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Last-minute injunction request seeks to halt Friday opening of Pennhurst Center haunted house

Barring a last-minute court order, the former Pennsylvania Pennhurst Center for the mentally handicapped is about to begin a new career as a haunted-house attraction over the passionate objections of advocates and some local residents.

Buildings at the Pennhurst complex have been left to deteriorate since the last patients were moved out in 1987. A haunted-house attraction is set to open at the site Friday.
Buildings at the Pennhurst complex have been left to deteriorate since the last patients were moved out in 1987. A haunted-house attraction is set to open at the site Friday.Read moreMATT SLOCUM / Associated Press

Barring a last-minute court order, the former Pennsylvania Pennhurst Center for the mentally handicapped is about to begin a new career as a haunted-house attraction over the passionate objections of advocates and some local residents.

Chester County Judge Robert J. Shenkin has scheduled a 9:30 a.m. hearing Friday on a request to block the haunted house - which features a "delousing" shower, "Frankenstein" room, and "crematorium" - from opening Friday night.

The injunction argues that East Vincent Township failed to require necessary building and construction permits, denying the public the right to challenge the plan.

The injunction request was filed on behalf of Saul S. Rivkin, chairman of the East Vincent Township Historical Commission, and his wife, Linda Fulton-Rivkin, who live on Pennhurst Road close to the complex, just outside Spring City.

The request "has no merit," said Richard Chakejian, who owns the 110-acre property.

Transcending the permit questions, however, is the issue of whether a haunted house is an appropriate use of the site, given the well-documented abuse of patients there. Pennhurst was the focus of landmark litigation that led to deinstitutionalizing the mentally ill.

"This is such an indignity to the people who lived and died at Pennhurst," said David Ferleger, the lawyer who filed the original Pennhurst suit on May 30, 1974. U.S. District Judge Raymond Broderick ruled in his favor, and Pennhurst closed in 1987.

"Pennhurst is a place where people's lives were wasted," Ferleger said.

Randy L. Bates, owner of the Bates Motel & Haunted Hayride attraction in Glen Mills, who developed the Pennhurst haunted house with Chakejian, said the criticism stung him.

"I've spent my whole life with people patting me on the back and people telling me what a nice guy I am. Now I'm told I'm the devil's pawn," Bates said Thursday as crews put finishing touches on the hulking Pennhurst administration building, where the attraction is housed.

Two rooms are devoted to Pennhurst's history, but Bates said that throughout the haunted-house exhibits, he had tried to create a fictional environment disassociated from the realities of Pennhurst.

"We created a backstory specifically to counteract any type of correlation between the former residents and what we're doing here," he said.

Chakejian, who said the haunted house was his 13-year-old son's idea, said he believed that "99 percent" of the 12- to 20-year-old visitors would have no acquaintance with Pennhurst's history.

"They're here to get a scare," he said.