Agencies to Contact

If you are a teen, a parent searching for a "disappeared" child, or friends of a teen who has been disappeared, contact the following authorities.

Contact them by telephone, letter, and in person. Ask them to investigate suspected child abuse. They are required to uphold the law. Ask them to do their job. Follow-up with on-going contact, as needed. Ask for a progress report. Ask what action they plan to take.

Many officials in these agencies are completely unaware that GULAG schools exist. Words like "behavior modification," "intervention," "boarding school," "therapeutic boarding school," "attitude adjustment," "emotional growth," hold them in a trance and keep them from acting to protect teens. They may not understand the urgency of your request. You can break the trance, when you use words like "kidnap," "disappeared," "child abuse,"  "snake-pit school," "child torture,"  "teen prisoner of war". Ask them to investigate.

If you suspect child abuse, you have a duty to report it. Child abuse is a felony in some states. Officials, once informed, have a DUTY to report. They can be held liable - and their license revoked - if they ignore or refuse to act on a report of child abuse or child torture, when that report can be supported with first-hand and factual information.

Agencies to contact include:

Child Protective Services (Ask them to do their job.  Ask: will they go to Court to ask for the return of this  teen?)

Child Advocacy Services (Ask: can an advocate be assigned to protect this teen?)

District Attorney (Ask them to do their job. Ask: what laws can they apply to protect this teen?)

Attorney General (for your state)  (Ask: can you contact all law enforcement agencies in the state and ask them to be alert to this new form of possible child abuse. Ask them to report all suspected cases to CPS.)

U.S. Attorney (for your region)  (Ask: can you contact all law enforcement agencies in the region and ask them to be alert to this new form of possible child abuse. Ask them to report all suspected cases to CPS.)

The U.S. State Department (Washington DC,  for out-of-the-country facilities) (Make your request in writing. Ask them to make this a top priority. Ask if there are other cases pending for the same facility. Ask them to treat exiled teens as U.S. Citizens, guaranteed the same rights and protections as adults under the Constitution. Follow-up, as long as necessary, to get the response you want.)

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) (Contact your local or regional office. Ask what support they can provide. In cases where attempts to intimidate may include death threats made across state lines, or over the Internet,  contact this agency.)

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