
Survivors' lawyers say Illinois has one of nation's worst records on sex abuse in juvenile detention
Dozens of complaints, including several filed this week in Chicago, allege decades of systemic abuse of children by the employees of detention facilities. Similar lawsuits have popped up in states including Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, but Illinois stands out for the volume of cases that began piling up last year and the lackluster response from state leaders, according to attorneys.
'The scale and the magnitude and the severity of these cases are some of the worst we've seen all over the United States,' Jerome Block, an attorney who has filed lawsuits nationwide, said at a news conference.
The latest Illinois complaints, filed Tuesday, represent 107 people who experienced abuse as children at 10 centers statewide. Some have since closed. The lawsuits allege abuse from the mid-1990s to 2018, including rape, forced masturbation and beatings by chaplains, counselors, officers and kitchen supervisors.
The Associated Press does not typically name people who say they were sexually assaulted unless they consent to being identified or decide to tell their stories publicly, as some who have filed lawsuits have done. Most plaintiffs are identified by initials in the lawsuits.
Survivor Kate-Lynn, who appeared at a Chicago news conference, said she only felt comfortable speaking publicly using her first name. The Illinois woman, now 26, said she was held in solitary confinement at a suburban Chicago facility for a year when she was 14. She said she was sexually and physically abused by at least five staff members who came into her cell and stripped her naked.
As she spoke, a fellow survivor who also planned to speak became overcome with emotion and left the room. He didn't return.
Kate-Lynn said she has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and anxiety.
'Going to public places is very hard for me,' she said, wiping tears at times. 'I feel like I 'm going to be attacked when dealing with authority figures."
The lawsuits, first filed in May 2024, and they are slowly making their way through the courts.
Two lawsuits against the state — representing 83 people — were filed in the Illinois Court of Claims and seek damages of roughly $2 million per plaintiff, the most allowed under law. Separate lawsuits representing 24 people held as children at a Chicago center, were filed in Cook County and seek more than $100,000 per plaintiff.
Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, who represents the state, has tried to dismiss the cases in court.
Raoul, whose office has investigated church sex abuse cases, declined to comment Wednesday as did officials with the Department of Juvenile Justice and Cook County. The lawsuits also name the state of Illinois and the Department of Corrections. Officials for the governor's office and Corrections did not return messages Wednesday.
While the number of lawsuits grows, few cases have gone to trial or resulted in settlements. Arrests are infrequent.
Many alleged offenders are not named in the lawsuits, represented by initials or physical descriptions as the plaintiffs remembered them. There are several alleged repeat offenders, including a corrections officer who currently serves as a small-town Illinois mayor and was accused separately by 15 people. He has denied the allegations.
Attorneys have called for legislative hearings, outside monitors, victim input and criminal charges by local authorities. Block has also harshly criticized Illinois leaders, including Raoul, saying there is a double standard for the abuse victims juvenile detention centers versus church abuse victims.
'When it's the state who perpetrated the abuse, when it's state employees who perpetrated the abuse rather than Catholic priests, the attorney general doesn't want to support the survivors,' he said.
Horrific accounts are detailed in the hundreds of pages of complaints. Many plaintiffs said their abusers threatened them with violence, solitary confinement and longer sentences if they reported the abuse. Others were given fast food, candy, cigarettes or the chance to play videos games if they kept quiet.
Another survivor, a 40-year-old Texas man identified in the lawsuit by the initials J.B. 2, said he was abused when he was 14 years old and staying a facility in St. Charles, which is outside Chicago. He issued a statement through attorneys.
'I want to let my fellow survivors know that we are not alone in this,' he wrote. 'Speaking your truth, no matter how gruesome it is, it can help to set you free from yourself and all the hurt that's been bottled up.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Awful public insults 'killer dad' Luciano Frattolin leveled at daughter, 9, as it's revealed he was $200k in debt
The Canadian father who allegedly killed his nine-year-old daughter in New York had insulted her 'messy art projects' and 'chaotic' toys on his coffee business's website. Luciano Frattolin, 45, wrote on his Gambella Coffee website that he struggled with daughter Melina's impact on his life because of his obsession with keeping 'perfect order' in his home. The businessman included candid insights into his 'feelings of isolation' and struggles with 'incidences of racism', and said he was hit hard by the death of his father as a teenager. At his arraignment on Monday, where he hung his head in shame as he was perp-walked into Ticonderoga Town Court in upstate New York, Frattolin also revealed he is mired in debt. He said he is more than $200,000 in debt due to his failing business in Canada, and admitted he could not afford a lawyer as he pleaded not guilty to murdering Melina. According to authorities, Frattolin killed his little girl as they were heading home from a vacation in New York on Saturday night, and he was set to give custody back to her mother. He called 911 in upstate New York and claimed that she had been abducted, but soon after an AMBER alert was issued, suspicion fell on Luciano. Cops said he had 'inconsistencies' in his story of the abduction, before her body was found in a lake in a remote stretch in Ticonderoga, New York, around 45 miles south of where her father said she had last been seen. Despite his apparent insults at his daughter's 'messy' impact on his life, Frattolin also wrote on his coffee website bio that she is the 'light of his life.' 'She is the inspiration for... well, everything,' the bio read. 'His pursuits for building a more equitable and just world are deeply guided by his determination that she will not have to endure the same social injustices that he encountered throughout his childhood.' The bio has since been scrubbed from the internet, with Frattolin's coffee company and failing business ventures said to have severely impacted him in recent years. According to a report in Canadian news outlet La Presse, Frattolin had rented a property in a hip neighborhood in Montreal since 2020, which he subletted as an Airbnb. He said in court documents reported by the outlet that he hired two property managers to run the Airbnb and make the rent payments, which he then used to pay for Melina's child support. But he still fell $26,000 behind in rent, and his lease was terminated by the landlord in August 2024. Frattolin is currently suing the two property managers for over $115,000, alleging that they never made the rental payments as promised, per Le Devoir. The managers countered that Frattolin had plans to flee the country and empty his bank account, which he denied. The Bank of Nova Scotia said Frattolin owed around $83,000 on Dépanneur Café, coffee shop he once owned, alongside $97,000 in credit card debt from Café Gambella, a coffee shop with the same name as his failing coffee business. After Melina's body was found on Sunday, Frattolin is now facing charges of second-degree murder and concealment of a corpse. At a press conference on Monday, officers said they came to believe he 'fabricated' his report of an abduction due to inconsistencies with his story. He initially claimed that his daughter was kidnapped near Lake George in upstate New York when he pulled over to urinate in the woods. He said he turned around to find that Melina was missing, and saw a 'suspicious white van' fleeing the scene. But he later said that 'two unknown males forced' his daughter into the white van. At the press conference, officials said that Luciano and Melina had traveled to the US from Canada on July 11 for a vacation, and were expected to return on Sunday. Luciano and Melina had spent the week on vacation in New York, but he was set to hand custody of his daughter back to her mother that day, officials said. Melina's mother had full-time custody, and had been estranged from Luciano since 2019. At around 6:30pm on Saturday, Melina phoned her mom to say she was heading back to Canada, but sometime that night she was allegedly murdered. The little girl was found in the shallow portion of a pond in upstate New York near the town of Ticonderoga on Sunday. Her cause of death is not yet known, and officials said they would perform an autopsy on Monday.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
DOJ officials to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell on Epstein case to ask ‘what do you know?'
The Justice Department plans to reach out to Ghislaine Maxwell, socialite and associate of Jeffrey Epstein, to see she has additional information about the highly scrutinized case. 'Justice demands courage. For the first time, the Department of Justice is reaching out to Ghislaine Maxwell to ask: what do you know? At @AGPamBondi 's direction, I've contacted her counsel. I intend to meet with her soon. No one is above the law—and no lead is off-limits,' Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement Tuesday.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Bryan Kohberger's eerie first words to cops after his parents were zip-tied as he was arrested
It was the middle of the night when armed officers stormed the quiet Pennsylvania home of Bryan Kohberger, the criminology student who pled guilty to killing four University of Idaho students in one of the most chilling murder cases in recent memory. Now, shocking new details about the night of his arrest have come to light in the Daily Mail's new podcast On the Case: The Idaho Murders, hosted by Investigative Reporter Laura Collins. In the first episode of the new mini-series released today, Collins and Pulitzer nominated author Howard Blum – whose bestselling book explores the case in depth – reveal the extraordinary lengths authorities went to when finally cornering their suspect. According to Blum, law enforcement launched a high-stakes midnight operation with helicopters, SWAT teams, and snipers trained on the Kohberger family home. And it wasn't just Bryan they were after. As the officers burst in, they didn't know what—or who—they might encounter. Listen to On The Case: The Idaho Murders wherever you get your podcasts now. Subscribe to The Crime Desk, Daily Mail's podcast network for ad-free listening, plus hours of exclusive True Crime content, including the No.1 True Crime podcast, The Trial In a moment that stunned even seasoned investigators, Kohberger's elderly parents were restrained with zip ties as their son was dragged from the house and placed into custody. But it was what Kohberger said next that left officers rattled. 'Was anyone else arrested?' he reportedly asked, moments after being cuffed and bundled into a police vehicle. Was he buying time? Spinning a final psychological game? Or hinting that someone else was involved? And if that wasn't chilling enough, the next thing out of his mouth was a self-assured, casual offer to grab a coffee sometime—with none other than the officer who'd just helped arrest him. It's just one of the many disturbing moments unpacked in this gripping new episode of On the Case: The Idaho Murders, which dives deep into the seven-week hunt for Kohberger, the forensic twist that led to his capture, and the secrets still buried beneath the surface of this headline-grabbing case. What really happened in the hours before his arrest? Why did police fear he might flee—or strike again? And what does his bizarre behaviour reveal about his state of mind?