Civil suit against Forest Haven by families of victims settled for $1.075 million ($2,209,856 today)
Forest Haven opened in 1925 as a farm-like institution geared towards educating its patients with useful life skills. It encompassed nearly 300 acres and contained 22 separate buildings, and at its height housed well over one thousand patients. Its decline began in the 1960s as funding was cut and the population grew to include persons with non-ID conditions such as epilepsy.[1] In 1974, Forest Haven received at least 20 individuals from a nearby orphanage "Junior Village" which had closed. A lawsuit filed by families of patients at Forest Haven in 1976 and joined by the Department of Justice in 1978 resulted in the relocation of many residents to group homes, but the facility continued to operate, even allowing a physician with a suspended medical license to continue practicing there.[4]
In 1981, staff member Lemuel L. Taylor was charged with misappropriation and theft after stealing over $40,000 ($82,227 today) from Forest Haven residents' bank accounts. In September 1981, a two-week trial commenced in which a jury convicted him, and he was sentenced to five years in prison.[5] A Washington Post piece reported in August 1982 that the victims of Taylor's theft had still not been reimbursed.[6]
Between 1989 and 1991, prior to the facility's closure, the Justice Department began to monitor deaths from aspiration pneumonia, a condition that can be caused by improper feeding procedures (e.g. feeding a patient who is lying down). There are also accounts of rampant physical, mental, and sexual abuse at the facility.[4][7] Prior residents have reported being hit with "belts, switches, and baseball bats." Missing teeth and other dental problems are commonly reported. Many of the residents who died were buried in a mass grave, unmarked until a headstone – noting 389 individuals – was erected by some of the patients' families in 1987. Some of the graves have been uncovered by erosion.[1]
In April 1994, families of six of the victims settled a lawsuit against Forest Haven for $1,075,000 ($2,209,856 today).[8]
Today, the site is abandoned and is heavily guarded and patrolled by United States Park Police, but remains a popular attraction for urban explorers. Many hazardous items such as asbestos have been removed, but much of the equipment, including desks, beds, toys, and medical records remain.[1]
Timeline and history
Date
Event
1925
"District Training School for the Mentally Retarded" opens
1928
First on-grounds burial
1954
Thorazine becomes widely used in hospitals and institutions
1963
Institution name changes to "Forest Haven"
1967
Joy Evans court-ordered to Forest Haven
1971
Curley Building opened
1972
More than 100 job vacancies at Forest Haven reported
February 23, 1973
Evans v. Fenty lawsuit filed
1974
Nearby orphanage "Junior Village" closes, 20 children are relocated to Forest Haven
July 1976
Joy Evans dies (age 18)
1978
US Departement of Justice joins lawsuit Evans v. Fenty
1987
Families of patients construct a plaque to mark the 389 individuals buried in the mass grave
August 8.1989
Arkie, a resident since the age of 5, dies of aspiration pneumonia at the age of 22
1991
D.C. becomes the second jurisdiction to deinstitutionalize