Two women say they faced unwanted sexual advances while living at a Colorado Springs, Colo. halfway house.
The Colorado Springs Gazette reported that according to a federal lawsuit filed against Community Alternatives of El Paso female residents say they felt administrators did not protect them from a sexual predator.
The lawsuit was filed weeks after the man in question, former maintenance worker Joseph Garcia Chapman, pleaded guilty to forcing himself on residents of the halfway house.
CAE is owned by Community Education Centers, a private, nationwide corrections company that contracts with the Colorado Department of Corrections to provide post-conviction supervision and services. A CEC spokesman says the company addressed the claims about Chapman seriously, but declined to comment on the lawsuit, citing ongoing litigation.
Topics Lawsuits
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Space Startups Seek Insurance for Orbital AI Data Centers
Mississippi Insurance Dept. Top Examiner Named in $90M Credit Union Theft Suit
5 Years After Surfside Collapse: Safer Condos, More Transparency for Underwriters
Need Wind Mitigation? New Florida Insurer Wants to Help With That 

