Back In Court from page 20 248.855.1730 WISHING YOU AND YOUR FAMILY A YEAR OF HAPPINESS, GOOD HEALTH AND PEACE! Working hard for you! mer of 2014. A statement issued by JCC spokes- person Michael Layne acknowledged that members of the JCC Day Camps supervisory staff had been terminated for failing to act on a previous 2014 complaint about Kuppe being "overly touchy" with campers, tickling and poking them. The counselor who made the com- plaint also expressed concern that Kuppe frequently took male children to the bathroom alone, despite being advised not to do so in accordance with camp policy. The government's brief explained the "grooming" process many child predators engage in, ingratiating themselves to gain trust among their victims as well as fellow employees and supervisors. According to Woodward's docu- ment, "the (JCC) management did not find the complaints credible and failed to act on them ... not because the JCC does not value the safety of the children in its summer camp; it is because the defendant presented to adults as highly accomplished, trust- worthy and completely appropriate. Defendant successfully manipulated his employers, making it impossible for them to believe that he is sexually interested in young boys." Parents' Letters STATE REPRESENTATIVE www.KlintKesto.com 39TH DISTRICT Please call my office toll free at (855) KESTO-39 with any questions or email me at klintkesto@gmail.co 22 September 10 • 2015 JN Parents of the three boys identified in the photos posted online wrote letters to U.S. District Judge Avern Cohn, who will preside over Kuppe's trial, poignantly describing the trau- matic effects Kuppe's alleged actions have had on their families and asking Cohn to deny the defense attorney's motion to release Kuppe. "The images of our son which include his name, which were sent to a Russian website known to attract pedophiles and sexual predators cannot be retracted or erased now that they have been shared digitally," wrote the parents of the boy who was identified by name online. "There is no telling who, beyond the agents involved in this case, has accessed and saved those pictures, or where additional copies are now freely cir- culating. "When our son is old enough to understand this, we will have to look him in the eye and tell him that there are stolen, pornographic images of him available on the Internet. This dreaded conversation is one which no parent should ever have to prepare to have with their child:" The other parents expressed similar sentiments, chiding Piszczatowski for his argument at Kuppe's detention hearing, where he described his client as a "model citizen" and suggest the photos may have been "child erotica" rather than pornography. Two of the letters also mentioned the parents' dismay that Kuppe's alleged actions have cast the JCC, a longstanding and highly regarded community institution, under a cloud of mistrust. "Mr. Kuppe's actions have single- handedly created suspicion and mis- trust for this institution, which has endured with an unblemished reputa- tion for decades — far longer than his life thus far:' Other parents in the community have expressed similar sentiments. "I personally feel disgusted with the choices made by the director and special needs director [of the JCC day camp program], but feel inspired by the whistleblower and Jim Issner [JCC executive director], who seems to be doing his very best to remedy a hor- rible situation:' said Darcee Matlen of West Bloomfield, the mother of a child with special needs who attended the JCC day camp. At press time, Cohn had not ruled on the motion to rescind the deten- tion order and release Kuppe to the custody of his parents. Kuppe was charged with six felony counts of child pornography, to which he plead- ed not guilty on Aug. 27. A trial date has not been scheduled yet. ❑