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WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Sunday, September 29, 2024

Nine more lawsuits filed against Miracle Meadows for abuse

State Court
Miraclemeadows

CHARLESTON — Nine more lawsuits have been School filed against Miracle Meadows by former students who alleged they were abused during enrollment at the private boarding school.

Susan Gayle Clark also was named as a defendant in the suit.

C.E., Y.B., V.G., C.C., C.B., A.I., R.B., M.M. and C.O. claim they were abused at the hands of the school, according to nine complaints filed June 3 in Kanawha Circuit Court.

The student claims they were regularly abused, sexually abused and quarantined to a windowless room that at times did not have heating, lighting, or air conditioning.

The defendants violated child labor laws, failed to educate the plaintiffs and caused them serious physical harm, vocational impairment and emotional and mental distress, according to the suits.

The plaintiffs are seeking compensatory and punitive damages. They are represented by W. Jesse Forbes of Forbes Law Offices; R. Scott Long of Hendrickson & Long; and V. Paul Bucci II, Brian D. Kent and Gaetano D'Andrea of Laffey Bucci & Kent.

Over the last several years, many cases have been filed against Miracle Meadows by students who claimed they were abused during their time at the now-defunct school.

Clark, founder and director of Miracle Meadows, was sentenced to jail time and probation in 2016.

Last year, a lawsuit involving 29 former students was settled for $51.9 million. 

The former students, in that case, alleged that those who ran the Christian boarding school forced them to perform manual labor, beat them, starved them, kept them in isolation rooms for long periods of time and would chain and shackle them to beds.

“The abuse suffered by these children would shock the conscious of any West Virginian,” Jesse Forbes, the attorney for the plaintiffs, said at that time. “They were stripped naked, handcuffed, sexually abused and kept in a 5-by-8-foot room with a coffee can for a toilet. This is the stuff straight from a horror movie."

The cases are assigned to Circuit Judges Tera Salango, Joanna Tabit, Louis "Duke" Bloom, Maryclaire Akers, Jennifer Bailey

Kanawha Circuit Court case number: 22-C-450, 22-C-451, 22-C-452, 22-C-453, 22-C-454, 22-C-455, 22-C-456, 22-C-457, 22-C-458

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