Mom sues Provo Canyon School
Aleah Corona files lawsuit alleging school did not adequately protect her son.
In a press conference held on Monday, June 15, Aleah Corona announced she was filing a lawsuit against Provo Canyon School after the school failed to adequately protect her son.
TTI Watch covered the emergency response from DHHS to the incident earlier this year, and we are continuing to investigate.
The Incident
The lawsuit alleges that on May 14, 2026, a 13-year-old teen, A. C., was assaulted by another resident at the school. “The other resident — believed to be significantly older, larger, and more aggressive than AC — attacked AC and slammed him onto his head. AC lost consciousness,” according to the lawsuit. “The initial confrontation, escalation and the ultimate assault were observed by non-medical personnel who allowed it to happen as a form of punishing AC.”
Allegedly, Provo Canyon School refused to call 911 for the incident, instead attempting to provide medical assistance to A. C. themselves. The lawsuit claims that, rather than an isolated incident, this failure to call an ambulance exemplifies the school’s “instinct for concealment and self-protection that has defined its institutional culture for over fifty years.”
Once they realized that the injuries A. C. sustained during the attack were too extensive to be treated in-house, staff members drove the child to Timpanogos Regional Hospital in Orem, Utah.
Per the lawsuit, “Timpanogos Regional Hospital immediately recognized the severity of AC’s injuries and transferred him emergently to Primary Children’s Medical Center,” where he was diagnosed with a fractured jaw, traumatic head injury, and intracranial hemorrhage — bleeding on the brain. He underwent surgery and is facing “lasting neurological consequences” from his injuries.
According to the timeline in the lawsuit, “The Emergency Room physician at Primary Children’s Medical Center was confused why police had not been called when there had been an assault and battery of a minor, and appropriately called law enforcement.” This phone call set off the chain of events that brought this event to light and led to the Utah Department of Health and Human Services to take emergency action against the school.
Utah’s Response
The DHHS investigated the incident and, on May 19, a week after the initial assault took place, concluded that the failure of the school to act resulted in a one-hour delay in A. C. receiving medical care. In response to these findings, the state took emergency action, which includes:
A prohibition on admitting new residents.
Mandatory compliance with enhanced monitoring inspections and investigations.
Retraining of staff regarding emergency response procedures and resident supervision.
Payment of costs associated with additional inspections.
Conditions remaining in effect through approximately June 18, 2026 unless modified earlier.
The Lawsuit
The lawsuit, which names over 50 defendants, including the school, its parent company Universal Health Services, school CEO TIm Marshall, and various staff members, claims the defendants are guilty of negligence, gross negligence, and medical malpractice.
The plaintiff, A. C.’s mother Aleah Corona, is seeking damages for medical costs, pain and suffering, emotional distress, and punitive damages for gross negligence.
This lawsuit has the potential to have huge financial and social impact. If a jury agrees that the plaintiff deserves punitive damages for gross negligence, the amount it assesses will likely be very high for the fine to feel like an actual punishment to Universal Health Services, which brought in over $11 billion in revenue in 2019.
The lawsuit is also a tier 3 lawsuit, which is a Utah legal designation for the most complex lawsuits that seek a minimum of $300,000 in damages. This designation also means the lawsuit will have a higher standard of evidentiary responsibility and a broader scope of discovery, which could lead to more details about the practices in the school becoming not only public but verified in court.
Provo Canyon School
Opening in 1971, Provo Canyon School is one of the oldest youth residential treatment facilities of its kind in the state of Utah. Its history makes it one of the most recognizable and infamous facilities in the troubled teen industry. It has been the subject of much media coverage, as well as advocacy from survivors like Paris Hilton.
The school has been the subject of countless allegations, lawsuits, and investigations, and has a documented history of abuse spanning decades. One of the earliest lawsuits against the school, Milonas v. Williams (10th Cir. 1982), resulted in an appellate decision that included a clear condemnation of the school. “The Provo Canyon School is not a school in the traditional ordinary or classic sense.... Provo Canyon School is also a correctional and detention facility. Students are restricted to the grounds. Students are confined. Some students are locked in and locked up with varying degrees of personal liberty restored as each progresses through the institutional program. If a student leaves without permission, he is hunted down, taken into custody and returned.”
That decision also spoke to the difference between the written policies of the school and the actual care that students received. It confirmed that “excessive and inappropriate use of isolation and physical force took place.”
The lawsuit contains a litany of incidents ranging from 1978 until 2023 to establish a history of abuse at the school.'
Full Lawsuit
TTI Watch has included a PDF of the lawsuit and all relevant documents. As the investigation into the incident continues, more documents will be published on our website.


