Current:Home > ContactNew Hampshire man who brought decades-old youth center abuse scandal to light testifies at trial -TradeWise
New Hampshire man who brought decades-old youth center abuse scandal to light testifies at trial
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-11 00:07:21
BRENTWOOD, N.H. (AP) — David Meehan, whose allegations of abuse at New Hampshire’s youth detention center sparked nearly a dozen arrests and more than a thousand lawsuits, finally took the witness stand Wednesday, seven years after he first told his wife, “They raped me.”
“I think I’m more ready than anybody else in this room to do this right now,” he said.
Meehan, 42, spent three years at the Youth Development Center, where he alleges he was repeatedly beaten, raped and locked in solitary confinement in the late 1990s. He went to police in 2017 and sued the state three years later. His lawsuit went to trial last week, and he began testifying Wednesday, describing his early years and arrival at the facility as a 14-year-old in 1995.
His attorneys displayed a photo of him as a smiling toddler clutching a football as he testified about physical abuse by his parents, including his mother’s habit of putting her cigarettes out on his face. They later displayed a closeup photo of Meehan’s face taken when he arrived at YDC and asked him to describe what he saw.
“It’s hard to describe this scared little boy, who at the same time feels safe,” he told jurors as he remembered being handcuffed to a wooden chair during the intake process at YDC. “I’m not worrying about where I’m going to sleep tonight, I’m not worrying about what I’m going to eat. It’s hard to explain that amount of emotion and distress.”
Since Meehan came forward, authorities have arrested 11 former state workers, and more than 1,100 former residents have filed lawsuits, arguing the state’s negligence allowed six decades of abuse. The state argues it is not responsible for the actions of “rogue” employees.
Meehan was the first to sue and go to trial. In testimony punctuated by long pauses, he described running away, breaking into homes to steal food and clothing, and once a gun that he hoped to sell. He said he and another teen escaped from a sheriff’s cruiser on their way to court after the older boy warned him of sexual abuse at YDC, and he spent time in a pre-trial detention center in Concord where he was involved in an attempted escape that resulted in a riot.
Earlier Wednesday, Michael Gilpatrick, another former resident whose time at the facility overlapped with Meehan’s, continued testifying about the “constant horror.” A staffer choked him until he lost consciousness and he awoke to find another man sexually assaulting him, he said. In another attack, two staffers beat and raped him, he said.
“I just remember sitting on my bed crying,” he said. “Blaming myself for being there, feeling ashamed, wondering what I did in this world to deserve this.”
Every assault “seemed like it lasted forever, because it kind of did,” Gilpatrick said.
Released just shy of 17, Gilpatrick said he quickly ended up in the adult criminal justice system, spending a dozen years behind bars for drug-related crimes. For many years, he didn’t recognize that he was abused as a child, he said.
Now a married father of three who owns a waterproofing business, Gilpatrick said all he learned at YDC was how to become a hardened criminal, take a beating and keep his mouth shut.
“Everything I went through there, I normalized,” he said. “That’s what I felt like life was supposed to be. When I got out of there, all the way to 2015, I was in and out of jails and prison because I thought that was where I was supposed to be.”
Gilpatrick also confirmed to attorneys for the state that he had no personal knowledge of Meehan being physically or sexually abused.
The men accused of abusing both Meehan and Gilpatrick have pleaded not guilty to criminal charges but have yet to go to trial. The attorney general’s office has been both prosecuting suspects and defending the state in the civil cases, creating an unusual dynamic in which they will rely on the testimony of former residents in the criminal cases while undermining their credibility in the civil cases.
veryGood! (9743)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Indonesia’s navy pushes a boat suspected of carrying Rohingya refugees out of its waters
- Israel bombs refugee camps in central Gaza, residents say, as Netanyahu repeats insistence that Hamas be destroyed
- Wawa moving into Georgia as convenience store chains expands: See the locations
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Two teenagers shot and killed Wednesday in Lynn, Massachusetts
- 'Fresh Air' staffers pick the 2023 interviews you shouldn't miss
- These twins are taking steps for foster kids − big steps. They're walking across America.
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Real estate company bids $4.9 million for the campus of a bankrupt West Virginia college
Ranking
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Stock market today: Asian stocks mixed in muted holiday trading as 2023 draws to a close
- France heightens security for New Year’s Eve, with 90,000 police officers to be mobilized
- San Antonio police release video of persons of interest in killing of pregnant Texas teen Savanah Soto and boyfriend Matthew Guerra
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- EVs and $9,000 Air Tanks: Iowa First Responders Fear the Dangers—and Costs—of CO2 Pipelines
- Venezuela will hold military exercises off its shores as a British warship heads to Guyana
- Bobby Rivers, actor, TV critic and host on VH1 and Food Network, dead at 70
Recommendation
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Turkey reportedly detains 32 IS militants and foils possible attacks on synagogues and churches
New York man becomes first top prize winner of $5 million from Cash X100 scratch-off
A frantic push to safeguard the Paris Olympics promises thousands of jobs and new starts after riots
Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
Are bowl games really worth the hassle anymore, especially as Playoff expansion looms?
Billions of pounds of microplastics are entering the oceans every year. Researchers are trying to understand their impact.
New Year's Eve partiers paying up to $12,500 to ring in 2024 at Times Square locations of chain restaurants