witnessed a boy sent to bed in mid-afternoon for the night for asking permission to use the bathroom when it wasn’t his “scheduled time.” Disturbed by what he saw there, the man declined to take the respite position.
The couple ultimately took refuge in the blame-the-child defense used by so many parents caught up in child-abuse charges for their use of AT and ATP methods. The Gravelles repeatedly claimed they were coping the best they knew how with some very “difficult” children, and were only trying to keep them safe. The oldest child, the only one not caged, wrote the trial judge after the conviction, “They knew the cages were wrong because they made sure that we never told anyone. The day we were taken, Mom pulled me and my brother aside and said, ‘who told?’”
The Gravelles claimed they had asked for assistance with their “damaged” children from county social-services, but received none, so they turned to that next best source for reliable information in 21st Century America — the Internet. They found layperson and AT “parenting expert” Nancy Thomas there. At one time, Sharen Gravelle told a potential respite worker that he might have to literally sit on a misbehaving child, an intervention mentioned in Thomas’s writings. Thomas was reportedly one of the first persons Sharen Gravelle called for help when the children were removed.
Another person the Gravelles say they discovered on the Internet was Elaine Thompson, a licensed social worker working as an Attachment Therapist out of nearby Elyria, Ohio. (Thompson and her business partner Mershona Parshall — who has been prominently connected to Attachment Therapy for a decade or more — also offer the unvalidated adjunct Neurofeedback, reportedly used by Thompson with the Gravelle children.) Sharen Gravelle settled on Thompson after her first choice, Attachment Therapist Gregory Keck of Cleveland, was not immediately available; Thompson had a “similar” practice, she determined. Sharen later testified that her treatment of the children was just following Thompson’s advice and instructions “to the letter.” However true that claim may be, it is certainly true that Thompson was intwined with the Gravelle family. She did “holding therapy” (i.e., Attachment Therapy) on some of the children for years. From 2002-2004, Thompson billed Huron County for over $100,000 in treatments for Gravelle children. By the summer of 2005, Thompson reportedly had reduced her client base to just the Gravelles.
Thompson’s role with the Gravelle family also earned her a grand-jury indictment for 32 criminal charges, half of them felonies, most of them for aiding or abetting child abuse and for failing to report child abuse. Of course, the child abuse she was charged with abetting and not reporting are things the Gravelles claim she instructed or encouraged them to do. Thompson plea-bargained the charges down to three failure-to-report misdemeanors and faces a maximum of nine months in jail, plus up to $750 in fines.
There is good news about the children unfortunately caught up in this nightmare. All are reportedly doing well now, none displaying the intransigent, atrocious behavior reported by the Gravelles. “They're going to have a chance, you know, to have a normal life now and grow up in a safe family environment, which is not what they’ve had over the last couple of years in the Gravelle home,” said Douglas Clifford, an attorney for the children, after the Gravelle’s parental rights were terminated.
The former siblings have gotten together from time to time. After one such reunion, one of the older children made a request of the press and public, relayed through an attorney. “Please,” he said on behalf of them all, “don’t refer to us as ‘special needs’.” That was an opinion shared by prosecutor Leffler who told jurors, ‘‘They weren’t special-needs then and probably never were.’’
A year ago, the Gravelles had their parental rights terminated by another judge. Outside the courthouse, after she testified at a hearing about that action, one of the little girls came up and hugged the leg of a deputy sheriff who had removed her from the Gravelle home a few months before, and said, “Thank you.” AT proponents would certainly characterize such a gesture as evidence of a deceptive and manipulative child. The deputy had an entirely different take on her action: remembering her and the children’s flat affects the day they were removed, the girl’s present gesture felt to him like a display of genuine emotion. With eyes welling, he responded gently with a simple, “You’re welcome.”
http://www.childrenintherapy.org/victims/gravelle.html
This is out of order, it belongs at the top, but I'm posting it anyway.
Victim of Attachment Therapy
Wakeman, Ohio
Rescued, 12 September 2005
Note: This account has been gleaned from personal interviews and published news reports. See the webography that follows for published sources.
The oldest of the former adopted children of Sharen and Michael Gravelle asked a judge “that they get as much time in jail for as long as my siblings had to be in cages.” She added, “They are grown adults who know the difference between right and wrong.”
The teenager was directing her comments to the judge about to sentence the Ohio couple who had been convicted of three counts of felony child-abuse for their use of Attachment Therapy on their 11 adopted children. It made national headlines for 18 months after authorities made the discovery that the Gravelles had for years been putting ten of their eleven adopted children, ages 1 to 14, in cramped, homemade cages, some totally lacking bedding and reeking of urine. Huron County Prosecutor Russell Leffler described the cages: “It’s about chicken wire and wooden boards, being literally cooped up, hotter than blazes in summer, an amazingly shrill alarm and little fingers trying to tear wire.” Former social worker Jo Ellen Johnson, who assisted the police in removing the children from the Gravelle home, said the stacked cages looked like “slave quarters.”
Michael and Sharen Gravelle
The parents posed next to their children’s cages
for “Good Morning America” in 2005.
They were convicted of felony child-abuse
in January, 2007. They remain free during appeal,
their lawyers predicting they will never
spend a day in jail.
The Gravelles faced a maximum of 15 years in prison, but despite their former children’s pleas for justice, they were given lenient sentences of six months to two years. Shortly afterwards, Attachment Therapist Elaine Thompson, pled guilty to related misdemeanor charges of failure to report the treatment as abuse and is awaiting sentencing.
The Gravelle’s oldest boy contrasted his present life in foster care with that under Attachment Therapy. “I don’t have to steal food,” he told the judge. “I can use the bathroom whenever I want. Never again will I have to sleep in a box.”
The oldest girl wasn’t forced to sleep in a cage, but nevertheless had years of experience with typical AT parenting: “I spent the most important years of my life being commanded like a dog, being told when to eat, when to sleep, when to go to the bathroom, when to get a drink of water, when to work, etc.”
One child tried to control his laughter during the first courtroom statement by his adoptive mother when she tried to blame her choices on a welfare system indifferent to the behavioral problems she supposedly had with her children.
Photo: People Magazine]
Despite the parents’ claims that they were overwhelmed by their eleven “special needs” children, the Gravelles were in the process of adopting a twelfth, an infant in foster care placed by an Illinois agency. By this time, neither Michael nor Sharen was working outside their home; they were collecting up to $99,000 a year in adoption subsidies and state aid, not counting medical and treatment expenses billed directly to the government, and they were demanding still more.
The Gravelles had turned their rural home near Wakeman, Ohio, 60 miles southwest of Cleveland, into a orphanage for minority children. Over the space of less than a decade, the couple — with no professional training or special qualifications (and despite the fact that the couple had first met in sexual-abuse counseling where Michael had been ordered for molesting his biological daughter in the 1980’s) — managed to convince government and private agencies from four Ohio counties and one in Illinois to place a dozen children in foster care with them. When they formally adopted their foster children, state oversight apparently stopped. Nonetheless, when a man being asked to provide respite for the Gravelle family reported child abuse to Job and Family Services, no action was taken.
County and state social services did not conduct any significant review of conditions in the Gravelle home until reports reached the Huron County Sheriff’s office in mid-summer, 2005. Investigators then discovered that the Gravelles had for some time been requiring most of the children to sleep in wood-and-chicken-wire cages wired with alarms to sound if the doors were opened at night. In September, deputies and social workers raided the home and removed the children. The children were put into foster care, along with the infant from Illinois. And the “caged children” then became a sensational, national story.
Subsequent investigations revealed other unorthodox, abusive treatment of the children than just the cages. The Gravelles had pulled all of the children out of school, and were “home-schooling” them, though evidence of any actual teaching was sparse to non-existent. Neighbors rarely saw the children out-of-doors, and never playing with or visiting children from other families. Conditions for the children were spartan, and toys were few. Unrefuted testimony from the children recounted a host of unusual circumstances and punishments:
a locked pantry and refrigerator;
stuffing a sock in the gaping mouth of a Down’s Syndrome child;
food deprivation;
eating only peanut butter sandwiches for weeks when caught sneaking food;
hosings with water in winter;
copying by hand a whole book of the Bible;
solitary confinements for months on end;
one child having her head dunked in a toilet;
and another forced to live in the bathroom for 81 days, sleeping in a bathtub, because of a bed-wetting problem
Many of these particular abuses have often been seen in cases involving Attachment Therapy (AT) and AT Parenting (ATP).
Sent by an agency to interview for provide respite care for the Gravelles, one man testified that Michael Gravelle regarded himself as a “Moses” to his children, and that Sharen Gravelle referred to her 11 black children as “monkeys.” He also witnessed a boy sent to bed in mid-afternoon for the night for asking permission to use the bathroom when it wasn’t his “scheduled time.” Disturbed by what he saw there, the man declined to take the respite position.
The couple ultimately took refuge in the blame-the-child defense used by so many parents caught up in child-abuse charges for their use of AT and ATP methods. The Gravelles repeatedly claimed they were coping the best they knew how with some very “difficult” children, and were only trying to keep them safe. The oldest child, the only one not caged, wrote the trial judge after the conviction, “They knew the cages were wrong because they made sure that we never told anyone. The day we were taken, Mom pulled me and my brother aside and said, ‘who told?’”
The Gravelles claimed they had asked for assistance with their “damaged” children from county social-services, but received none, so they turned to that next best source for reliable information in 21st Century America — the Internet. They found layperson and AT “parenting expert” Nancy Thomas there. At one time, Sharen Gravelle told a potential respite worker that he might have to literally sit on a misbehaving child, an intervention mentioned in Thomas’s writings. Thomas was reportedly one of the first persons Sharen Gravelle called for help when the children were removed.
Another person the Gravelles say they discovered on the Internet was Elaine Thompson, a licensed social worker working as an Attachment Therapist out of nearby Elyria, Ohio. (Thompson and her business partner Mershona Parshall — who has been prominently connected to Attachment Therapy for a decade or more — also offer the unvalidated adjunct Neurofeedback, reportedly used by Thompson with the Gravelle children.) Sharen Gravelle settled on Thompson after her first choice, Attachment Therapist Gregory Keck of Cleveland, was not immediately available; Thompson had a “similar” practice, she determined. Sharen later testified that her treatment of the children was just following Thompson’s advice and instructions “to the letter.” However true that claim may be, it is certainly true that Thompson was intwined with the Gravelle family. She did “holding therapy” (i.e., Attachment Therapy) on some of the children for years. From 2002-2004, Thompson billed Huron County for over $100,000 in treatments for Gravelle children. By the summer of 2005, Thompson reportedly had reduced her client base to just the Gravelles.
Thompson’s role with the Gravelle family also earned her a grand-jury indictment for 32 criminal charges, half of them felonies, most of them for aiding or abetting child abuse and for failing to report child abuse. Of course, the child abuse she was charged with abetting and not reporting are things the Gravelles claim she instructed or encouraged them to do. Thompson plea-bargained the charges down to three failure-to-report misdemeanors and faces a maximum of nine months in jail, plus up to $750 in fines.
There is good news about the children unfortunately caught up in this nightmare. All are reportedly doing well now, none displaying the intransigent, atrocious behavior reported by the Gravelles. “They're going to have a chance, you know, to have a normal life now and grow up in a safe family environment, which is not what they’ve had over the last couple of years in the Gravelle home,” said Douglas Clifford, an attorney for the children, after the Gravelle’s parental rights were terminated.
The former siblings have gotten together from time to time. After one such reunion, one of the older children made a request of the press and public, relayed through an attorney. “Please,” he said on behalf of them all, “don’t refer to us as ‘special needs’.” That was an opinion shared by prosecutor Leffler who told jurors, ‘‘They weren’t special-needs then and probably never were.’’
A year ago, the Gravelles had their parental rights terminated by another judge. Outside the courthouse, after she testified at a hearing about that action, one of the little girls came up and hugged the leg of a deputy sheriff who had removed her from the Gravelle home a few months before, and said, “Thank you.” AT proponents would certainly characterize such a gesture as evidence of a deceptive and manipulative child. The deputy had an entirely different take on her action: remembering her and the children’s flat affects the day they were removed, the girl’s present gesture felt to him like a display of genuine emotion. With eyes welling, he responded gently with a simple, “You’re welcome.”
http://www.childrenintherapy.org/victims/gravelle.html
This is out of order, it belongs at the top, but I'm posting it anyway.
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
Re: 11 SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN - 1 - 11 (09/2005) / Convicted: Adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle - Wakeman, OH
Stark sets aside money for abused children
Published: February 28, 2014 - 09:48 PM
CANTON: The Stark County Department of Job and Family Services will put $100,000 in a trust fund for three of the 11 children who were caged by a Huron County couple.
County commissioners approved the payment as part of the settlement of a lawsuit that had been filed on behalf of three children who had been adopted through the Stark department.
Half of the settlement is to be paid into an independent escrow trust fund initially. The remainder is to be paid within a year of probate court approval of the agreement.
The adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle of Wakeman, were sent to prison for child abuse that was discovered in 2005.
Stark County’s placement of the children began in 1999, said Ross Rhodes, chief of the civil division of the county prosecutor’s office. It was Stark officials’ contention in the lawsuit that Huron County’s welfare department was responsible for monitoring the children.
“They were on the spot,” Rhodes said. “They had their person visiting the home and all that. We don’t think we were negligent or anything.
“We had home studies vouching for them, so it’s certainly not the case that we knowingly put them in an abusive home.”
The private firm that conducted one of the evaluations of the Gravelle home also has reached a financial settlement on behalf of the children, Rhodes said.
Huron County previously paid $1.2 million into a trust fund for the children, who were kept in metal and wooden cages in addition to being subjected to other forms of abuse.
In a complaint filed in 2012 in Stark County Common Pleas Court, the children’s attorney, Jack Landskroner of Cleveland, said the Gravelles had not been licensed as foster parents, had not completed the required training and did not have the appropriate certification.
He also said the Gravelles’ abusive behavior to their biological children should have disqualified them from adopting the children from Stark County.
http://www.ohio.com/news/stark-sets-aside-money-for-abused-children-1.470061
Published: February 28, 2014 - 09:48 PM
CANTON: The Stark County Department of Job and Family Services will put $100,000 in a trust fund for three of the 11 children who were caged by a Huron County couple.
County commissioners approved the payment as part of the settlement of a lawsuit that had been filed on behalf of three children who had been adopted through the Stark department.
Half of the settlement is to be paid into an independent escrow trust fund initially. The remainder is to be paid within a year of probate court approval of the agreement.
The adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle of Wakeman, were sent to prison for child abuse that was discovered in 2005.
Stark County’s placement of the children began in 1999, said Ross Rhodes, chief of the civil division of the county prosecutor’s office. It was Stark officials’ contention in the lawsuit that Huron County’s welfare department was responsible for monitoring the children.
“They were on the spot,” Rhodes said. “They had their person visiting the home and all that. We don’t think we were negligent or anything.
“We had home studies vouching for them, so it’s certainly not the case that we knowingly put them in an abusive home.”
The private firm that conducted one of the evaluations of the Gravelle home also has reached a financial settlement on behalf of the children, Rhodes said.
Huron County previously paid $1.2 million into a trust fund for the children, who were kept in metal and wooden cages in addition to being subjected to other forms of abuse.
In a complaint filed in 2012 in Stark County Common Pleas Court, the children’s attorney, Jack Landskroner of Cleveland, said the Gravelles had not been licensed as foster parents, had not completed the required training and did not have the appropriate certification.
He also said the Gravelles’ abusive behavior to their biological children should have disqualified them from adopting the children from Stark County.
http://www.ohio.com/news/stark-sets-aside-money-for-abused-children-1.470061
twinkletoes- Supreme Commander of the Universe With Cape AND Tights AND Fancy Headgear
- Job/hobbies : Trying to keep my sanity. Trying to accept that which I cannot change. It's hard.
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