Current:Home > MyFormer resident of New Hampshire youth center describes difficult aftermath of abuse -Zenith Investment School
Former resident of New Hampshire youth center describes difficult aftermath of abuse
Surpassing View
Date:2025-04-07 12:41:37
BRENTWOOD, N.H. (AP) — A man who says he was beaten and raped as a teen at New Hampshire’s youth detention center testified Friday that he both tried to take his own life and plotted to kill his abusers years later before speaking up.
David Meehan, who spent three years at the Youth Development Center in the late 1990s, went to police in 2017 and sued the state three years later. Testifying for a third day in his civil trial, he described his life’s downward spiral after leaving the facility, including a burglary committed to feed a heroin addiction and multiple suicide attempts. He said he stopped using drugs after a 2012 jail stint but was barely functioning when he woke up from hernia surgery in 2017, overwhelmed with memories of his abuse.
“I go home, I heal up a little bit, and the moment I know I’m stronger, I walk out on my wife and my kids,” he said. “Because this time, I really think I’m capable of taking the life of Jeff Buskey.”
Buskey and 10 other former state workers have pleaded not guilty to charges of sexually assaulting or acting as accomplices to the assault of Meehan and other former residents. Meehan, who alleges in his lawsuit that he endured near-daily assaults, testified that he tracked down his alleged abusers more than a decade later and even bought a gun with the intent to kill Buskey, but threw it in a river and confided in his wife instead.
“That’s not who I am,” he said. “I’m not going to be what they thought they could turn me into. I’m not going to take another life because of what they did.”
Meehan’s wife took him to a hospital, where he was referred to police. That sparked an unprecedented criminal investigation into the Manchester facility, now called the Sununu Youth Services Center. But at the same time as it prosecutes former workers, the state also is defending itself against more than 1,100 lawsuits filed by former residents alleging that its negligence allowed abuse to occur.
One group of state lawyers will be relying on the testimony of former residents in the criminal trials while others seek to discredit them in the civil cases, an unusual dynamic that played out as Meehan faced cross-examination Friday.
“You were an angry and violent young man, weren’t you?” asked Attorney Martha Gaythwaite, who showed jurors a report concluding that Meehan falsely accused his parents of physical abuse when they tried to enforce rules. Meehan disagreed. Earlier, he testified that his mother attacked him and burned him with cigarettes.
Gaythwaite also pressed Meehan on his disciplinary record at the youth center, including a time a boy he punched fell and split his head open. According to the center’s internal reports, Meehan later planned to take that boy hostage with a stolen screwdriver as part of an escape attempt.
“It’s fair to say someone who had already been the victim of one of your vicious assaults might not be too enthusiastic about being held hostage by you as part of an AWOL attempt, correct?” she asked.
Meehan has said that the escape plan occurred at a time when Buskey was raping him every day, while another staffer assaulted him roughly twice a week. The abuse became more violent when he began fighting back, Meehan said. And though he later was submissive, “It never became easier,” he said.
“Every one of these takes a little piece of me to the point when they’re done, there’s really not much left of David anymore,” he said.
Meehan also testified that he spent weeks locked in his room for 23 hours a day, hidden from view while his injuries healed. Under questioning from Gaythwaite, Meehan reviewed a report in which an ombudsman said he saw no signs of injuries, however.
Meehan, who suggested the investigator lied, said his few attempts to get help were rebuffed. When he told a house leader that he had been raped, the staffer, who is now facing criminal charges, told him: “That doesn’t happen here, little fella.” Asked whether he ever filed a written complaint, he referred to instructions on the complaint forms that said residents were to bring all issues to their counselors.
“What am I going to do, write ‘Jeff Buskey is making me have sex with him,’ and hand it to Jeff Buskey?” he said.
The trial resumes Monday.
veryGood! (2958)
Related
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- US women will be shut out of medals in beach volleyball as Hughes, Cheng fall to Swiss
- Stephen Curry talks getting scored on in new 'Mr. Throwback' show
- NCAA Division I board proposes revenue distribution units for women's basketball tournament
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- California’s two biggest school districts botched AI deals. Here are lessons from their mistakes.
- Global stock volatility hits the presidential election, with Trump decrying a ‘Kamala Crash’
- USA's Tate Carew, Tom Schaar advance to men’s skateboarding final
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Maryland’s Moore joins former US Sen. Elizabeth Dole to help veterans
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Alligator spotted in Lake Erie? Officials investigate claim.
- Armand “Mondo” Duplantis breaks pole vault world record in gold-medal performance at Olympics
- Billy Bean, second openly gay ex-MLB player who later worked in commissioner’s office, dies at 60
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Powerball winning numbers for August 5 drawing: jackpot rises to $185 million
- USA basketball players juggle motherhood and chasing 8th gold medal at Paris Olympics
- Olympic medals today: What is the medal count at 2024 Paris Games on Wednesday?
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Data shows Rio Grande water shortage is not just due to Mexico’s lack of water deliveries
'The Final Level': Popular GameStop magazine Game Informer ends, abruptly lays off staff
Four are killed in the crash of a single-engine plane in northwestern Oklahoma City
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
'The Final Level': Popular GameStop magazine Game Informer ends, abruptly lays off staff
Georgia property owners battle railroad company in ongoing eminent domain case
Could another insurrection happen in January? This film imagines what if