CEDU was founded by Merle "Mel" Wassermann and his wife Brigette Wasserman, in their Palm Springs home. Wasserman was a furniture salesman and had been involved with sponsoring people undertaking the Synanon program. CEDU had been given non-profit status and actively solicited donations. In September 1968, CEDU faced a setback when county planners denied their ranch a permit for public use. This decision meant that the program would have to find a new location to continue its operations. In 1969, CEDU bought a town house in San Bernardino and was also operating a gasoline station in
Loma Linda. Contemporaneous newspaper reports cited allegations of "sex orgies" and "brainwashing," based on statements from parents, claims that were at the time rebutted at length by CEDU. CEDU was later accused by a critic of telling problematic students that they may end up at
California Youth Authority,
Juvenile Hall or
Patton state hospital if they left prior to completing the program. CEDU moved into the property in Running Springs that had previously owned by
Walter Houston and turned it into the Running Springs campus. In a 1973 news article titled "Center a beacon light leading addicts out of world of drugs", it was reported that students were being assigned jobs such as construction, kitchen duties, landscaping, and plumbing. Including digging out tree stumps. In 1982, a small group of staff and residents known as the "original seven" left the
Running Springs, California campus for
Bonners Ferry, Idaho, to open Rocky Mountain Academy (RMA). RMA's curriculum and philosophy were identical to the original school, CEDU Running Springs. CEDU also ran another program called Hilltop that was established in 1984. Its ages ranged from to . on
December 12, 1985 - Rescue teams search were dispatched for five girls who went missing in a snowstorm during a survival course run by CEDU in the
Joshua Tree National Park. The girls were found by a
US Marine Corps helicopter safe after a 3-day search, unaware that anyone had been searching for them. In the early 1990s, CEDU expanded its operations to include additional programs serving a wider range of ages and treatment models. In 1992, the organization opened
Ascent, a 41-day wilderness program located near Ruby Ridge, Idaho, which was commonly used as an initial placement prior to enrollment at other CEDU schools. Participants in the program ranged in age from approximately 13 to 20 years old. That same year, CEDU established
CEDU Middle School on its Running Springs, California campus, extending its educational model to younger students
.; When the middle school first opened, it served children between roughly 9½ and 13½ years of age, later focusing on students aged 12 to 14. followed by
Northwest Academy in 1994. Northwest Academy, located in northern Idaho near the Selkirk Mountains, served adolescents between the ages of 13 and 17.
July 15, 1994 - A male client from Texas hanged himself with a belt from a pipe of an overhead sprinkler system in one of the dormitories of Lower Camelot at Rocky Mountain Academy in
Bonners Ferry, Idaho.
July 28, 1994 - It is revealed that a former CEDU employee and white separatist planned to kidnap students attending Rocky Mountain Academy for ransom, including the children of celebrities: the daughter of
Barbara Walters and
Clint Eastwood. The employee, who was a friend of
Randy Weaver, was fired after federal agents discovered the plot.
June 27, 1996 - John C. D'Abreo files a lawsuit against CEDU in
Monterey County Superior Court, claiming he was physically and emotionally abused at
Ascent wilderness program and
Northwest Academy. In 1997, a violent disturbance at Northwest Academy involving students resulted in injuries and property damage, prompting investigations by state health officials and local authorities, though no criminal charges were filed at the time. The incident later became central to a series of allegations and legal actions in 1998, when parents filed lawsuits claiming abuse and negligence linked to injuries sustained during the disturbance and subsequent restraints. These complaints contributed to a broader state investigation that led to criminal charges against some employees and findings that certain allegations, including failures to report injuries, were substantiated. At the same time, a wider civil lawsuit brought by former students accused CEDU and its affiliated programs of fraud, racketeering, and abusive practices, marking a significant escalation in public and regulatory scrutiny of the organisation.
On July 31, 1998, CEDU was acquired by Brown Schools Inc for $72 million., a Texas-based provider of behavioral health and special education programs. In March 2005, Brown Schools Inc., CEDU’s parent company, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The filing resulted in the immediate closure of CEDU’s remaining programs, including four schools in North Idaho, and the loss of approximately 300 jobs in the region. Nationwide, about 300 students were sent home. In April 2005, a class-action lawsuit was filed in federal court alleging that approximately 700 former employees were not provided the 60 days’ notice required under federal labor law prior to termination. The suit sought back pay, benefits, and damages. During the closure process, a group of parents funded two emotional growth workshops for 12 remaining students.
Idaho Educational Services Universal Health Services Inc., a public company focused on hospitals and behavioral health centers, subsequently reopened three of the former CEDU facilities: Boulder Creek Academy (located on the former Rocky Mountain Academy property), Northwest Academy, and Ascent Wilderness Program, whose name they later changed to Caribou Ridge Intervention. These operate under the new name of Idaho Educational Services. Each program is overseen by individual directors.
Disappearances Between the early 1990s and the mid-2000s,
three students disappeared from CEDU-affiliated programs under circumstances that later drew sustained media scrutiny and criticism of the institution’s supervision practices. In
January 1993,
John Christopher Inman, a student at CEDU High School in Running Springs, California, went missing after leaving campus. In
June 1994,
Blake Wade Pursley, another student at the same facility, disappeared after reportedly going to check on animals at a barn on the property. Both disappearances occurred during a period when students were subject to restrictions on movement and communication, and neither case resulted in definitive findings regarding the students’ whereabouts. More than a decade later, in
February 2004,
Daniel Ted Yuen, a student at CEDU High School, disappeared from the Running Springs campus. His case remained open years later and prompted renewed attention to earlier disappearances associated with the program. Investigative reporting in subsequent years examined similarities among the cases, including questions about campus oversight, student accountability procedures, and delays in reporting.The three disappearances became a focal point of later investigations and media coverage, contributing to broader criticism of CEDU and similar residential treatment programs regarding student safety, monitoring, and institutional transparency. In October 2022, Los Angeles Magazine published an article by David Safran examining the disappearances of John Inman, Blake Pursley, and Daniel Yuen, raising questions about the handling of the cases and institutional oversight. In March 2023, Safran published a follow-up article focusing specifically on Daniel Yuen’s case. ==Program and practices ==