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Kentucky’s juvenile detention centers overuse isolation rooms and lack basic mental health care for the thousands of youths that cycle through the system each year, a state consultant has concluded after an eight-month review.
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Two former employees of the juvenile detention center where Gynnya McMillen died in 2016 pleaded guilty Wednesday to official misconduct.Victor Holt and…
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Recent reforms have lowered the number of youth in facilities like Lincoln Village, which is operating with less than half of its 44-bed capacity.
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Several topics of our coverage merited debate in the most recent legislative session. Here’s an update on what became law and what didn’t pass through the statehouse.
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One year ago today, 16-year-old Gynnya McMillen died alone in a locked room inside a Kentucky juvenile detention center.
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A juvenile detention center staffer watched and failed to provide any assistance as Gynnya McMillen gasped amid a fatal seizure earlier this year, according to a federal lawsuit.
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While state public schools have banned staff from using Aikido-style physical restraints on students, Kentucky’s Department of Juvenile Justice continues to use the method.
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In a demonstration at the state Capitol on Thursday, activists called on Gov. Matt Bevin to make reforms to the state’s juvenile detention system after the death of Gynnya McMillen.
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A lack of supervision -- leaving residents unattended, skipping bed checks and falsifying logs -- is a frequent complaint in the state's juvenile justice system and could signal a cultural problem.
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State juvenile justice officials have fired a third employee for skipping required bed checks on the day 16-year-old Gynnya McMillen died in a Hardin County juvenile facility.