Las Vegas Review-Journal

You can join ex-slugger Jose Canseco in pursuit of Bigfoot, aliens for a price State closing Nye school

Operators arrested on abuse counts after arsenic discovery

- By Rio Lacanlale Las Vegas Review-journal

Officials took steps to shut down an Amargosa Valley boarding school Wednesday after the owner and his wife were arrested in Las Vegas as part of an ongoing abuse investigat­ion.

Marcel Chappuis, 72, a profession­al psychologi­st who owns Northwest Academy, and his 66-year-old wife, Patricia, each face 43 counts of allowing child abuse or neglect. They operated the school for at-risk teens and adolescent­s.

Most of the counts stem from an investigat­ion into the school’s tap water, which officials have said contains high levels of arsenic, but Patricia Chappuis also faces two felony counts of child abuse or neglect in connection with “previous physical altercatio­ns with students,” Nye County Sheriff ’s Office Sgt. Adam Tippetts said

Wednesday.

The contaminat­ed water was discovered while the Sheriff ’s Office was investigat­ing unrelated allegation­s of child abuse against staff member Caleb Hill, 29, by a former employee and a former student. Hill was arrested Jan. 29 on suspicion of child abuse, but formal charges had not been filed in Beatty Justice Court as of Wednesday afternoon.

Investigat­ors determined that the Northwest Academy’s water had been contaminat­ed for more than two years, and that school officials had been limiting students to three small water bottles daily.

But the school often ran out of bottled water, sometimes going without it for up to three days, Tippets said.

“Even during the hot summer months, students were either required to drink the tap water or nothing at all,” he said, noting that students also drank the tap water when they were given their medication­s.

Patricia Chappuis also instructed staff to cook and clean with the contaminat­ed tap water, witnesses told detectives.

“They also reported the empty Sparkletts bottles were brought into the kitchen and staff were told that if anyone asked if they used the bottled water for cooking, that they were to tell them yes,” Tippetts said.

Las Vegas arrests

News of the two additional arrests in the case broke early Wednesday, after the Metropolit­an Police Department, which was assisting the Sheriff ’s Office, announced that it had taken a man and woman with felony warrants for child abuse into custody just before 11:55 p.m. Tuesday in the 7600 block of Painted Dunes Drive.

Metro later identified the pair as Marcel and Patricia Chappuis. A knock at the door of the Painted Dunes home, which sits in a gated community with its own golf course near West Ann Road and North Durango Drive, was not answered Wednesday afternoon.

The couple’s connection to the home was unclear, as the two are known to live in a home on the school’s property. Records show that the Las Vegas home is owned by a limited liability company in Lakeway, Texas.

In a brief phone interview with the Las Vegas Review-journal days after Hill’s arrest, Patricia Chappuis defended the academy, saying, “There have been a multitude of inaccuraci­es and falsities reported. There have been no findings of abuse or neglect by Sheriff (Sharon) Wehrly or any of the licensing boards.”

She declined to address the arsenic in the school’s water during that interview or the other allegation­s that had surfaced by then.

Lawyer Richard Schonfeld, who is representi­ng both the school and the couple, declined to comment Wednesday afternoon.

But in a Feb. 4 statement, he said, “We ask that the public not rush to judgment as we are confident that the investigat­ive process will reveal that Northwest Academy’s goal is to provide a safe and productive environmen­t for its students.”

The Division of Public and Behavioral Health said Wednesday that the school would surrender its child care license after all students were relocated.

“The individual­s arrested do not provide direct supervisio­n of the children currently onsite,” the division said in a statement. “Northwest Academy Staff are working to move children to alternativ­e placements as soon as possible. DCFS is assisting with finding alternativ­e placements for the children currently onsite at NWA.”

DCFS refers to the Division of Child and Family Services.

Contaminat­ed water

A notificati­on of the contaminat­ed water was sent to parents on Dec. 13, according to an email obtained by the Review-journal. It stated that the contaminat­ion was detected Nov. 6 and was caused by “erosion of natural deposits; runoff from orchards; runoff from glass and electronic­s production wastes.”

But, according to a state Division of Environmen­tal Protection spokeswoma­n, Northwest Academy stopped treating its water in October 2016, and had been working with the agency since January 2017 to treat its water.

The school’s water supply contained 0.032 milligrams per liter of arsenic, three times the EPA’S recommende­d 0.01 milligrams per liter, though that falls below the EPA’S former cutoff of 0.05 milligrams per liter.

The school was given a formal notice in February 2018 that it would need to treat the water by Dec. 31, but the school missed the deadline.

‘It’s about time’

Since the announceme­nt of the ongoing abuse investigat­ion, several allegation­s from former students and their parents have surfaced, including from 13-year-old Tanner Reynolds, whose mother pulled him out of the school in January after hearing from other mothers about incidents at the school.

Tanner now alleges that he was slammed and pinned to the ground by Hill on one occasion in December.

Brothers Tristan Groom, 15, and Jade Gaastra, 23, spoke out against the school the morning after the Sheriff ’s Office announced the investigat­ion.

Tristan, who was 12 when he attended the school, alleged that the abuse had been going on since at least late 2015. His older brother, who was 17 when he was a student from 2012 to 2013, accused the school’s staff of favoritism but said he could not recall any instances of severe abuse during his time there.

On Wednesday, the boys’ mother, Nicole Bayer, was celebratin­g the news that Marcel and Patricia Chappuis had been arrested.

“It’s about time. I always knew something was up,” she told the Review-journal.

Marcel and Patricia Chappuis were being held Wednesday at the Clark County Detention Center on $100,000 bail. Jail records show Patricia Chappuis was booked under the name “Patricia Mathis.”

The couple’s initial appearance in Las Vegas Justice Court is scheduled for Thursday morning. Tippets said they are expected to be extradited to the Nye County Detention Center in Pahrump within the next week.

Hill remained at the Nye County Detention Center, where he is awaiting arraignmen­t, jail records show.

Health inspection­s

In addition to issues surroundin­g the school’s tap water, the Division of Public and Behavioral Health found in March 2017 during one of its biannual inspection­s of the school that staff never reported an incident two months earlier in which two students were found in the gym “having sexual contact,” according to a report of the division’s findings.

The inspector also observed that the school was not meeting daily nutritiona­l needs for each of its students, as fruits and vegetables were not being provided during lunch, the document stated. Northwest Academy appointed a “kitchen manager” as a result “to ensure that the appropriat­e inventory is available.”

That same inspection also led to the school implementi­ng a “daily shift change report,” after the inspector conducted a review of the school’s records and found that Marcel Chappuis failed to maintain counseling or therapy case notes

“for students with self-harming behaviors,” according to the document.

Contact Rio Lacanlale at rlacanlale@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0381. Follow @riolacanla­le on Twitter. Review-journal staff writer Jessie Bekker contribute­d to this report.

 ??  ?? Marcel Chappuis
Marcel Chappuis
 ??  ?? Patricia Chappuis
Patricia Chappuis
 ??  ?? Caleb Hill
Caleb Hill

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States