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Sexual abuse victims while incarcerated at a New Hampshire youth detention center (YDC)

The New Hampshire Youth Development Center (YDC) is also known as the Sununu Youth Services Center (SYSC). Other New Hampshire detention facilities that house youth inmates include:

  • The State Industrial School
  • The Philbrook School
  • The Tobey Special Education School
  • Mount Prospect Academy
  • Nashua Children's Home
  • Jolicoeur School

Details of the New Hampshire youth detention centers (YDCs) sex abuses

NH State Broadens Eligible Abuse & Increases Settlement Limits for YDC Compensation

The state has expanded the eligibility for abuse victims to seek compensation from the former Youth Development Center.

The recently passed Senate Bill 591:

  • Broadens the types of abuse eligible for compensation;
  • Increases settlement caps; and,
  • Extends the deadline for submitting claims by six months.

The new legislation also increases the Youth Development Center settlement fund to $160 million to enhance and expand victim compensation, up from claims of sexual and physical assault capped at $1.5 million for sexual assault or a combination of sexual and physical assault and $150,000 for physical abuse alone.

The law includes a new category for "egregious" sexual abuse, defined as "wanton or cruel" abuse exceeding typical experiences, with a cap of $2.5 million. Additionally, a category for "other" abuse has been introduced, covering unlawful restraint, confinement, strip searches, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

The former child residents of the Youth Development Center are suing the state, alleging that between 1960 and 2018, children were beaten, raped, and tortured by state employees–while the stories of abuse have, for decades, stayed largely shielded from public view.

Hints of what went on inside the institution’s red-brick dormitories came in pieces–the rare termination of a problem employee, independent investigations that outlined the center’s disturbing culture but seemed to do little to curb mistreatment.

More than 500 men and women have so far come forward with allegations of sexual or physical abuse at the hands of staff, a pattern of mistreatment spanning six decades.

At least 150 staffers have so far been implicated by alleged victims, according to court filings and attorneys for the plaintiffs.

iStock-862279386

The breadth of wrongdoing, experts say, has quietly approached or exceeded some of the country’s most high-profile child sexual abuse scandals.

Many who spent time there depict New Hampshire’s YDCs as houses of horrors, including: 

  • Rampant sexual abuse by rogue staffers;
  • Beatings so severe they eventually broke bones;
  • Residents being forced by staff to fight each other for food;
  • Solitary confinement stays that stretched for months; and,
  • Exposure to this kind of violence leaves lasting psychological damage.

The alleged victims span generations and social strata–among those who have come forward: is a New Hampshire state representative who’s long been critical of the center’s history and who revealed in an interview that he, too, was sexually assaulted by a staff member during his time at the facility.

“It was essentially a youth prison,” said Cody Belanger, a 27-year-old Republican, who was detained at one of the YDCs at the age of 13. “We felt that we weren’t worth anything, that they weren’t even going to bother listening to our concerns.”

Eligible victims are encouraged to request a free, private case evaluation by our experienced legal staff with the potential for compensation and justice.

Find Out if You Qualify

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Details of the New Hampshire youth detention centers (YDCs) sex abuses

NH State Broadens Eligible Abuse & Increases Settlement Limits for YDC Compensation

The state has expanded the eligibility for abuse victims to seek compensation from the former Youth Development Center.

The recently passed Senate Bill 591:

  • Broadens the types of abuse eligible for compensation;
  • Increases settlement caps; and,
  • Extends the deadline for submitting claims by six months.

The new legislation also increases the Youth Development Center settlement fund to $160 million to enhance and expand victim compensation, up from claims of sexual and physical assault capped at $1.5 million for sexual assault or a combination of sexual and physical assault and $150,000 for physical abuse alone.

The law includes a new category for "egregious" sexual abuse, defined as "wanton or cruel" abuse exceeding typical experiences, with a cap of $2.5 million. Additionally, a category for "other" abuse has been introduced, covering unlawful restraint, confinement, strip searches, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

The former child residents of the Youth Development Center are suing the state, alleging that between 1960 and 2018, children were beaten, raped, and tortured by state employees–while the stories of abuse have, for decades, stayed largely shielded from public view.

Hints of what went on inside the institution’s red-brick dormitories came in pieces–the rare termination of a problem employee, independent investigations that outlined the center’s disturbing culture but seemed to do little to curb mistreatment.

More than 500 men and women have so far come forward with allegations of sexual or physical abuse at the hands of staff, a pattern of mistreatment spanning six decades.

At least 150 staffers have so far been implicated by alleged victims, according to court filings and attorneys for the plaintiffs.

iStock-862279386

The breadth of wrongdoing, experts say, has quietly approached or exceeded some of the country’s most high-profile child sexual abuse scandals.

Many who spent time there depict New Hampshire’s YDCs as houses of horrors, including: 

  • Rampant sexual abuse by rogue staffers;
  • Beatings so severe they eventually broke bones;
  • Residents being forced by staff to fight each other for food;
  • Solitary confinement stays that stretched for months; and,
  • Exposure to this kind of violence leaves lasting psychological damage.

The alleged victims span generations and social strata–among those who have come forward: is a New Hampshire state representative who’s long been critical of the center’s history and who revealed in an interview that he, too, was sexually assaulted by a staff member during his time at the facility.

“It was essentially a youth prison,” said Cody Belanger, a 27-year-old Republican, who was detained at one of the YDCs at the age of 13. “We felt that we weren’t worth anything, that they weren’t even going to bother listening to our concerns.”

Eligible victims are encouraged to request a free, private case evaluation by our experienced legal staff with the potential for compensation and justice.

100% Free & Secure Case Evaluations

Answer a few basic questions to get started

We’ll ask specific questions to understand the situation, the abuses, and other vital info to help determine the next steps.

Receive a confidential case evaluation

A qualified legal team led by a personal injury attorney will consider the facts of the case and the potential for compensation.

Have an individual claim filed for compensation

Those that qualify will have an individual claim filed in a court of law for the justice and compensation they deserve.

Don’t suffer the injury of sexual abuse in silence any longer—we fight for justice!

Victims suffering sexual abuse—and the families who suffer with them—should have every opportunity for the compensation and justice they deserve.

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