“Someone has to end this cycle. Cause it is it's just like human trafficking. They don't prepare you for society they don't prepare you for the real world.
It's like shell shock”
Phil
Ep 3
"“So why would you choose prison over this? Of course, you're not gonna go to prison, you're gonna go to this thing. You’re gonna go there with the hope of actually learning about something and becoming a better person. Right?”
EJ
Ep 1
"“We started seeing some people were saying that there was this habitual pattern that wasn't changing. Are they providing proper nutrition? What is the education level that they're providing, and what is the quality?”
Gabe
Ep 6

Episode 1

Teens are being sent to a compound in upstate New York. Some of them were forced by their parents, others were court-ordered, but all are indelibly marked by their time under the care of Pastor Fletcher Brothers. Host and creator Margaret details her entry into the world of Freedom Village USA and uncovers its connection to the larger Troubled Teen Industry.

Episode 2

Margaret, Maggie, and Boy Wonder travel upstate to interview young survivors of Freedom Village who report on its final years of operation. Patterns of abuse and coercive behavioral modification provide a platform to understand institutionalization. The survivors reveal their individual experiences with violence, racism, medical neglect, and suicidal feelings in the treatment center.

Episode 3

Margaret investigates the origins of the Troubled Teen Industry from its roots in the Independent Baptist movement to Lester Roloff’s legislative battles to build and run homes for troubled teens and foster kids, ultimately showing how closely tied the industry is tied to the architects of the Religious Right. After investigating the various streams of money into Freedom Village, the reality of Freedom Village’s Adopt-A-Teen program and international connections to Ukrainian orphanages lead to haunting revelations.

Episode 4

Margaret sits down with a woman who was born at Freedom Village and spent the first 24 years of her life under Fletcher Brothers’ care. Her experiences, the perspective from two other long-term residents turned staff, and the advice of an investigative reporter raise the question, was Freedom Village a cult?

Episode 5


Shame, sexuality, flashbacks. What is the true legacy of the Freedom Village? To answer that question, Margaret talks with past interviewees and hears how their experiences of exploitation, and even conversion therapy have impacted their lives, often for years, decades, and even generations after leaving the Village. Maggie’s knowledge as a clinical therapist helps us to uncover some of the more insidious psychological consequences of the treatments administered to the Village’s wards.

Episode 6

Margaret speaks with Jaz and Gabe, the founders of We Warned Them, who tell the story of how they stopped Freedom Village South Carolina from re-opening in 2019. However, Fletcher Brothers and the TTI network he sponsors are still operating without accountability. We explore how concerned citizens can identify residential care homes in their states, get involved with local governance, and prevent the Troubled Teen Industry from flourishing in their own backyards.

“I'm gonna be honest, the whole program made me feel like I was pimped out.”
Jesse
Ep 3
“They told us a lot of weird crazy things there so yeah, I mean I feel like that is a direct result I struggle with addiction my entire life. I'm just glad a lot of stuff coming to light because like I mean it was it was one of the worst years of my life and I was a kid and who knows how my life would have turned out if I wasn't there. I wonder that alot, If I would’ve have gone down the  same path I went down if I hadn’t gone to this place for a year”
Tim
Ep 2

These are the accounts of students attending Freedom Village, the self-proclaimed premiere home for troubled teens.

Shielded from the scrutiny of the public by its seclusion in a sparsely populated region nearby Rochester New York, it maintained its reputation and relationships with conservative fundamentalist religious organizations and operated as a state-sanctioned method of behavioral therapy.

Some had no choice to be there, some supposedly signed on voluntarily, and others were born in there, but all were audience to the powers of religious indoctrination, physical labor, and psychological abuse wielded by the village’s administration.

How did this place exist for nearly 40 years? What is the long term aftermath for the thousands who passed through these doors? And what can these stories tell us about the multi-billion dollar troubled teen industry?

This is the journey of discovery into the microcosm of Freedom Village.