The three plaintiffs suing the Wyoming Boysâ School on allegations of abuse and cruel treatment are asking if they can add the claims of another youth resident of the school to their own. They also want to expand their lawsuit to include four more of the facilityâs employees.
Blaise Chivers-King, Dylan Tolar and Charles âReesâ Karn sued the Wyoming Department of Family Services, the Wyoming Boysâ School and several of the schoolâs staffers in February, alleging that school staffers discriminated against the boys for their disabilities, confined and abused them during their respective stays at the school for juvenile criminal conduct.
After a July 9 conference, a fourth potential plaintiff, a minor identified by the initials âDH,â came forward with additional claims from his stay at the school, from March to July of this year. The timeline is more recent than the others in the suit: other plaintiffs date their residency at the school to about 2020, in court documents.
DH also implicated four more employees, according to a Tuesday filing by the young men already suing.
The filing asks U.S. District Court Judge Scott Skavdahl to allow the young men and teens to file a new lawsuit complaint that includes DHâs allegations;Â namely, that he was denied medical treatment, subjected to humiliation and cruelty, and held in solitary confinement.
â(Some) staff members subjected DH to improper restraints and inflicted serious physical abuse on him, including shoving him, pinning him against the wall, and restraining him by bending his arms behind him,â says a copy of the new complaint as proposed, which the plaintiffs filed along with their request. One staffer âshoved DH with such force that he knocked the air out of DH, causing him excruciating pain.â
The document says the school subjected DH to prolonged solitary confinement, a practice which the school denied using, in an April 29 answer to the original allegations.
DH has been diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) and learning disabilities.
The proposed complaint says staffers denied the boy access to his ADHD medication and ignored his motherâs pleadings that they provide it, that one employee humiliated the boy by displaying his underwear after heâd have a bladder accident and making fun of him, and that the employee called the boy âretardâ and withheld food from him.
The boy tried to run away May 6Â of this year, but he was caught and placed in âuninterrupted isolationâ for five weeks, the proposed complaint alleges.
Nope, Says DFS
Wyoming DFS, the umbrella agency over the school and one of many parties being sued, countered the new claims in a Wednesday email to Cowboy State Daily.
âSafety and security continue to be priorities for all boys court-ordered to the Wyoming Boysâ School,â says the agencyâs statement. â We do not tolerate abuse and deny any allegations of wrongdoing.â
That echoes the agencyâs earlier statement, issued when the lawsuit first surfaced and denying any allegation of wrongdoing:Â âWe look forward to formally responding to the complaint and having our day in court."
It also echoes the stateâs April answer to the plaintiffsâ complaint in which the school and DFS repeatedly denied the use of abuse, cruelty and solitary confinement.
â(We) deny that the Wyoming Boysâ School uses solitary confinement; deny that (the boys) were in solitary confinement ⌠deny that Plaintiffs experienced serious deprivations of basic human needs,â the answer says. â(We) deny that Plaintiffs were deprived of their basic dignity and human decency ⌠deny that Plaintiffs were subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.