Author Topic: Bay County Boot Camp Will Close  (Read 1618 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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Bay County Boot Camp Will Close
« on: February 23, 2006, 09:12:00 AM »
It's not enough, but it's a start.




http://www.latimes.com/news/printeditio ... -a_section

Boot Camp Where Boy Died Will Close

Uproar over guards' handling of the teen left the detention facility unable to operate, a Florida sheriff says.

By John-Thor Dahlburg, Times Staff Writer


MIAMI ? A Florida sheriff ordered the closing of a boot camp for young offenders Wednesday as the investigation into the death of a 14-year-old detainee widened and critics demanded all such facilities in the state be shut down.

In early January, Martin Lee Anderson died after an altercation with guards at the Bay County Sheriff's Office Boot Camp in Panama City, in the Panhandle. A surveillance camera videotape, made public last week, shows the guards dragging the limp boy around the grounds, kneeing and striking him several times.

 Camp officials said Anderson, who had just arrived, was uncooperative when ordered to do push-ups, sit-ups and other exercises. He died the next day in a Pensacola hospital.

A state medical examiner ruled that the young African American boy's death was caused not by the incident but by bleeding due to sickle cell anemia, a genetic blood condition. Florida's top official in the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People called that finding ridiculous and demanded an outside investigation.

"It's absolutely asinine," said the state conference president, Adora Obi Nweze. "Many, many people have sickle cell, and they are alive today."

Two state lawmakers who got an early look at the videotape expressed outrage, and Gov. Jeb Bush has called it a "tragic case."

On Tuesday, Bush appointed a special prosecutor ? State Atty. Mark A. Ober of Hillsborough County ? to decide whether to bring criminal charges in the boy's death.

Bush also said a second autopsy might be conducted; news reports have said that the license of the medical examiner, Charles F. Siebert Jr., was expired when he signed Anderson's autopsy report.

State officials said the U.S. Justice Department also had opened an investigation into the case, the third death of a young black male in state custody in three years.

Television news programs have played scenes of the incident repeatedly. The uproar reached such magnitude that Bay County Sheriff W. Frank McKeithen said the 30-bed boot camp could no longer operate effectively. On Wednesday, he ordered it closed within 90 days.

"Drill instructors no longer feel confident in the execution of their duties," McKeithen said in a statement. "Juvenile offenders currently placed at the boot camp are taking advantage of the situation and are using the abuse hotline not for its intended purpose but as a means of retaliation."

The camp opened in June 1994, according to the sheriff's office website, which describes it as a "paramilitary program designed to teach self-respect, discipline, high self-esteem and motivation" to male felons 14 to 18 years old. Youths are committed for at least six months.

Of the 22 current prisoners, 12 are to finish the program March 7. The rest will go to other state facilities, said Cynthia Lorenzo, spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Juvenile Justice, which funds and has oversight authority for the five boot camps in Florida operated by local sheriff's offices.

On Tuesday, Bush called the camps, which hold 600 youths, "part of the strategy that has reduced juvenile crime in our state."

Statistics from the Department of Juvenile Justice, however, indicate that the camps have operated with varying degrees of success.

In fiscal 2003-04, the most recent period for which data are available, one out of five Martin County boot camp graduates was caught breaking the law again. Bay County's recidivism rate was considerably higher: 52% of the boys who passed through the Panama City boot camp committed another crime.

"It's not a one-size-fits-all program, but some youths benefit," Lorenzo said.

The president of the advocacy group Florida's Children First, Howard M. Talenfeld, said studies had shown that boot camps were less effective at reforming juvenile offenders than other programs, that they wasted taxpayers' money and that they should be abolished.

"The fact a youth can take orders for a relatively short time doesn't guarantee how they are going to behave afterwards," said Talenfeld, an attorney in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "There is no aftercare. It's a quick fix. And you don't get to the heart of what caused the delinquent behavior in the first place. They need rehabilitation, not just tough love."

Lorenzo said the Department of Juvenile Justice would await the findings of investigators, including its own inspector general, before deciding whether boot camps should be changed or perhaps closed.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Bay County Boot Camp Will Close
« Reply #1 on: February 23, 2006, 09:24:00 AM »
Might be worth some letters to these people.  Steve Meadows seems to be concerned about LE and political ties.  DFAF, Jeb, Sembler.


http://www.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... 30318/1010
Also, the state chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People will have a town hall meeting at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church in Panama City.

"We want the public to express their concerns and fears with law enforcement," said state NAACP first vice president, Anthony Viegbesie of Tallahassee.

Gov. Jeb Bush appointed Hillsborough County State Attorney Mark Ober to investigate Anderson's death. Bay County State Attorney Steve Meadows asked for another investigator because of his ties local law enforcement.

« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Bay County Boot Camp Will Close
« Reply #2 on: February 23, 2006, 09:43:00 AM »
I spoke too soon.



Embattled sheriff wants new youth program

The Associated Press
 February 23. 2006 6:01AM

Embattled Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen detailed plans on Wednesday for a new county-operated academy for juvenile offenders to replace a boot camp under criminal investigation in the death of teenager seen on a security video being beaten by guards.

McKeithen released a two-page statement explaining plans for his Sheriff's Training and Rehabilitative or STAR Academy, a day after he gave the state Department of Juvenile Justice a 90-day notice of the county's plans to close the youth boot camp it operates for the state.

McKeithen said he wanted to find jobs for boot camp employees at the new academy, elsewhere in the sheriff's office or with Corrections Corporation of America - the company the county contracts with to operate its jail.

Employees involved in the ongoing criminal investigation would be placed on administrative leave when the boot camp closes, he said.

A national controversy erupted when 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson died after he was shown on the Jan. 5 security video being kicked and dragged by as many as nine guards. A medical examiner for the county ruled that death was from natural causes related to internal hemorrhaging caused by complications from the sickle cell trait, although sickle cell experts have questioned the finding and said the cause of death is extremely unlikely.

"It has become apparent to me that since this unfortunate incident, the ability of the boot camp to operate effectively has been compromised. Drill instructors no longer feel confident in the execution of their duties. Juvenile offenders currently placed at the boot camp are taking advantage of the situation and are using the abuse hotline not for its intended purpose but as a means of retaliation," McKeithen said.

On Tuesday, Gov. Jeb Bush appointed a new state attorney, Hillsborough County prosecutor Mark A. Ober, to replace State Attorney Steve Meadows, the prosecutor whose jurisdiction included Panama City, after Meadows requested to be replaced citing his agency's close ties to local law enforcement.

A spokeswoman for Ober's office said Wednesday that he would not comment on the ongoing investigation. Bush has said a new medical examiner may also review the case along with change in state attorneys.

Also Wednesday, Jerry Thomas, a spokesman for The Rev. Jesse Jackson's Chicago-based Rainbow/PUSH Coalition said organization officials would join a rally of support for the Anderson family in Panama City on Saturday, but that Jackson himself was not expected to attend.

Jackson has said that he has the sickle cell trait, a gene anomaly doctors say is found in one of 12 black people.

"Sickle cell doesn't kill. Beatings kill you," Jackson said in a statement released this week.

Anderson died early on the morning of Jan. 6 at a Pensacola hospital, hours after he collapsed after doing push ups, sit ups, running laps and other exercises that were part of his admission to the boot camp.

The videotape taken at the camp on Jan. 5 and released Friday shows that Anderson was struck and kneed several times by guards during a half-hour encounter. The sheriff's office has said he was not cooperating during an exercise drill shortly after he checked in.

The video shows a limp Anderson being dragged around the grounds by up to nine guards.

McKeithen on Wednesday described his planned STAR academy as school designed to help at-risk youth.

"My desire is to reach out and offer a helping hand to parents whose children have not yet been arrested but are on a road which, without intervention, will result in them becoming embroiled in our legal system. I firmly believe the STAR Academy could be the solution to change the lives of these borderline children before it is too late," he said.

Rep. Gus Barreiro, R-Miami and one of the most vocal critics of the Department of Juvenile Justice's boot camp programs, has called for DJJ to close all boot camps until lawmakers can investigate them.

Barreiro sent a letter asking McKeithen and Siebert to appear before the state's criminal justice committee on Thursday.

Sasser said Wednesday that McKeithen had not received the letter and would not be in Tallahassee on Thursday. Siebert did not return phone calls from The Associated Press.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Bay County Boot Camp Will Close
« Reply #3 on: February 23, 2006, 09:48:00 AM »
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/13938615.htm

The head of the state juvenile justice agency is keeping an uncharacteristically low profile as it comes under fire in the death of a teen in its care.

BY CAROL MARBIN MILLERcmarbin@MiamiHerald.com

Where is The Commish?

The colorful, larger-than-life chief of Florida's juvenile justice department, who came into office vowing to safeguard the children in his care, has been strangely absent from public view in the latest crisis to engulf his agency: the death of a 14-year-old boy in a juvenile boot camp.
''I think Floridians, at a time of crisis, expect the skipper to be at the helm of the ship,'' said Roy Miller, who heads the Florida Children's Campaign, an influential juvenile justice advocacy group. ``The absence of the skipper at the time a child dies raises serious questions about leadership.''

Still, Miller and others do not believe Anthony Schembri has gone missing of his own accord.

Some lawmakers and advocates say they have detected a widening rift between Schembri, a flamboyant character who was the inspiration for the television show The Commish, and his boss Gov. Jeb Bush -- a charge Schembri vehemently denies.


''Nothing could be further from the truth,'' Schembri told The Miami Herald Wednesday. ``I run things past the boss. We agree on things. I'm his expert. He expects me to come up with solutions. I don't bring every problem to him.''

Observers of state government say there are some signs of Schembri's fading influence:

When 14-year-old Martin Anderson died hours after being manhandled by guards at a Panama City juvenile boot camp, Schembri's statement of condolence was vetted by Gov. Jeb Bush's press office. When the state's most powerful legislative committee met last week to rough up Schembri's agency and demand answers in the boot camp death, the DJJ secretary wasn't in the building.

Schembri said that though he knew the committee had scheduled the hearing, he chose to keep a ''longstanding commitment'' out of town.

continued.....
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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Bay County Boot Camp Will Close
« Reply #4 on: February 23, 2006, 10:13:00 AM »
Quote
On 2006-02-23 06:24:00, Anonymous wrote:

"Might be worth some letters to these people.  Steve Meadows seems to be concerned about LE and political ties.  DFAF, Jeb, Sembler.





http://www.tallahassee.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... 30318/1010

Also, the state chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People will have a town hall meeting at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church in Panama City.



"We want the public to express their concerns and fears with law enforcement," said state NAACP first vice president, Anthony Viegbesie of Tallahassee.



Gov. Jeb Bush appointed Hillsborough County State Attorney Mark Ober to investigate Anderson's death. Bay County State Attorney Steve Meadows asked for another investigator because of his ties local law enforcement.



"


Guess I misread that.  Thought Meadows was concerned about Ober's ties to LE.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline AtomicAnt

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Bay County Boot Camp Will Close
« Reply #5 on: February 26, 2006, 11:09:00 PM »
Great. When the State shuts down your boot camp for murder, just go and open a TBS.[ This Message was edited by: AtomicAnt on 2006-02-26 20:09 ]
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »