Anonymous - 12-10-2004 at 08:56 AM
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/world/2940467
10 December 2004
Mexico has shut down two drug-rehabilitation centres aimed at helping US addicts, after finding blood stains
and handcuffs in two cells.
Mexican immigration authorities deported on Thursday 22 US adults who were being treated in the two centres close to the coastal town of Ensenada near
the border with California.
Another 55 minors from the centres were handed over to US consulate authorities to be returned to their parents.
"In two cells we found closed-circuit television, handcuffs and blood stains," Francisco Javier Reynoso, head of the National Immigration Institute in
the state of Baja California, told a news conference.
"For us all this is sufficient to start an in depth investigation, to arrest the guilty and to start legal proceedings against them in Mexico because
they lacked legal permits to operate in the country," Reynoso said.
Anonymous complaints
One US citizen has been arrested in connection with the closures and another is fugitive, Reynoso said.
The two centres - which authorities said were charging up to $5,000 per month for treatment - were raided after anonymous complaints of physical and
psychological maltreatment and the use of medicines that had expired.
In September, authorities closed down three other rehabilitation centres in the same area of northern Mexico and deported 590 US teenagers who had
been sent to them for treatment of drug, alcohol or behaviour problems.
Those centres were shut down after patients complained of abuse.
Dave - 12-10-2004 at 06:15 PM
It's about time. I couldn't believe when they shut down the others and not this one.
Mexico Shutters U.S.-Run Rehab Centers for Teens
Anonymous - 1-5-2005 at 06:04 PM
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4255719
Audio report. Summary:
Morning Edition, January 3, 2005 ? Authorities in Mexico crack down on U.S.-run rehab centers set-up for troubled American teens in Baja California.
Mexican authorities charge that unlicensed personnel dispensed prescription drugs and cite numerous health violations. Several of the centers have now
been closed. NPR's Carrie Kahn reports.