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Lexi Jones Clarifies Rehab Account, Defends Bowie and Iman

ID 193078974 | David Bowie © 
Laurence Agron | Dreamstime.com
ID 193078974 | David Bowie © Laurence Agron | Dreamstime.com

Alexandria Zahra Jones, the 25-year-old daughter of David Bowie and supermodel Iman, has broken years of silence about being forcibly removed from her family home as a teenager and placed into a series of treatment programs, revealing that the experience kept her from being at her father's side during his final days.

In a candid 20-minute video posted to Instagram in late February 2026, Jones described a childhood shaped by privilege, pain, and the weight of growing up in the shadow of one of rock's most iconic figures. The account has drawn widespread attention not only for what it reveals about the Bowie family's private struggles, but for shining a high-profile light on the controversial troubled teen industry and the practice of youth transport, in which parents hire private escort companies to physically remove minors from their homes and deliver them to treatment facilities.

Jones, who goes by Lexi, said she began seeing a therapist around age 10 after teachers and her parents noticed behavioral changes. She had her first anxiety attack that same year. By 11 she was self-harming, and by 12 she had developed bulimia. When Bowie was diagnosed with what would turn out to be terminal liver cancer, Jones said she was already at a breaking point. She turned to drugs and alcohol at 14.

“I drank and got high alone. I was angry, I was scared, I was numb, but I felt free,” she said in the video. “I became someone who lashed out. I was cruel to people who didn't treat me the way I wanted to be treated.”

What came next is the detail that has generated the most public reaction. Jones described waking one morning to find two men entering her home. Her parents and her godmother were present and in tears, but they allowed the men to take her. The men looped a rope around her and placed her in the back of a black SUV.

The scene Jones described is consistent with a well-documented practice in the American troubled teen industry known as youth transport or “gooning.” Parents who feel they have exhausted other options hire private escort companies to physically collect their children, often in the early morning hours, and deliver them to wilderness therapy programs or residential treatment centers. The parents typically sign over temporary custody to the transport company for the duration of the transfer. The practice has been criticized by advocacy groups and former participants as traumatic and ethically questionable, with some comparing it to kidnapping. In December 2024, President Biden signed the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act into law, requiring federal agencies to study and report on conditions in youth residential programs. Celebrity survivors including Paris Hilton have spoken publicly about similar experiences and pushed for legislative reform.

Jones said that upon arrival at the wilderness program, she was strip-searched, handed winter clothing and an oversized backpack, and told she would be living outdoors. She had never heard of wilderness therapy.

“It felt like boot camp's weird cousin, and it was disguised as something therapeutic,” she said.

She spent 91 days in the program with weekly showers, no mirrors, no clocks, and communication with the outside world limited to one letter per week. She acknowledged finding a sense of community among the other girls in the program, but called the overall experience dehumanizing.

“The whole point was to take away every basic human comfort and need,” she said. “No TV, no bed, no roof, no privacy, so that we'd ‘behave right.'”

After completing the wilderness program, Jones was transferred to a therapeutic boarding school in Utah, where she remained for 13 months. It was during this period that her father's health deteriorated. On January 8, 2016, two days before Bowie's death at age 69, Jones spoke to him by phone on his birthday.

“I told him I loved him, and he said it back, and we both knew,” she recalled.

When Bowie died on January 10, 2016, Jones was still in the Utah facility. She said reading media reports that he had passed away “surrounded by his whole family” made her physically ill.

“Yeah, the whole family was there,” she said. “Except for me.”

Jones was released from the boarding school shortly before her 16th birthday, but said she fell back into old patterns and was sent away again. That cycle, she said, repeated throughout her teen years.

“The mental and emotional manipulation I experienced is something I will not forget,” she said. “And I won't pretend it didn't happen, because that is abuse too.”

Jones made clear that her intention was not simply to air personal grievances but to draw attention to what she views as systemic failures within the troubled teen treatment model.

“The point is to show what this system does to a person,” she said. “The point is that this happened to me and to a lot of other kids that deserved better.”

Jones' account adds her voice to a growing wave of public testimonies from survivors of the troubled teen industry, an umbrella term for privately run youth residential treatment centers, wilderness programs, boot camps, and therapeutic boarding schools across the United States. The industry has faced mounting scrutiny in recent years following investigations documenting widespread reports of abuse and neglect at such facilities.

 

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