Pubdate: Mon, 03 Apr 2006 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: A1 Copyright: 2006 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area. Author: Laura Mecoy, Bee Los Angeles Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/corrupt.htm (Corruption - United States) STATE FAULTED REHAB CENTER - BUT KEPT SILENT Despite Red Flags, Drug And Alcohol Agency Failed To Inform Public Of Troubles At Orange County Treatment Facility. Determined to help her addicted teen, Sacramento retail clerk Cathi Taylor unwittingly spent more than $22,000 on a drug treatment program one state agency tried to shut down and another allowed to remain open. "They put up this facade like this was really a good place to take your kids," said Taylor, who now feels she was misled. Taylor sent her daughter to MedPro Treatment Center in Orange County last year because it had a top rating from the Better Business Bureau. Unbeknownst to her and the bureau, MedPro's house manager had been convicted of rape, and two of its owners had been banned for life from Department of Social Services programs. Gary Almond, vice president of the Better Business Bureau of the Southland, said he could only find a record indicating MedPro was in good standing with another state agency, the Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs. "When you have agencies that can keep this sort of stuff hidden, it's hard," he said. The case illustrates the shortcomings in a regulatory system in which state agencies fail to report wrongdoing to the public and have differing rules. The department overseeing California's drug treatment industry provides no public accounting on its Web site of misconduct in the programs or among the professionals it regulates. The Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs only began requiring drug counselors to register last year, and it makes information available about misconduct only through a lengthy public records request process. Its lawyer, Morgan L. Staines, has said this is to ensure the confidentiality required by law for those in treatment. Taylor said the Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs should protect consumers who need to find treatment as soon as their loved ones want help. "Something should have been published on (the department's) Web site for the protection of other teenage girls as well as the pocketbooks of the already traumatized parents of these kids," Taylor said. The department said it protects consumers by investigating their complaints. But it never received a complaint from the Taylors. Taylor's daughter, Stephanie, said she complained frequently to MedPro, but the counselors told her she was "just trying to find faults with the program." Her mother said the two of them were barely communicating at the time, and she didn't know about MedPro's past problems before seeing a mention of the program in The Bee's recent report on drug treatment. Shirley Washington, Department of Social Services spokeswoman, said the department now issues press releases when it takes action against a program. But that rule was not in effect when it sanctioned MedPro's owners in April 2004. She said Social Services did notify the Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs about its MedPro investigation as early as 2003. The drug programs agency said it didn't take any immediate action because it has different regulations than Social Services. "Our regulations encourage the development of alcohol and drug treatment facilities," the agency said in a statement. "Alcohol and drug treatment programs are voluntary, meaning a client may leave at any time, while individuals in a DSS facility typically require a higher level of care." MedPro, which recently changed its name to the Center for Dual Diagnosis Treatment, stayed in business until June 16, 2005, as an adult residential treatment center with a drug agency license. It surrendered that license after the drug program agency found several violations. But it remains in business as an unregulated sober living house and an outpatient center that meets a lower standard of state certification. As a residential facility, MedPro first came to Social Services' attention in 2003, after the program's director reported sexual misconduct charges to police. MedPro's house manager at the time, Michael Jerry Escarcida Jr., was convicted of statutory rape, and MedPro settled out of court with another girl who claimed Escarcida molested her. MedPro's attorney, Michael Eisenbaum, called the sexual abuse "an aberration" and said Escarcida was fired immediately. "He was just a bad guy," Eisenbaum said. "He kind of slipped through the system." In addition to the sexual misconduct, Social Services charged MedPro with violating its rules by having other staff with criminal records working with teens. The department also claimed the facility didn't provide adequate treatment and charged for services that weren't provided. It described teens smoking on rooftops and displaying "bare breasts" and other body parts to neighbors. In one case, the department said, a teen got drunk on alcohol supplied by a cook at MedPro's adult facility, drove a vehicle and crashed it. It also noted that MedPro Director Simon Andrew Casey pleaded guilty in 1999 to practicing psychology without a license and filing false health claims. It charged him with continuing to claim to be a psychologist while working at MedPro. On April 8, 2004, Casey and administrator Leon Desimone agreed to a lifetime ban from Social Services programs but admitted no specific wrongdoing. They continue to be affiliated with MedPro - or its current incarnation as the Center for Dual Diagnosis Treatment. Taylor and her daughter said Casey is also continuing to claim to be a psychologist. Eisenbaum, Casey's lawyer, insisted neither Casey nor MedPro's staff made such a claim. He said Casey has a doctorate in psychology and goes by the name of "Dr. Casey," resulting in some misunderstandings. He said Casey is registered as a psychological assistant. Victoria Thornton, Board of Psychology spokeswoman, said that registration was revoked last year when Casey's supervising psychologist told the board he was no longer supervising Casey. Cathi Taylor said she felt Casey and the rest of MedPro's staff misled her by failing to disclose the program's past troubles and by promises they made. Stephanie Taylor was less than two months from high school graduation when she sought help to beat a growing drug addiction. The father of a friend had found MedPro. Cathi Taylor contacted the program and said its staff falsely claimed male and female patients lived separately and that her daughter would be able to complete high school while in treatment. MedPro's lawyer, Eisenbaum, said the staff didn't mislead Taylor and did arrange for her daughter to finish studies at a nearby community college. "Stephanie certainly seemed happy when she left, and they did everything to help her remove herself from the path she was previously on," he said. Stephanie Taylor said MedPro didn't deliver on its promise to provide tutoring so she could graduate from the Sacramento school she'd been attending. She relapsed three times during her three months at MedPro. Cathi Taylor said she considered removing her daughter from the program but didn't know where to send her. "I thought this was better than her killing herself or someone else on the road," she said. At age 19, Stephanie Taylor still doesn't have her high school diploma. She entered another Orange County program in August 2005, and she said it has helped her more than MedPro did. "I have been clean and sober for eight months," Stephanie Taylor said with pride. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake