stampa
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Before the tragic epilogue of the kidnapping of Giuliana Sgrena brought his name
into press reports for his efforts at mediation between Rome and Washington,
Mel Sembler, US Ambassador to Italy, was virtually unknown in America. But among
the few who already knew him, many have been seeking to put him and his wife,
Betty, behind bars for years. For seventeen years, the couple founded and ran
“Straight, Inc.” a network of group homes for drug addicts, whose severe methods
have led to numerous legal and civil suits on the part of ex-patients.
In his official biography, the ambassador’s long experience with “Straight, Inc.” is described as a great
success story. “During its 17 years of existence, Straight successfully graduated
more than 12,000 young people nationwide from its remarkable program,” reads the
State Department site. But Wes Fager, a computer scientist who entrusted his fifteen-year-old
son to “Straight” in Virginia in 1989, couldn’t agree less. “Approximately 50,000
children passed through those group homes. Many still have mental problems, and
over forty have committed suicide. Some of them are among the 12,000 Sembler considers
‘graduated’ drug-free. They are successful graduates, but they’re dead.” Fager
has dedicated himself to uncovering the truth about “Straight,” and created the
website “The Straights”. After five months at the center, his son was never the same again. “He had
nervous breakdowns. I believe Straight greatly contributed to that. One of his
therapists told me, ‘Your son might have had problems anyway, but Straight pushed
him over the edge’.”
According to dozens of charges brought to court, in Sembler’s centers the patients
were beaten, deprived of food, and forced to sit in the same position all day.
There are instances of some clients being made to sit in their own feces, urine,
and vomit. Some girls were even forced to sit in their own menstrual blood. Older
members were encouraged to spit in newer members’ faces, and patients were compelled
to recount their most humiliating sexual experiences. Superiors ordered senior
patients to abuse the newcomers. “Straight does something very close to psychic
homicide,” says Marge Robertson, former head of the local section of the American
Civil Liberties Union, speaking about the Cincinnati center. “We’re talking about
the same abuses and torture that provoked scandal at Abu Ghraib,” Fager insists,
“At the Straight centers, that conduct was the norm.”
Some of the charges of mistreatment lead to convictions and the paying out of
large settlements. One after another, the Straight group homes finally closed
in 1993. Some of the directors subsequently opened new centers with different
names but similar methods, but it was the end of the largest drug rehabilitation
program ever founded in the United States, a business that generated almost 100
million dollars. Although its ending was inglorious, Sembler – already nominated
ambassador to Australia by Bush père – escaped virtually untouched. Shopping centers built by the Mel Sembler Company
continued to sprout up across the United States, especially in Florida. One of
them, in Saint Petersburg, was accused of racism by the local Afroamerican community
because of the methods used by security guards to target black youths and because,
out of 450 employees, only one was black.Alessandro Ursic