CCHR White Paper Urges Government Crackdown on Troubled Teen and For-Profit Psychiatric FacilitiesNew report cites abuse, deaths, fraud, and systemic regulatory failure; backs Senate BRIDGES for Kids Act
A sweeping new white paper released by the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) warns lawmakers that abuse, neglect, preventable deaths, and fraud remain endemic in the troubled teen treatment industry and for-profit psychiatric hospitals, despite years of warnings, litigation, and media investigations. The report calls for mandatory transparency, automatic enforcement triggers, criminal accountability, and the withdrawal of public funding from facilities that harm children and vulnerable adults—arguing that reform without enforcement has repeatedly failed. CCHR welcomed the recent introduction of the BRIDGES for Kids Act, sponsored by U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, describing the legislation as "long overdue" after decades of documented abuse across residential treatment centers and psychiatric hospitals.[1] "The evidence is overwhelming," The BRIDGES for Kids Act would require the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to establish a national, publicly accessible dashboard disclosing inspection results, restraint and seclusion use, staffing levels, licensing status, and serious complaints. States would be required to respond to critical complaints within 48 hours and initiate investigations when violations are identified. CCHR's white paper documents why such measures are needed: up to 45% of inpatient mental health patients reported experiencing sexual violence during admission.[2] "These are not isolated incidents," Eastgate states. "They reflect a regulatory vacuum in which abuse becomes predictable rather than exceptional." The white paper highlights escalating litigation and criminal prosecutions involving some of the nation's largest for-profit psychiatric hospital chains. In January 2026, a Pennsylvania court ordered a trial to proceed against a former employee at one facility, charged with felony child endangerment and aggravated assault following an alleged assault captured on surveillance video.[4] In Illinois and Virginia, juries returned awards totaling hundreds of millions of dollars to patients sexually abused in for-profit psychiatric hospitals, citing chronic understaffing, inadequate supervision, and cost-cutting practices that placed children at extreme risk. "From a fiduciary standpoint, these companies and psychiatrists treating children and teens represent extraordinary legal and reputational risk," Eastgate explained. "From an ethical standpoint, no level of profit justifies investment in behavioral institutions repeatedly linked to child abuse." CCHR's report devotes substantial attention to other major for-profit operators that were scrutinized in a 2024 U.S. Senate investigation titled Warehouses of Neglect, which concluded that abuse in youth residential treatment facilities occurs "inevitably and by design" due to a business model that treats children as revenue streams.[5] Since then, one major chain has faced facility closures following allegations of sexual assault, and enforcement actions by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Department of Justice. Investigations by The New York Times detailed alleged overbilling, falsified records, and coercive confinement to maximize insurance reimbursement.[ Despite these findings, CCHR's report notes that more than 70% of one hospital chain's revenue continues to come from Medicaid and Medicare. Beyond individual cases, CCHR's report identifies what it calls the underlying source of the crisis: a psychiatric system that offers no scientifically demonstrable cures and instead relies on prolonged institutionalization, behavioral control, and drug-centered management. "When treatment does not resolve illness, facilities profit by extending confinement— The white paper concludes with a call for immediate legislative and regulatory action:
NBC News reported that if enacted, the BRIDGES for Kids Act would direct federal investigators to examine how often states send children across state lines to facilities with documented abuse histories. "Decades of evidence show that voluntary compliance does not work," CCHR said. The group, which was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz, also concludes: "Without enforceable standards, real penalties, and the withdrawal of public funding, abuse will continue. Legislators now have the evidence—and the responsibility— Sources: [1] Tyler Kingkade, "Senate bill aims to expose abuse at residential treatment centers for children," NBC News, 18 Dec. 2025, www.nbcnews.com/ [2] Holly Betterly, et al., "Sexual assault in the inpatient psychiatric setting," General Hospital Psychiatry, Vol. 82, May–June 2023, www.sciencedirect.com/ [3] Gretchen Morgenson, "Lean staffing, lax hiring, training flaws: Why sexual assaults at hospitals are up," NBC News, 18 Nov. 2024, www.nbcnews.com/ [4] "Charges held for trial for behavioral health worker accused of assaulting juvenile," North Penn Now, 7 Jan. 2026, northpennnow.com/ [5] Chris Larson, "Senate Finance Committee Releases Excoriating Investigation of Abuse in At-Risk Youth Industry," Behavioral Health Business, 12 June 2024, bhbusiness.com/ [6] "US SEC hits 7 public companies with penalties for violating whistleblower protections," End
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