02/18/2026
It was a warm Friday afternoon when I left school with my backpack on and crossed the street like I had done countless times before. I walked into a Tudor-style house on Tibbett Avenue in Riverdale, surrounded by trees and quiet streets.
Inside, I was greeted by two men who were smiling—friendly, welcoming, almost charming. But what shocked me was that they didn’t offer me a soda. They offered me alcohol.
One of them was the Headmaster of my high school, Horace Mann. His name was R. Inslee Clark. The other was a history teacher and swim coach named Stanley Kops. At the time, I didn’t know the relationship between them. It was 1975, and I was only 14 years old.
I felt flattered to be included in what seemed like “adult” company. I didn’t understand their intentions. I was too young, too trusting, and too naïve.
I accepted the drinks.
After several strong drinks, the three of us got into a car. They told me they were taking me into the city to get something to eat. But instead, they stopped at a bar and ordered more alcohol.
As I became more intoxicated and less aware, they hired two male prostitutes and brought them back to the house with us.
Back inside, the two men r***d me while the Headmaster and teacher watched. Eventually, they joined in.
At that time, Horace Mann was one of the most respected private schools in the country. It produced politicians, scientists, Pulitzer Prize-winning writers, and influential public figures. To the outside world, it was a place of excellence.
But behind closed doors, it was something else.
By then, I was already familiar with abuse.
When I was just 6 years old, my uncle had begun assaulting me. I still remember the way he threatened me—cold and cruel.
“If you tell,” he said, “I’ll cut you into a million pieces and throw you in a lake where no one will ever find you.”
Then he reminded me I was adopted.
“Your parents got you from a store,” he told me. “They’ll go back and replace you. No one will miss you.”
My parents had no idea what was happening. They were constantly fighting, and eventually they separated. My brother, who was also adopted, struggled too—anger, violence, trouble at school, constant visits to psychiatrists. My parents were overwhelmed, and there was little room left to see what was happening to me.
In 1972, I went on an overnight trip to Washington, D.C. I was 11 years old. That night, a teacher-chaperone put his hands down my pajamas after I had gone to bed.
I remember saying, “I don’t like this.”
He replied, “Just be a good boy and relax.”
Between that night and 1979, I was r***d hundreds of times by eight different faculty members at Horace Mann.
There was nowhere I could escape—not at school, not at home, and not even at church.
One of my music teachers brought me to the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in Manhattan and pushed me to join the choir. I thought it might be a safe place, maybe even something good.
Instead, over the next two years, I was r***d and assaulted more than 30 times by a Jesuit priest and a group of monks.
They would force me to “confess my sins,” then beat and whip me under the disguise of “guidance” and “treatment.” I was often stripped and punished while other men watched—or took turns.
It happened almost every week.
Not long after I joined the choir, it became clear that a big part of why I was there had nothing to do with music. I wasn’t a child to them.
I was an object.
Everything happened behind locked doors. And people noticed. Church employees and officials would see the priest alone with me in a locked room after everyone else had left.
But instead of stepping in, they simply walked away.
I had no one.
Still, there were a few bright spots in my childhood—things that kept me alive inside.
I started playing guitar at the age of 3. By the time I was 6, I was attending after-school music classes taught by three retired teachers. They had a beautiful way of teaching, and in that brownstone, I learned piano and trumpet.
Even in the middle of chaos, I was surrounded by incredible music in New York City. Back then, I could go to Radio City Music Hall for five dollars and watch legendary jazz musicians perform.
That’s when I fell in love with jazz.
As a teenager, I began sitting in with musicians and learning from the best. After college, I started playing steady gigs. For 18 years, I played at a place called The Cajun twice a week. Music was there seven nights a week—no cover charge, no minimum.
Places like that were rare in New York City. They barely made a profit, but they stayed open because they loved music and wanted to spread joy. For me, it became something I desperately needed.
It was safe.
After high school, I attended the New England Conservatory of Music. I studied both classical and jazz, but jazz always pulled me back. I loved the energy, the looseness, the way it had structure but still allowed personal expression.
Today, I am 57 years old.
And the truth is—pain doesn’t end just because the abuse ends.
The damage stays. It affects your relationships, your ability to trust, your sense of self. There are still days when I think, “What was wrong with me that they all chose me?”
Maybe they could sense my vulnerability. Maybe they saw my hurt the way someone smells a perfume.
But I’m in a better place now. Things are calmer. Sometimes I even joke that I look forward to “normal” problems—car trouble, plumbing issues, everyday stress.
I still fight my demons. But through music, I feel free.
I’m playing for my life.
We all need something that heals us—something that brings beauty back into our world. For me, it will always be jazz. It takes me somewhere else. It gives me peace when nothing else can.
Many of the faculty members who abused me have died. The rest have been protected by old statute of limitations laws in New York State.
But the few who are still alive know who they are. And the world knows too. Their names have been published online. They live with their shame.
I still have a long way to go in my healing, but I’ve made real progress through opening up and joining support groups—online and in person.
Knowing you’re not alone changes everything.
And I would encourage anyone living with trauma or abuse to take that first step and reach out. It’s terrifying the first time. It’s scary the second and third time too.
But it gets easier. And the reward—feeling understood, supported, and less alone—is worth it.
Today, I feel in control of my life because I’m telling my story.
I’ve taken ownership.
And I hope that by sharing it, I can help someone else find their way out of the darkness too.
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