Heart Starts Pounding: Horrors, Hauntings, and Mysteries - 179. How Reddit Shut Down the Worst Troubled Teen School in America
Episode Date: June 4, 2026Go to https://kachava.com and use code HSP for 15% off your first order. In 1970, a man with no clinical training opened a "therapeutic boarding school" in the Maine woods. For forty-one years, stude...nts inside were subjected to organized beatings, forced fight rings, and psychological torture while journalists, state investigators, and even Congress failed to shut it down. Then, in 2010, one anonymous Reddit post did what none of them could. TW: Child Abuse, mention of suicide, addiction Subscribe on Patreon to become a member of our Rogue Detecting Society and enjoy ad-free listening, monthly bonus content, merch discounts and more. Members of our High Council on Patreon also have access to our weekly after-show, Footnotes, where I share my case file with our producer, Matt. You can also enjoy many of these same perks, including ad-free listening and bonus content when you subscribe on Apple Podcasts. Follow on Tik Tok and Instagram for a daily dose of horror. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is brought to you by Salas Health.
I have been booking lots of doctors appointments lately, and it can be such a headache.
You can spend hours on hold with insurance.
You can be bounced between doctors who clearly aren't talking to each other.
I mean, I see it in my life now, and I have a grandmother with Alzheimer's, and it's hard for
her to go to the doctor and advocate for herself.
Having a solace advocate would be such a game changer.
Solace connects you with dedicated healthcare advocates, registered nurses, and healthcare
pros averaging 16 years of experience who do the work that usually falls on you. A solace
advocate can find the right doctors and schedule your appointments, fight denied insurance
claims, and get your care approved. And they can also make sure your doctors are actually
in sync, so nothing falls through the cracks. Studies show that 98% of patients feel more in control
of their care after working with an advocate. You can go to solacehealth.com to see if you qualify.
It takes about two minutes and it's covered by insurance. That's solacehealth.com must be
18 or older. Advocates do not provide medical or legal advice.
What do you do?
Get as fast as they could after Jesse called for her help.
It's been too long, cowboy.
Toy Story 5 is only in theaters.
So that's Lily Pan.
Where are you? Some sort of old man toy?
She thinks you're old because you're bald, Woody.
From Disney and Pixar.
Toys are for play.
Tech is for everything.
It's Toys versus Tech.
The screen just took over.
All the tapping. It's happening.
It's happening. On June 19.
I want to talk to you, device. A long, Toy.
Twitter off.
I responded. I have plastic fingers.
Disney and Pixar's Toy Story 5, only in theaters June 19th.
Welcome back to Heart Starts Pounding, a podcast of horrors, hauntings, and mysteries.
As always, I'm your host, Kayla Moore.
Before we dive into this week's episode, I just wanted to give a thanks to everyone who listened to last week's episode and reached out to me.
In that episode, the one that we covered on the case of McKenzie Shurilla, also featured in Netflix's The Crash documentary,
I asked you guys if anyone had experience with Potts, and I heard from a lot of the community.
I just wanted to share a comment that listener Jamie left.
Jamie wrote,
This girl did not pass out from Potts.
I've had this condition for almost three years now,
and it was really offensive to see these people
use a miserable life-changing disability as an excuse.
In addition, Potts stands for postural,
orthostatic tachycardia syndrome,
meaning the position of the person is upright,
high heart rate symptoms.
Potts symptoms are experienced when standing up
and are directly caused by this position.
If McKenzie really was diagnosed with this,
they would know that. Once again, thanks to everyone who reached out. I get a lot of interesting
context from the community and I always like reading through comments that you guys send me. And so I
just wanted to call out one of those this week. This week's episode though, I have truly an
interesting one for you all, a case that I was following in real time when it was happening.
It's a story of how one person sat down at their computer and typed a message and to avoid,
not thinking they would get any response and ended up starting of movement that took down one of the
worst troubled teen schools I've ever heard about. It's a wild story and I'm excited to share it
with you today. All right, let's get into it. In November of 2010, a post popped up on Reddit that
now lives in infamy. It was posted in the subreddit R slash self by a user, Jesus is my hero who has
since deleted their account. And the title just read, quote, even skimming this post once will
blow your mind. Most probably think that it's made up, but you would be dead wrong. Jesus went on
to explain that he was sent to a place known as the Alon School in 1998 when he was just 16 years old.
He said the school was still open to this very day and there were still kids as young as 13 years
old going there. But it was not at all what it seemed. In fact, the post says, it was basically
state-sanctioned torture. Now the school was advertised as a place where, quote,
troubled students could be sent by their parents to receive an education and behavioral support,
a way to gently straighten out your child so they could thrive in society, essentially.
But this Reddit post said that was not the case.
Here's some of what they wrote.
They said that the, quote, school accepted anyone and then held them as long as they possibly could
depending on the age of the child.
If you were sent at 14 years old, as many were, you may have been looking at three to four
years locked inside.
This is because the Elon School collects $50,000 a year per child,
either from the child state, school, or parents.
And, of course, money was the only motivation of the staff and directors.
These were the people in charge of your, quote, progress in the program.
At Elon School, we were forced to participate in staff-organized fight clubs,
none of which were fair.
All were designed to humiliate one child who would be put up against at least three others.
So even the children who followed the rules were forced to fight in the name of good.
Children who tried to rebel or be free thinking were thrown in an isolation room where they had to stay for months at a time.
They had to sleep at night on a dirty mattress on the floor of the isolation room.
The mattress was brought to them at midnight and they were woken up at around 7 a.m.
All outgoing letters to parents were screened, many of us having to write many different drafts until they were accepted.
All phone calls to our parents were.
were monitored, we were allowed about 15 minutes a week, and the person who monitored the call
would have their hand hovering over the hang-up button as a constant reminder of our reality.
We were not allowed to write or receive letters until we earned the right, and this could
take eight months or more. When someone found out where I was and wrote me, my unopened letters
were ripped up in front of me as motivation to move up in the program. I feel like I'm beginning
to write too much and I do not want to overwhelm anyone who made it this far because most of the
bullet points honestly require further explanation to give the full impact of what Elon truly was.
The most important thing that anyone can do is be aware of this place and make sure that nobody
you know ever gets sent there for any reason. If you are a parent, then do not send your child there.
If you know someone who is there now, then beg the parents to do more research.
The amount of suicides and tragic deaths of former Elon students is a reason enough to take this post seriously.
Please.
The post also explained that the, quote, school part of this school was essentially nothing.
Kids would do school from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
and most of their teachers were not actual teachers.
They were just other students who had graduated from the school, but they ended their post with this powerful message.
Quote, this place only still exists because so many people believe that it doesn't.
or that it can't.
I believe that the internet is our number one tool
for exposing these horrid blind spots for what they are.
Help me, Reddit.
Now, I'm not sure what the poster was expecting to happen
when they sat down at their laptop
and wrote this anonymous post.
Elon's school had been around since 1970.
Thousands of kids had been sent there,
and some commenters on the post were really skeptical at first.
Like, if this was really going on,
wouldn't they have heard something
about it by this point, how could this possibly be legal?
Well, what this poster maybe didn't know
is that journalists had been trying to expose
Alon school for decades, but to no avail.
No matter what they published,
parents still sent their teenagers to this place,
throwing them into the belly of the beast
and watching as they emerged just shells of themselves.
No, none of the journalists were able to do
what this Reddit post was
about to. Now, I think people these days are a bit more familiar with the, quote, troubled teen industry than ever before.
Paris Hilton made a documentary about her time at one of these schools, and the Netflix show Wayward was a
fictionalized version based on a true story. I personally hate the phrase troubled teen because
what does troubled even mean? Students sent to these programs have everything from criminal records to
undiagnosed ADHD. The industry has become a way to profit off of
minors that don't neatly and quietly fit into society. But there is a long and sorted history
to these places. Now, the Alon School, which this poster wrote about, specifically was located in
Maine. It sat on 33 acres of woods on the shore of Upper Range Pond and a town called Poland,
about 30 miles north of Portland. The main building had been a hunting lodge once, and ironically
being a respite for men while they were tracking and killing local wildlife
might have been the least morbid thing about this place.
In 1970, a man named Joe Ricci bought the building,
and to understand how Alon came to be,
you have to understand who Joe Ricci was,
because it's his lifeblood that was pumped into the school.
In 1963, Joe Ricci was 18 years old,
growing up in a working class town outside of New York City,
and he had been using heroin for years.
That spring, he and some friends got caught robbing a U.S. Postal Service mail truck.
The judge gave Joe a choice.
He could spend up to seven years in prison or he could go to rehab.
And that's how he wound up at a place in Connecticut called Daytop Village.
Daytop was something new at the time.
It was a therapeutic community for drug addicts.
It was the first generation of a movement that thought addicts could only be saved by being broken first.
Daytop was actually modeled on a Santa Monica program called Synanon, which had started in 1958,
and was, to put it mildly, a cult.
Synanon had this thing that they called, quote, the game.
I think we talked about it actually when Amanda Montel and I did the Reddit episode about cult stories,
but just a quick reminder, for the game, you would sit in a circle with other addicts,
and the group would essentially verbally attack you.
They would find your weakest point, childhood trauma, or body,
image, anything, and they would just hammer into it for hours, sometimes for days.
I mean, imagine someone finding out something you're horribly sensitive about, like the death
of a loved one, and then a group of people screaming at you that it was your fault.
That was the game.
The theory was that if they tore you all the way down, you would stop using drugs or alcohol
because there would be nothing left of the old you to feed the addiction.
Studies later found that about 10 to 15% of people who went through this program actually did get sober,
but those people might have also eventually gotten sober on their own.
There's no way to tell because the rest of the people that went through this program actually got worse.
Some came out completely unable to function,
but the ones who did get sober at Synanond tended to become evangelists about the program.
And Joe Ritchie was one of those people who came out sober.
He left Daytop a very firm.
believer of the way that it worked. And in 1971, the federal government got into the same business.
They gave a grant to a Florida program called The Seed, which took synonon's methods and then applied
them to teenagers specifically. And these were even teenagers that hadn't actually used drugs.
They were just kids whose parents suspected that they might have used drugs. And I mean,
I'm sorry, but that is so many teenagers. If the bar is just teens whose parents thought they
used drugs, I feel like 75% of my friend group would have been sent to the seed. By 1974,
Congress had gotten word that the program was really, really intense, so they did an investigation,
and the committee found that the seed used methods, quote, similar to the highly refined
brainwashing techniques employed by the North Koreans. And then they let this program keep going
after that. The seed got rebranded as Straight Incorporated, which Nancy Reagan would later declare
her favorite anti-drug program.
And this closed in 1993,
but it did spawn a whole new generation of successors
that are still open today.
And this is the very messed up world
that Alon School was born into.
So in 1970,
Joe Ritchie, a rehab evangelist
with no formal education
and no clinical training,
partnered with a Boston psychiatrist
named Dr. Gerald Davidson
and an investor named David Goldberg
who put up all the money for their,
and the three of them together opened Alon in Poland, Maine.
And this did start as a treatment program for adults with drug addiction issues,
but within a few years they pivoted because they saw that there was only a small pool of heroin addicts
that were willing to try out the program, but there were a lot of rich families that had teenagers
who they thought were using drugs, or who had behavioral issues,
or like I mentioned earlier, undiagnosed ADHD, autism.
you name it. So Alon
rebranded as a
quote, therapeutic boarding school
for adolescents. Kids
with addiction issues, kids with behavioral
issues, kids whose parents felt
like they had run out of options.
And the price at its peak
was $54,960 a year
for a two-year program
sometimes longer, depending.
And on the outside, this looked like
a boarding school in the beautiful
woods of Maine. But on the
inside. It was the type of horror show that still haunts thousands of former students to this day.
This episode is brought to you by Kachava. I typically thrive on a routine. And the second I'm out of
my house for more than a day, all of that starts to fall apart, which is why I'm very excited that
Kachava just launched travel packs. You literally just throw a pack or two in your bag on the way out
of the door and you've got your all-in-one nutrition handled wherever you go. One packet gives you
plant-based protein, fiber, vitamins, greens, probiotics, all with no fillers, no
artificial flavors, colors, or sweeteners.
It's clean.
It's simple.
And it actually tastes good, which is why I feel like I shouldn't be surprised anymore.
But here we are.
I love kachava.
I've been drinking kachava for over a year now.
And, you know, lately, I feel like my life has just been more hectic.
And I'm often forgetting to eat.
So I love that they now have these travel packs.
They've got six flavors, including my favorite vanilla, but they also have chocolate and coconut
asa yi.
and you can try them completely risk fee with their love at guarantee. Take your daily ritual with you.
Go to cachava.com and use code HSP for 15% off your first order. That's Kachava, kachava.k-h-A-V-A-V-com, code HSP.
This episode is sponsored by LiquidI-V. Now that summer is here, I feel like I'm constantly on the move between work and trying to actually enjoy the weather.
Before, I was not drinking nearly enough water, but Liquid-I-V has been saving me because just one stick in 16 ounces of
water hydrates faster than water alone. It's powered by Live Hydroscience, an optimized ratio of
electrolytes, essential vitamins, and clinically tested nutrients. I keep a few hydration multiplier sticks
in my bag at all times. There's a lot of really fun flavors for summer. Like the cotton candy
flavor honestly feels like a little summer treat. It delivers longer lasting hydration than water
alone. And right now, you can get 20% off your first order with code HSP at checkout. Like me,
you can keep one on you at all times. One in the car.
in your bag. One right by your bed. I love Liquid Ivy. Stay hydrated while you're on the go
this summer with Liquid Ivy. Live more. Go to Liquidiv.com and get 20% off your first purchase
with code HSP at checkout. That's 20% off your first purchase with code HSP at Liquidive.com.
If you were a teenager being sent to Alon, you usually didn't get told you were going. You would go
to bed in your own room one night and then you would wake up at three in the morning to two
strangers standing over you. They were called transporters, sometimes called gooners. I know,
I know that word means something totally different these days. Do not share this episode with your
12-year-old son. But the gooner's whole job was to wake up other people's children, restrain them if
they had to, and get them into a van by any means necessary, and then drive them up to Maine.
Your parents knew that this was going to happen. They were the ones who had hired these strangers
to throw you in the van. You would then be processed at the school the next day,
and that's really when the horrors would start.
They would take your clothes,
they made you shower in front of staff,
not always staff of the same gender either.
They took whatever was in your pockets,
your bag, your wallet,
and they gave you a uniform.
By the end of the first day,
you didn't have a single thing that was yours anymore.
Then you walked into your house,
and at Alon,
house meant a unit of about 55 other kids who lived together,
and that's when you got your first look of daily life there.
Now, the first thing you would notice is that almost no one looks like staff.
It was often hard to find the adult in the room.
The students ran everything.
The students at Alon were divided into a hierarchy.
At the bottom was a position they called Shot Down.
This role had no privileges.
They just scrubbed floors all day.
And above that was a series of crews, like service, kitchen, communications, business, office.
At the top were the expeditors, and that was the security team.
expeditors were in charge of watching the other students.
They patrolled in zones.
They counted everyone every 10 minutes all day, every day.
And also, every night while you were sleeping.
An expediter would come into your dorm room with a flashlight and lift the sheets off of you.
And they did this every 10 minutes throughout the night.
The reason was so that you couldn't hide clothes in your bed and escape.
Every word that you wrote was read before it left the school,
every phone call you had was monitored.
You had four minutes to shower,
and you had to ask permission to talk to other students.
You couldn't look out of a window.
You couldn't write anything down without permission.
You couldn't wear dark clothes
because that's what kids who tried to escape would wear.
So the school took all of the dark clothes that you owned.
About 200 infractions were booked against students every day,
and booked meant that another student had wrote down what you'd done.
Like, if you had talked out last,
or if you had looked at the wrong person or maybe smiled at the wrong moment,
and that person turned it into the staff.
After that, a dealing crew would convene,
and you would stand in front of three older students
who would yell at you in a kind of ritual unison
about everything you had done wrong,
and then you would be assigned your punishment.
For some infractions, the punishment was this thing they would do
called a general meeting.
A general meeting started with someone yelling,
house in the dining room.
Then everyone would drop what they were doing and run into a single room.
They would put this broomstick on the floor as a line and the kid being punished would stand on one side of the line and everyone else would be on the other.
Then a staff member would yell, get your feelings off.
And then everyone would rush forward in five or six at a time and scream into this student's face.
Anything, insults, profanity, whatever they could think of.
They would sometimes spit on this person and they would keep going to.
going until everyone in that house had a turn. Sometimes this lasted an hour. Sometimes it would happen
twice in one day. And you had no choice but to participate on either side. This was not just a spectator
sport. In the 1970s, a student named Michael Wiggins was put through one of these general meetings once,
and the leader told him to admit that he was a coward and a chicken. Now, he didn't want to do that,
so he did say no, but apparently that was the wrong answer. Because the leader then
picked up a paddle and beat Michael with it until he was bleeding. And then Michael was forced to put on
a chicken suit. He said as he was wearing this suit, there was blood pouring down his legs. And it
was humiliating and incredibly painful. But that was what was expected at these meetings. And general
meetings weren't even the most embarrassing or violent part of Alon. No, that was something known as
the ring. The ring was essentially a boxing match. Whoever was being punished would put on boxing
gloves and face a guard. The other students would form a circle around them and inside of that circle
another student would step in to fight. Each round, the person being punished would have to fight
a new student. So it was impossible to win. No one had enough energy to beat every single
student at the school. And the ring kept going until the kid being punished, gave up and usually by that
they were just beaten into a bloody pulp and physically could not continue.
If the student being punished couldn't stand anymore, other students would hold them up so they
could keep being punched. Now, there was also this one punishment called the corner,
and the corner was a chair that faced a wall, and you would just have to sit in it all day.
You couldn't talk, you couldn't read, you couldn't listen to music, and another student sat next
to you to make sure you didn't move. Now, one former student told a main newspaper in 2002 that he
watched a girl stay in the corner for 57 days. Another former student described being someone in
the corner for so long that their leg muscles started atrophying. A staff had to walk the kid
around the room a couple times a day so he wouldn't lose the ability to walk. Now in 1980,
an NBC news reporter named Robert Rogers did a segment on Alon. Word had been spreading
around about the horrors of the school and it was time someone did something about it.
Joe Ritchie sat down on camera for an interview, and he admitted on tape to corporal punishment being used at Alon.
He explained that students administered it to each other, but here's the thing.
When it's teenagers that have been labeled as troubled that are being abused, no one really cares.
That interview was in 1980, and when our Reddit poster sat down to write his testimony in 2010, Alon was still open.
But more people started flooding that Reddit thread with their own whole.
horrible stories of being inside of the school, of being in a general meeting, of being in the ring,
of having to sit in that chair. And some of the things they wrote were even more shocking than what
I've told you just now. Like one poster who wrote, quote, one girl I was close with died horribly
when she ran away. When the director of my house told us of her death, she pointed to me and went
off on how I would never be as good as this girl. I was worthless. I was 16. She was so much
prettier, charismatic, etc. than I. Why her and not me? I am a waste of bed space,
et cetera, et cetera. Now, I believe that this friend that this poster was speaking about was
Don Burnbaum, who was a 17-year-old girl that decided on March 22nd, 1993, that she was going
to run away from the program. Dawn's body tragically was found a few days later in a snowbank
in Pennsylvania. She had been sexually assaulted, strangled, and then her body was dumped in
Pennsylvania not long after she had tried to escape. Male DNA that was found at the scene
tied the crime to James Cruz Jr., who was an Ohio trucking company driver who was later
arrested for the crime. But the school didn't close after Dawn's death, and it didn't close
after the interview in 1980 either. If it had, then a 15-year-old student wouldn't have died
just two years after that interview. Phil Williams was from Auburn, Maine. He was 15 years old
in December of 1982. His sister Pam was 12 at the time. In their childhood, their father had attacked
their mom viciously with a pipe. That left their father in prison and their mother unresponsive
in a nursing home for the rest of her life. Phil and Pam had been wards of the state in Maine for
years. They had been moved from foster home to foster home. Phil had run into trouble with the law
somewhere along the way. The specifics aren't in the public record, but after that the state sent him
to Alon school to straighten him out.
On December 27th,
Phil told one of the staff at Alon
that he had a headache.
Now, this was something that was well known
and documented about Phil.
He suffered from migraines.
It was also believed that his bouts of aggression
were tied to these migraines
because they usually coincided with one another.
But even though these migraines were, in part,
the reason for the aggression that landed Phil in Alon,
on December 27th, when he told staff
that he was getting one, they didn't believe him.
And Alon had a way of dealing with kids who claimed to be in pain.
The staff thought that this was manipulation.
So as a punishment for complaining, they ordered Phil into the ring.
Other students at Alon that day saw what happened next, and this is what they described.
Phil was put in the boxing ring, surrounded by the rest of the house, and made to fight.
New opponents stepped in every round.
The fighting went on and on.
and on, and at some point, Phil collapsed.
Students watched as he turned blue and started convulsing on the floor.
Eventually, staff carried him away, and he was pronounced dead the next day.
The school told his family that it was a sudden aneurism that caused this.
They said that there was nothing anyone could have done, and there was no investigation any further into this.
There was no autopsy beyond what was needed to write down the words, probable brain aneurism on the death certificate,
and then the school arranged for his funeral.
Phil was buried in an unmarked grave
and none of his friends were allowed to attend.
Elon didn't allow students to go to each other's funerals as a rule.
But there was one exception to this.
There was a young woman who was sent to Alon from Florida
who had been Phil's unofficial girlfriend at the school.
Now, Alon had banned any kind of relationship between students,
but she and Phil had managed to be something to each other anyways.
And Alon did let her go to.
to the funeral. She would try to tell the staff at the school three decades later what she had
seen the day before Phil died. She corroborated the witness accounts of the ring. She cried through
the entire interview that she gave. And then two weeks before Maine State Police could take her
formal statement on the record, she died suddenly. She was never able to give her testimony.
Phil's sister Pam was 12 when she was at his funeral. She was in foster care living separately from her
brother, and she was told that her brother had died of a freak medical event. She said that at her
brother's funeral, she tried to crawl into his grave to stay with him, and she remembered having to be
forcefully removed from the cemetery. But Pam never questioned the story that the school had told
her about her brother's death. She didn't know what was actually happening inside those walls,
so she had no reason to. And honestly, most people didn't know about what was going on at a lawn,
or they did know and just didn't care because over the years there would be countless attempts to publicize the horrors of that school and none were taken seriously.
This episode is brought to you by OG.
Have you ever put on what you thought was a great face of makeup in the morning and by 2 p.m. it just looks way too heavy.
Like it's sitting on top of your skin instead of being a part of it.
That is what led me to OG, a certified organic beauty branch that performs like luxury makeup.
Their crystal contour collection is nearly 90% skin care ingredients.
Think green coffee oil, elderberry extract, cold press hojoba, ingredients that actually nourish
your skin while giving you color and glow.
Also, their NSF certified organic, which is way, way more rigorous than a clean beauty label.
This system is three sticks.
You have copper for warmth, rose quartz for flush, and opal for highlight.
And I will say this crystal contour collection has quickly become one of my go-to staples.
I love that it's mostly skin care products.
If you are ready to raise your beauty standards, OG's got you covered.
Go to OG.com slash HSP and use code HSP for 20% off.
That's OGE.e.com slash HSP and enter code HSP to get 20% off.
This episode is brought to you by Alma.
I'm a big believer in therapy, but finding the right therapist can feel like its own obstacle.
Honestly, it can be the thing that keeps you from getting help in the first place.
I remember not knowing where to start and feeling so overwhelmed by the whole process.
Who takes my insurance, who's going to be the right fit?
And what is this actually going to cost me?
Those obstacles usually turn people away from getting help.
Well, that's why I want to tell you about Alma.
Alma has a network of over 26,000 therapists nationwide,
and 98% of them accept insurance.
You can browse their directory without even making an account
and use filters to find someone who actually fits your needs.
Clients with insurance pay $20 on average,
and most people find their match on the first try.
Seriously, there is nothing worse than feeling so overwhelmed
by something that you stop before you even really get started.
And that's especially when it comes to mental health.
You deserve to find help and to not be exhausted by the process.
Get started now at helloalma.com slash heart starts.
That's helloalma.com slash H-E-A-R-T-S-T-A-R-T-S.
Across Canada in a Volvo.
Destination, Vancouver, turn left to leave.
Travel west through.
Approaching.
Continue toward.
You've arrived.
Adventure and comfort with Volvo.
Whether you prefer gas,
plug-in hybrid, or fully electric,
there's a Volvo for everyone.
Learn more at VolvoCars.ca.
In the summer of 1975,
the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services
pulled 11 children out of a lawn
accusing the school of physical and mental abuse.
Joe Ritchie called it slam.
and a political hoax, the state of Maine did its own investigation and found nothing.
Three of the 11 children ended up back at Alon within the year.
And after that, the school stayed open.
Corrections magazine published in Exposé in March of 1979, titled Alon.
Does its bizarre regiment transform troubled youths or abuse them?
That same year, a congressional subcommittee on human resources had a hearing called
oversight on scared straight.
and Alon was discussed by name,
but the school stayed open after that.
In 1983, a documentary called Children of Darkness aired on PBS.
Filmmakers had been allowed inside Alon,
and they captured footage that the school was not expecting them to get,
including two boys living in a dumpster outside of the facility,
with another boy posed as their guard.
If the boys in the dumpster tried to escape, the narrator explained,
the guard would be put inside instead.
There was also a boy,
that was filmed in a pink bunny suit
with shackles around his ankles.
He had apparently tried to run away.
Even after this aired, the school stayed open.
Then in 2000, the magazine Details,
published a long piece by a journalist named Kevin Gray,
calling Alon, quote,
among the most controversial of the nation's
residential therapeutic communities.
It described the abuses and practices in detail,
and the school still stayed open.
Then in 2001, Joe Ritchie died,
of lung cancer and his widow, Sharon Terry, took over. In 2007, the journalist Maya Zelavitz
published a feature in Mother Jones called The Cult that spawned the tough love teen industry.
And that same year, the New York State Education Department, which had been paying tuition for
some of its kids to attend Alon, sent the school a letter. The state alleged that students
at Alon were being physically restrained by other students and being deprived of sleep. The state
threatened to stop paying the school.
And Alon's lawyer responded,
and after that, the school still stayed open.
There's reasons, though,
that the school kept staying open and didn't close.
And it's a tale as old as time.
Money at the expense of children.
Alon had a director of governmental relations,
this man named Bill Diamond,
who happened to be a Maine state politician.
Joe Ritchie, while he was alive,
owned the largest harness racing track in Maine,
Scarborough Downs,
and twice he ran for governor.
Alon was just not a school that the state of Maine particularly wanted to close,
so they didn't close it.
But there was another reason, too, one that's not really talked about as much.
For 30 years, every story about Alon came through someone else.
It was through a journalist reporting or through a state investigator's report.
Sometimes it was through a court witness's testimony in someone else's trial.
the survivors themselves, the actual students who had been there,
almost never got to tell their own stories on their own terms
to the people who actually needed to hear them.
But that started to change slowly in the mid-2000s.
With the introduction of the internet,
people were able to connect who previously weren't able to.
A small group of former students started finding each other online.
Mark Babitz from Chicago,
who had been sent to a lawn as a word of the state of Illinois
back in the 70s, a woman named Sharon McCarthy in Illinois who said that she had been sexually assaulted
on a school outing while she was at Alon in 1984. There was Matt Hoffman in Virginia who had been at Alon from
1974 to 1976, and there was a New York writer who went by Kronachin. Around 2008, McCarthy started a Facebook
group called the Alon Survivors Group. By 2010, it had a few hundred members. The group then built a
website. They started writing blog posts. They posted in obscure forums where almost no one read them.
For two or three years, they organized in plain sight and almost nothing came of it. But then,
in November of 2010, that post showed up on Reddit. And it threw gasoline on the grassroots online
movement that the others were starting. And now the stories being told about Alon were being told
in raw first-person, unedited form on a platform where you could just keep scrolling and
hear more. After that first post, other former Alon students started showing up in the replies.
And then more, and even more after that. And by the end of the first week, the thread had
hundreds of comments. Some of them were from people who had been trying to talk about Alon
since the 80s. They had written letters. They had called reporters. They had posted in those obscure
forums in the early 2000s that nobody read. And now, suddenly, they were all in one place.
All of these people were comparing notes, naming the same staff members, describing the same
rings, the same corner, those same general meetings. And a lot of them used the same phrase
that I kept saying over and over again as I was going through this thread. But they would all say,
quote, I thought I was the only one. The pre-existing core organizers that I talked about earlier,
Babbitts, McCarthy Hoffman, and Karnachin,
they all saw what was happening
and they threw their weight behind it.
The Alon Survivors Group on Facebook
went from a few hundred members
to several hundred more in a matter of months.
Mark Babetz drove out to the abandoned Parsonsfield campus,
which was the maximum security wing
that Alon had stopped using in the 80s,
and he photographed the basement.
In there, he found a cell,
like a literal locked cell,
with a coat hook on the wall
and a dead bolt installed from the inside.
inside designed to keep the occupant from escaping. He took this picture of graffiti that was scrawled
on the wall of an isolation room on the top floor, and it read, quote,
Alon don't like people to have families, so they send them to group homes and keep them here for
three years. A woman named Mary O'Brien posted drawings that she had made of her experiences
inside of Alon, pictures of the general meetings and the ring, and these started spreading all
around the network. And the website that the survivors had built, Alon schools,
record of atrocities started climbing in the Google rankings. By early 2011, if you were a parent
Googling Alon's school because you wanted to send your kid there, the first thing you saw
wasn't the school's marketing brochure anymore. It was survivor testimony. For 41 years,
Alon had controlled what parents saw. They held onto the facade that this was a therapeutic school,
and they worked really hard to make sure that these real stories from insiders did not get out.
but the internet finally democratized this storytelling,
and Reddit provided a place for all of the stories to be told at once on one big thread.
The more voices that were added to this thread, the more viral it went,
and the higher it climbed on Google rankings,
and within a few months, parents were pulling their children from the school.
On March 23, 2011, that's less than five months after the original post.
Sharon Terry, who was the current director of Alon, sat down to write a letter.
The letter went to the Lewiston Sun Journal, the local newspaper that had been covering
Alon for 40 years, and it announced that the school was going to be closing on April 1st.
In this letter, she didn't admit to anything.
Actually, she denied everything.
The letter described the survivor campaign as, quote, harsh and false attacks spread over
the internet with the avowed purpose of forcing the school to close.
And specifically, it named an accuser.
Sharon Terry's letter pointed directly at the original Reddit user, a person who she had never met, whose real name she did not even know, and she identified them as being the person whose testimony Alon had been unable to survive.
For the first time in the school's history, the institution was acknowledging on the record that one survivor's voice had broken something.
It had spent four decades protecting.
She announced that the school was closing because enrollment had declined.
so much due to people seeing the truth of the school.
There was no celebration in any state office in Augusta when this happened.
There was no statement from the governor.
There was no criminal charge against anyone involved.
And there was no acknowledgement of the students who had died there, like Phil Williams or
Don Bernbaum.
There was no formal acknowledgement that anything bad had happened there at all.
The school just silently closed its doors.
And the buildings then sat there,
empty for 13 years.
That is until 2024, when it started burning down.
On November 17th, 2024, a building on the old Alon campus caught fire.
It burned to the ground.
On March 1st, 2025, another fire burned another building down.
And on March 7th, 2025, six days later, a third fire burned another building to the ground.
The main state fire marshal's office announced that all three of these fires were intentionally
set by teen boys.
And maybe there is something a little poetic about a new generation of teen boys
burning down a school that destroyed the teenagers of their parents' generation.
But this did mark a final chapter of the school.
Cam Newell, whose brother Phil died inside of the school, was also partially able to close
that chapter of her life.
She eventually did learn what truly happened to Phil after survivor Mark Babitz told her
about it in 2016.
That year, she was also a.
able to raise enough money to finally get her brother a headstone. The closure of the school is really
a suture on an otherwise open and unhealing wound, though. That same year, Mark Babbitts tried to put
together a $50 million civil suit, something to pay the victims back for what had been stolen from
them. Sure, the school was closed, but the pain would linger for the rest of the victim's lives.
He went to the Maine State Police with witness statements and a copy of Phil Williams' death
certificate. And sadly, the Attorney General's office found that there was, quote, insufficient
evidence and the case was ultimately closed. The troubled teen industry is still around, and it's still
claiming lives. Sometimes it looks like a boarding school, but other times it looks like a wilderness
camp. In one of my earliest episodes of heart starts pounding, actually, I interviewed a young woman
who had been in the troubled teen industry for almost four years. I highly recommend you listen to her
story in her own words in that episode. My jaw was on the floor the entire time we were speaking. The
internet can be a force for good, but there is a long, long way to go when it comes to this industry.
And if you're interested in helping, you can look into programs like Breaking Code Silence for more
resources. And hopefully, at the end of all of this, more victims can feel empowered to come
forward because really that's where the change comes from, victims being able to tell their
stories and their own words and for us to feel the impact of that. That is all I have for you today.
This was a wild episode to get into.
Have you guys been affected by the troubled teen industry?
You or any of your loved ones ever been sent there?
Please let me know in the comments wherever you listen to episodes.
I'm always, always, always interested in hearing your stories.
You can join me here next week for another episode.
And until then, stay curious.
Heart size pounding is written and produced by me, Kayla Moore.
Heart size pounding is also produced by Matt Brown.
Our associate producer is Juno Hobbs.
Sound design and mix by Red Room Creative.
Special thanks to Travis Dunlop,
Grayson Jernigan,
and the team at WME.
Have a heart pounding story
or a case request.
You can submit on the forum
on our site,
heartsardspounding.com.
