MANCHESTER, N.H. — A man who says he was brutally raped as a teenager by workers at a New Hampshire youth center testified Tuesday that he couldn't report the attack at the time because the perpetrators were responsible for his welfare.
''They just did that to you. Those are the people you are supposed to feel safe around,'' Michael Gilpatrick said at the trial of Bradley Asbury.
Asbury is accused of holding down 14-year-old Gilpatrick on a staircase in 1997 with help from a colleague, while a third staffer raped him and a fourth forced him to perform a sex act.
The defense says the attack never happened and Gilpatrick is motivated by money.
It's the second criminal trial to stem from a broad 2019 investigation into historic abuse at the Sununu Youth Services Center in Manchester. Asbury, now 70, is among nine men who worked there or at an associated facility in Concord who are facing criminal charges.
Prosecutor Audriana Mekula said Gilpatrick, who was already in trouble and on room confinement, made a smart-aleck comment to Asbury and his colleagues and was then dropped onto the floor from behind, picked up by his arms and legs, and dragged onto the staircase.
Defense lawyer David Rothstein said Gilpatrick had gone to police only in 2020, when he was already ''deep into the business" of suing the state and had changed crucial parts of his testimony.
''There was no gang rape on the staircase at East Cottage," Rothstein said. "Brad Asbury is not guilty of these charges.''