New Zealand police are investigating new allegations that Dr. Selwyn Leeks abused youths at Lake Alice Hospital's child and adolescent unit during the 1970s.
The latest complaint was filed by an unnamed 45-year-old Auckland man who claimed that Leeks, who was in charge of the psychiatric institution from 1972 to 1977, allowed him to be tortured with painful injections, solitary confinement and electric shocks as punishment.
The man said he was in his teens at the time of the alleged abuse.
More than 30 former patients have called for Dr. Leeks to face criminal charges for his part in the abuse they claim they suffered at Lake Alice. The average age of the patients at the time of the alleged abuse was 11 years.
Those former patients claim that staff at the institution, under Leek's direction, routinely used electric shock to punish them for everything from getting poor grades to not eating their meals. In some cases, other patients, including children, dealt out the punishments. They also claimed that they were locked in rooms with adults who sexually abused them.
Last September, police dropped plans to extradite Leeks from Australia to face criminal charges, saying they did not have enough evidence.
In recent years, more than 300 former patients of New Zealand's psychiatric hospitals have come forward saying they were abused at the facilities during the 1960s and 1970s.
Nearly all of the facilities have been closed in favor of community-based supports. The adolescent unit at Lake Alice was closed in 1978.
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