Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Devereux employee charged

He’s accused in assault of teen client

- By Fran Maye fmaye@21st- centurymed­ia.com @dailylocal on Twitter

WESTWHITEL­AND » Police have arrested a staff member at the Devereux Kanner Center in West Whiteland Township after video surveillan­ce showed him hitting a 16- year- old nonverbal client several times about the head and face with his fists.

Olasoji Satimehin was arrested by West Whiteland police in connection with the incident which occurred Sept. 12, police said.

Satimehin, police said, was an employee at the facility at the time of the alleged crime. A staff member at Devereux had reviewed surveillan­ce video from that date.

The staff member allegedly observed a client being assaulted by Satimehin. The staff member reported the incident to the police.

An investigat­ion was conducted, and video surveillan­ce was obtained. Police said the video shows Satimehin striking the client four or five times in the head and face with his fists. The victim was a client with intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

Satimehin was arraigned and later was released on an unsecured $ 50,000 bail. Satimehin’s preliminar­y hearing is scheduled for Oct. 22.

Late last year, three employees at the Devereux facility in West Whiteland Township were arrested in connection with the physical assault of a 16- year- old special needs student there. That assault was also captured on surveillan­ce video.

Charged were Andrene Ben

nett- Wint, 35, of Newark, Del., Tyrena Adams, 51, of Philadelph­ia and Cecelia Gbor, 22, of Darby.

And in 2018, five staff members at Devereux were arrested in connection with abuse of clients. Charges were filed against Christina Borden, 27, of Yeadon; Monique Scott, 25, of Pomeroy; Solgie Barbar, 38, of Upper Darby; Kimberly Dawkins, 32, of Lansdowne; and Jordan Brothers, 25, of Philadelph­ia.

Devereux serves children, adolescent­s and young adults — from birth to age 21 — with autism spectrum disorders, intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, and behavioral and emotional disorders. Each year, more than 1,000 children and adolescent­s receive specialize­d care there.

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