Tasia Keaton search adds $8,000 reward as more allegations arise against Vista Maria facility

Former Vista Maria resident speaks on alleged conditions, abuse

An $8,000 cash reward is now being offered for information on the disappearance of 16-year-old Tasia Keaton, who reportedly ran away from Vista Maria, a Dearborn Heights facility for vulnerable youth, on March 14.

Keaton was last seen on March 17 on gas station surveillance near the area of Beech Daly and Joy Road.

After hearing all of the allegations and that they are not cooperating in the investigation into his granddaughter's investigation, Keaton's grandfather, Terry Mansell, said, “I’m very angry and upset about it. And all I want is my granddaughter to come back safely. It seems to me if [Vista Maria] did that then there’s a reason — there’s something they don’t want no one to find.”

Mansell said he found it controlling that they would listen to phone calls between him and Keaton.

“They listen to everything — your conversations and my granddaughter could not tell me these things were happening because they wouldn’t let her tell,” Mansell said. “They tell you they’re listening.”

Dearborn Heights police and assisting agencies are deeply concerned that she is in danger, as information has come to light that Keaton, who has a history of being sexually abused and trafficked, may be in a similar situation. And despite multiple credible tips in recent days, authorities have yet to locate her.

Keaton’s disappearance has also prompted a closer look at Vista Maria, a facility that has been the subject of growing concern among current and former staff and residents.

Sources tell Local 4 the facility has not been forthcoming with personal property and information that would have assisted investigators on the case, and has not been cooperative in disclosing “vital” information in “a timely manner.”

“It has absolutely impeded the process of finding Tasia. Without question,” investigative sources said.

After Local 4 learned Dearborn Heights Police made 368 runs to the facility in just 2024 alone, we have been reviewing state documents, violations, and dozens more allegations made by former and current residents and former and current staff, in an effort to get answers.

After becoming a ward of the state, one former resident from Standish said she was forced to stay at Vista Maria from July of 2020 to May of 2021.

“I was in Rose Hall, and definitely I went through a lot of, I’d say cruel punishment,” she said. “I went through a lot of [inappropriate] restraints. I remember I was writing in my room… and I got tackled like almost into a straddle position, like the guy was on top of me, straddling me. And I just remember with my hands pinned above my head, this is not okay. This is abuse.”

The former resident also described an incident involving another girl and a male staff member after she got upset on a phone call with her mother.

“She got upset, slammed the phone down, and this guy just grabbed her by her ponytail to the ground, and then looked at all of us sitting across from her and walked away,” she said. “It was really scary. I remember his face, his whole demeanor, everything, still to this day.”

Local 4 is told there are two open investigations involving sexual contact between a former male staff member and two teen residents within the last several months, with one of the residents allegedly being Tasia Keaton.

The former resident we spoke to on Monday said allegations of physical and sexual abuse “go back years,” with multiple employees. She referenced another male staff member during her time there:

“He used to pick up girls on home visits, and they engage in intercourse and stuff. I know he used to come to work under the influence and smoke in front of us,” she said.

She also reported disturbing conditions in the facility’s buildings, including an abandoned structure called Donna Maria, used for punishment.

“My hands were turning blue, because all I got was a blanket. There was no heat. There was no air, there was nothing in that building,” she said. “Even if the fire alarms went off, the doors could not open.”

She stated that girls were placed there “for misbehavior” and to prevent them from running away.

“I felt like my humanity was disregarded,” she said. “I’m traumatized. I was really traumatized, and I talk about it in therapy today.”

She said she would also like to see the state step in and investigate the conditions, staff and abuse that she said went on “the whole time” she was there.

“Shut that place down as soon as possible. Shut it down,” she said. “Hire staff with a background in behavioral issues. Hire people that know what they’re doing instead of random strangers.”

Local 4 reached out to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services last week and again on Monday, and we are waiting to hear back. We are also waiting for further response from Vista Maria.

Statement from Vista Maria on April 17, 2025:

“At Vista Maria, the safety and well-being of the youth and families we serve is our top priority.

We alerted police immediately on March 14 when Tasia Keaton left our property and

initiated the search for her. We have been working with law enforcement ever since to help ensure her safe return. Our hearts go out to her aunt and the rest of her family during this difficult time.

Vista Maria has a 142-year history of providing trauma-informed care, mental health stabilization, foster care services, and education for youth who have experienced trauma."

Anyone with information about this case should contact Dearborn Heights Police at 313-277-6770, Crime Stoppers at 1-800-SPEAK-UP, or the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children at 1-800-843-5678."

Statement from Vista Maria on April 17, 2025