Daily Camera (Boulder)

Ex-state adviser implicated in youth center abuse lawsuits

- By Holly Ramer The Associated Press

The girls at New Hampshire’s youth detention center called their dormitory leader “Peepin’ Dave” because they say he leered at them through a bathroom window. But David Ball, later promoted to chief of operations, also is accused of much worse.

Of nearly 1,000 people who say they suffered physical or sexual abuse at the Sununu Youth Services Center, 20 have accused Ball, who retired in 2014 but continued advising the state on juvenile justice matters until 2021. The allegation­s against Ball, made in lawsuits against the state, point to a scandal that is not only widening, but also spiraling up the hierarchy.

One woman, who was 14 when she was incarcerat­ed in 1993, said Ball raped her dozens of times — sometimes while she was in a straitjack­et — and repeatedly choked her to the point of unconsciou­sness.

“I really thought at some point there, I was going to die,” she told The Associated Press in an interview.

Ball, now 76, is among roughly 150 former staffers who are implicated by former residents in more than 700 lawsuits naming the state as the defendant rather than individual workers.

Ball said he didn’t know until a reporter called him last week that 20 lawsuits filed between October 2021 and January of this year accuse him of physically or sexually assaulting 18 girls and two boys between 1981 and 1999.

“I don’t believe that’s true. I know it isn’t true,” Ball told the AP, saying he never hit or otherwise abused any of the children and that he has not been questioned by police.

The attorney general’s office declined to comment on whether Ball is part of the criminal investigat­ion launched in 2019. Eleven former workers have been charged with either sexually assaulting or acting as accomplice­s to the assault of more than a dozen teenagers

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States