The Accusations Against the Founders of Genesis
Associates
Ranged from Malpractice to Injury
Published Friday, April 9, 1999,
in the Philadelphia Inquirer.
By Adrienne Lu INQUIRER SUBURBAN STAFF
Nine civil lawsuits against Genesis Associates of
Exton, a controversial therapy center specializing in drug and alcohol
counseling, and its two founders, psychologist Patricia Mansmann
and social worker Patricia Neuhausel, have been settled.
The accusations against Genesis ranged from medical
malpractice to personal injuries, according to court records and
attorney Rodger Mutzel, who represented six of the plaintiffs.
Mutzel said he could not discuss the settlements.
"My clients were very satisfied with the resolutions of the
claims," he said.
Mansmann's and Neuhausel's attorney, Cornelia Farrell
Maggio, did not return calls yesterday.
Former Genesis clients have claimed they were ordered
to break ties with family and friends, and that they were encouraged
to recall sexual abuse or abusive satanic rituals that had never
happened, according to state records.
One of the nine cases, in which Carol and Martin
Ritter of Pomeroy and their daughter Christina claimed mistreatment,
was scheduled to begin Monday. The other cases were scheduled to
follow in Chester County Court, through June. Mutzel said he had
been prepared to select a jury for the Ritters' case.
All of the cases were settled through a conference
before Chester County Judge Robert Shenkin on Monday.
The other plaintiffs represented by Mutzel are Peter
Fulginiti Sr., Peter Fulginiti Jr. and Brian Fulginiti of Wallingford;
Elizabeth Johnson of Santa Fe, N.M.; Stacy Good of Reading; Joseph
and Kathleen Kelly; and Richard Stinger of Blue Bell. Joseph Rizzo,
who has represented at least five other clients who have settled
with Genesis, represented Laurence Byers, Jennifer Holmes and Michael
Mayer, who also settled on Monday.
Genesis is also under investigation by the state,
which considered at one point permanently revoking Mansmann's and
Neuhausel's licenses. The state filed charges in 1996 against Mansmann
and Neuhausel for engaging in harmful practices.
According to a complaint filed by the state Bureau
of Professional and Occupational Affairs, Genesis, founded in the
late 1980s, used a controversial form of therapy known as "detachment
therapy."
Clients were encouraged to maintain relationships
only within the Genesis network, according to the complaint.
State records indicate Mansmann and Neuhausel continued
practicing after their licenses were suspended in 1996.
Carol Ritter claimed in the lawsuit that Genesis
had her brainwashed and told her that her husband and daughter were
"toxic" people.
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