Author Topic: The world will never know how Eric Perez died  (Read 31735 times)

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Offline Ursus

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Video of final moments of teen who died at a West Palm Beach
« Reply #30 on: July 27, 2011, 12:39:09 PM »
NEWS CHANNEL 5 — WPTV

Video of final moments of teen who died at a West Palm Beach juvenile detention center

Posted: 07/17/2011


Copyright 2011 Scripps Media, Inc.

WEST PALM BEACH - - Authorities say there is a video of the final moments of an 18-year-old who died at a West Palm Beach juvenile detention center.
Eric Perez died last Sunday after falling ill.

A spokesperson for the state Department of Juvenile Justice says four lockup workers have been suspended and two fired.

The department's inspector general and police are investigating Perez's death.

While there is video of the incident, it may not be made public.  A new law makes it illegal for agencies to release photos or recordings of a death.

Perez's mother says she was told the teen began hallucinating and vomiting. He was moved to a room where officials could watch him more closely but his condition deteriorated.


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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Video of final moments of teen who died..."
« Reply #31 on: July 29, 2011, 12:45:44 AM »
Comment left for the above article, "Video of final moments of teen who died at a West Palm Beach juvenile detention center" (07/17/2011, News Channel 5 - WPTV):

Robert Hemlak · Last Week
    Seeing is believing.


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Offline Ursus

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Florida's Anti-Faces of Death Law May Hide How 18-Yr-Old Die
« Reply #32 on: July 29, 2011, 12:48:08 AM »
Finally, at long last ( :D ), here's that entry from the Broward-Palm Beach New Times blog, The Daily Pulp, which was linked to by Oscar in the OP:

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The Daily Pulp

PUBLIC RECORDS
Florida's Anti-Faces of Death Law May Hide How 18-Year-Old Died in State Hands

By Matthew Hendley · Mon., Jul. 18 2011 at 8:30 AM
Categories: Public Records


cinema-suicide.com
Faces of Death: A crappy movie that makes videos of people dying very scary.

Thanks to the Florida lawmakers' successful bid to legislate morality in the state's public records law, we may never know how 18-year-old Eric Perez died in the hands of state workers.

Perez died about a week ago at a West Palm Beach juvenile detention facility, due to either breathing problems, an enlarged heart, maybe a stroke, or after becoming "ill and psychotic" -- at least those are the different stories officials have told Perez's mother, according to the Miami Herald.

His death was recorded on video, but since HB 411 was signed into effect by the governor, the media -- and subsequently, the public -- may never get to see that video.

The rationale for the law may make sense on the surface: Most people who've seen Faces of Death -- a 1980 film that's just a roughly 100-minute compilation of real and fake footage of deaths -- would think there's no legitimate reason to watch the death of another human being.

To anyone who wants to hold people and government accountable, though, death videos have proved to be important.

Consider the story -- and video -- of Martin Lee Anderson.

He was 14 years old when he died at a juvenile boot camp in Panama City in 2006, and just about everyone had seen the video of his death -- leading to the closure of all state boot camps.

But as of July 1, any photograph, video, or audio recording that depicts "all acts or events that cause or otherwise relate to the death of any human being, including any related acts or events immediately preceding or subsequent to the acts or events that were the proximate cause of death," are considered confidential and exempt from Florida's public records law.

Now it's a third-degree felony for a records custodian to release the video if it violates the new law.

The Herald has already requested the tape, and officials say they're in the process of redacting the footage in case it is exempt from the law, although they still wouldn't be able to release it while the investigation into Perez's death is ongoing.

The only other way around the law in this case would be through Perez's mother. The death videos can be released to immediate family, and they're free to do whatever they want with it. His mother has told the Herald she'd likely give the paper the tape.

Absent that, the state hasn't even said how Perez died or what he died of.

Officials wouldn't provide Perez's name until his mother came forward to reporters, and the state wouldn't give the Herald the employees' termination letters.

Follow The Pulp on Facebook and on Twitter: @ThePulpBPB.


©2011 New Times BPB, LLC.
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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Florida's Anti-Faces of Death Law May Hide..."
« Reply #33 on: July 29, 2011, 02:58:22 PM »
Comment left for the above Broward-Palm Beach New Times blog entry, "Florida's Anti-Faces of Death Law May Hide How 18-Year-Old Died in State Hands" (by Matthew Hendley, Jul. 18 2011, The Daily Pulp):


Thefamilyshouldhavenorights · 4 days ago
    Horrible! You mean that media outlets will not be able to view or publish gruesome details or pictures of these deaths without the immediate surviving familys consent?
    I do believe that my right to titilation outweighs the familys right to privacy.
    Consider Dale Earnheardts death...who the hell would prioritize his wife and kids desire not to see images his decapitated corpse splashed all over the media vs my and every other readers desire to see said gruesome images? Insanity!


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Offline Ursus

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Attorney Speaks About Teen Who Died At Juvenile Facility
« Reply #34 on: July 29, 2011, 03:26:31 PM »
Now comes the issue about the nightlong delay of the 911 call...

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abc25 - WPBF

Attorney Speaks About Teen Who Died At Juvenile Facility
Mother Of Teen Who Died In Custody Says Officials Could Have Done Something

Angela Rozier, Reporter
POSTED: 3:46 pm EDT July 18, 2011
UPDATED: 10:37 pm EDT July 18, 2011


WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- An attorney representing the family of a teenager who died while in custody at a West Palm Beach juvenile detention center spoke about the incident Monday.

Eric Perez died July 10 while in custody at the Palm Beach Regional Juvenile Detention Center.

An attorney for the family said the reason Perez died was because one of the guards was not allowed to call 911 even after Perez complained of severe headaches and vomited for hours.

"The analysis here is that, unfortunately, some of the people in charge think that these young men are malingerers and fakers, but this is not one of those situations," attorney Richard Schuler said.

Perez's mother said she wasn't told how her son died.

"They could have done something to help him out," mother Maritza Perez said.

The Florida Department of Juvenile Justice and West Palm Beach police are investigating the death.

Since Perez's death, the juvenile justice agency has fired two employees and suspended six others.

The 18-year-old Port St. Lucie boy was buried Monday at Palm Beach Memorial Park in Lantana.


Copyright 2011 by WPBF.com.
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Offline Ursus

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911 phone call may have saved teen, but guard says...
« Reply #35 on: July 29, 2011, 07:28:59 PM »
Video news footage at the title link:

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NEWS CHANNEL 5 — WPTV

911 phone call may have saved teen, but guard says he was ordered not to call

Posted: 07/18/2011
By: Rochelle Ritchie



Photographer: WPTV · Copyright 2011 Scripps Media, Inc.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - One phone call might have made a difference between life and death. One of the guards fired from a West Palm Beach detention facility says it's a call he never got the chance to make.

His story is part of a widening probe into the sudden death of a teenager; a case sparking legal action now.

The cause of death for 18-year-old Eric Perez is still not known and it could take up to 10 weeks before an autopsy report comes through.

The family's attorney says this is a case of negligence and blatant disrespect for human life.

They say once the investigation is over they'll know exactly who to go after in their lawsuit, whether it's the state or Palm Beach County.

A heartbroken mother, just back from burying her son, is working to make sure his death is not in vain.

"My son didn't have to die like this," says Maritza Perez.

Perez expressed anger that her son was not given any medical attention after suffering from a severe headache and sickness 8 days ago at the Palm Beach Regional Juvenile Detention Center, where he died suddenly.

"If a kid complains about a headache why can't they take care of it? They could've done something to help him out," says Perez.

Flloyd Powell was a guard who on duty that day; one of two fired after Perez's death. Four others are on administrative leave. Powell told the family's attorney Perez had been, "vomiting violently for several hours and screaming." Flloyd says he wanted to call 911.

"I was given a direct order from my supervisor not to call 911," he says.

The Florida Department of Juvenile Justice says Flloyd Powell and Terence D. Davis were terminated for failing to call 911 in accordance with their training and clearly posted Department of Juvenile Justice policies, and will take additional disciplinary measures if more violations are found.

One of the family's attorneys, Richard Schuler, says two videotapes have surfaced from cameras placed at the juvenile detention center that could reveal exactly what happened to Perez.

"When he was taken out of his room and told to lie on the floor there's videotape that looks at that area. The second tape actually would have filmed his death. This was a situation where help was required to be called and it wasn't. They weren't doing their job," says Schuler.

Powell says Perez appeared to fall asleep and was later taken to a medical confinement room, almost three hours after he got sick.

He later died, alone, in that room.

Perez says she knows her son is gone but she is hoping to save another family the same loss.

"I just want justice that's all," she says.

The family attorney says he is hoping others who were working that night will come forward with more information.


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Offline Ursus

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Jail guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen
« Reply #36 on: July 29, 2011, 07:57:20 PM »
This seems to be an article which first appeared in the Miami Herald, although I cannot, at the moment, seem to locate it on their website. It was probably absorbed into/combined with other material for a longer piece by Carol Marbin Miller, also published on this same date...

Video news footage at the title link:

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The Palm Beach Post

Jail guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen

State juvenile justice administrators have a tape of a dying teen in custody in Palm Beach County. Two lockup workers have been fired and several others suspended.

By Carol Marbin Miller
Miami Herald


Updated: 11:55 p.m. Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Posted: 3:06 p.m. Monday, July 18, 2011



Eric Perez was 18 when he died. Family photo


Eric Perez Photo provided

A guard at the West Palm Beach juvenile detention center claims he was fired last Friday after he told state investigators he was forbidden to call 911 when a teenager complained of repeated severe headaches and vomited for hours. The teen, 18-year-old Eric Perez, died after authorities waited hours to seek medical attention.

Eric Perez's death at 8:09 a.m. on July 10 is under investigation by both the state Department of Juvenile Justice and West Palm Beach police. Since his death, the juvenile justice agency has fired two employees and suspended six others. DJJ administrators have declined to discuss Eric's death, citing the ongoing investigations.

The guard, Officer Floyd Powell, a five-year DJJ employee, said through an attorney Monday morning that he was terminated "after disclosing to state investigators that he was ordered not to call 911."

"This guy desperately wanted to call 911," his attorney, Cathy L. Purvis Lively, told The Miami Herald. "He was told, No, you are not to do that."

Powell could not make the call on his own, Lively said. The "module" where Powell oversaw several detained youth did not contain a telephone, and Powell could not reach a telephone without walking away from his post — and leaving other youth unsupervised.

DJJ administrators did not tell Powell why he was being fired, Lively said, only that he was technically still on probation, and, therefore, without any protections. Powell had been promoted in recent months, and so technically on probation for the higher position.

Samadhi Jones, a DJJ spokeswoman in Tallahassee, declined to discuss Lively's claims Monday morning, but added the department may have additional information later in the day.

Powell, his lawyer said, will be seeking damages from the state for his "wrongful termination."

Lawyers for Eric's mother, Maritza Perez, said Monday that Eric had been vomiting for perhaps seven hours, and complaining of a severe headache, before he died. "A critically ill young man had all the signs of a severe head injury — a headache and vomiting. They put him in a room and left him alone and unmonitored," said Richard D. Schuler, a West Palm Beach attorney. "These folks have no medical training — far from it."

Both Schuler and Lively said that guards at the lockup also tried to get a nurse to examine the teen, but the nurse failed to respond to two phone calls.

Eric's death is eerily similar to the death of a 17-year-old, Omar Paisley, who died in June 2003 at the Miami-Dade Juvenile Detention Center.

On June 9, 2003, Omar died of a ruptured appendix after he had pleaded with both guards, supervisors and nurses for three days to see a doctor. Records and testimony from both legislative hearings and a criminal investigation showed that guards had sought permission to call for an ambulance, but were not allowed by their supervisors.

Following Omar's death, DJJ administrators announced a series of sweeping changes to lockup medical care throughout the state. Among the policies: any guard, supervisor, or even volunteer was give absolute authority to call for an ambulance.

Dale Dobular, who was superintendent of the Miami lockup for almost four years after Omar died, remembers designing a poster that administrators ordered be hung in every DJJ facility across the state. The poster clearly stated that lower-level employees need not seek permission to call 911, Dobular said.

By the time Dobular left the Miami lockup in the summer of 2008, however, he felt that many of the protections put in place after Omar's death already had begun to erode.

"One of the reasons I left was because I didn't feel like I could guarantee the safety of the kids in that facility because services continued to get cut," Dobular told The Miami Herald.

"I felt that it would take another Paisley before the agency recognized it could happen again."


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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen"
« Reply #37 on: July 29, 2011, 08:10:36 PM »
Comments left for the above article, "Jail guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen" (by Carol Marbin Miller; July 18, 2011; Miami Herald/Palm Beach Post), #s 1-20:


af · 3:40 PM, 7/18/2011
    Finally the DJJ is being investigated-they should investigate the state DOC system too since it too denies needed medical attention to inmates unless the family gets involved. This kind of thing has been going on for well over 10 years at the DJJ, along with several other horrible things. It is such a horrible shame that the State of FL can't take anything seriously or carry out actions to ensure the safety and health of inmates until something like this happens.
reggie · 3:49 PM, 7/18/2011
    same no calling the police policy is in the school system as well.
missourigirl · 4:00 PM, 7/18/2011
    What is is with the STATE of FLORIDA and Kids? This state is a mess....and now another mother has lost a child. Such a crying shame...
............ · 4:07 PM, 7/18/2011
    I think this is BS what do they need these kids to do so they can give them medical attention just because they are in a detention center does not mean they should be treated like animals and they dont even go that long with feeling sick before the care takers take them to get medical attention!!!!!!!!!!
jac · 4:23 PM, 7/18/2011
    We give tax breaks to big business and cut the programs from the taxpayers.This is who GOP are.
yada yada · 4:34 PM, 7/18/2011
    This guy didn't have a cell phone he could have used to call 9-1-1? What is the huge deal about calling an ambulance for someone who is sick (much less a kid)? Civilians would be held negligent had someone in their care be sick and you don't call 9-1-1. Who the ehck is the "supervisor" who ordered him not to? Thats the man to fire and hold accountable.
Barbie · 4:42 PM, 7/18/2011
    what is wrong in Florida. Who knows it could be happening in many other states.
Kevin · 4:49 PM, 7/18/2011
    I guess the big unanswered question here is. Was this a privately run "contracted with the state" institution or was it being run directly by the state. The problem with most of these troubled kids is that they are pathological liars and will do or say whatever they need to in order to be remanded to the hospital where treatment is much better weather or not they are actually sick Since this would cut into the profitability of a privately run center they are more likely to deny medical care.
r.c · 4:51 PM, 7/18/2011
    The state of Florida is so full of ****.......I say that everyone that was involved with this kid needs to be charged with his death. The person he told that he had a bad headache and was not feeling good to the person who locked him in a room. To the warden or the person who over sees everything. For not providing a safe place and for not allowing anyone to call for some help. The only people who will suffer from all this is his parents really not knowing what the real truth is.
Jonna · 4:55 PM, 7/18/2011
    This is crazy, as a woman who is currently attending school to become a JPO. I cant believe how people are being treated. Truthfully wether its being taking care of in an actual hospital or being detained & needing medical treatment, I feel that every life is important. Felon or Non-Felon, Insurance or no Insurance. The fact that guards are deciding wether a inmate is faking symptoms or not is not there job. The facility should have more than one nurse around aswell as back up for emergencies.
Sue · 4:55 PM, 7/18/2011
    I totally agree with AF....there are people who are arrested even for non-criminal crimes and are not given their medication....I know of an individual who was on blood pressure medication and cholesterol meds and was at eh PBC Jail where they did not give him his meds.....he was thenm rushed to the ER due to lack of medication where he remained for a week....A family member had called and the jail employee was totally rude and said they would get to it....they are lucky he is alive!
SheliaJoy · 4:55 PM, 7/18/2011
    DJJ facility = LEGALIZED CHILD ABUSE.

    I worked in a level 8/10 girls facility. Staff refused to allow the children to report child abuse on the FAKE phone on the floor. Had a nurse who could not read or write. DJJ attempted to get staff to dispence meds instead of nurses. If you disciplined your child the way DJJ does in a facility you would be arrested for aggravated child abuse.

    One girl almost bleed to death while the staff played cards.

    You would think after Omar Pasley...
mark · 4:58 PM, 7/18/2011
    This place is run by the state. Don't forget they have a budget. If the kid goes to the hospital they have to pay for it and send officers along with him to guard him. this all costs money. He was being released soon they were probably hoping he would be fine till they let him go. It was a gamble and the young man lost.
Rachel Wise · 4:59 PM, 7/18/2011
    Isn't it interesting that every building in Palm Beach County has to be to code for handicapp people but not the JAIL....I know someone too that was taken to the PB Jail and was handicapp and could not use the jail toilets.....(couldn't sit) because they were too high and he had double hip replacement....they told him too bad when he asked for a cell that was equipped for handicap individuals....
? · 5:07 PM, 7/18/2011
    mark - are you a Christian?
Brian O'Donaghey · 5:08 PM, 7/18/2011
    Kid's death appears to be a preventable tragedy and I'm REALLY trying to believe this guards story BUT
    WHEN did he decide that 911 should be contacted?
    Was EMS-medical already contacted when he decided that 911 should be called?
    What's so important about his place of duty that prevents him from going to a phone for a life-death emergency?
    Who made the 2 phone calls to the nurse who failed to respond, and WHEN was the nurse 1st called? (I thought there was no phone)
    Somethin's shady here.
Watersisland · 5:09 PM, 7/18/2011
    This supervisor is guilty of a crime and should be punished accordingly. Even as an innocent bystander, ANYONE is required to offer assistance for someone in obvious medical need......never-the-less in a situation where the victim is being detained. TOO MANY law enforcement personell believe they OWN the law--thus causing huge amounts of taxpayers money to be needed in righting the wrongs that they cause. A CRIME HAS BEEN COMMITTED!
Gail · 5:13 PM, 7/18/2011
    The entire Criminal Justice System is corrupt and needs to be investigated! They only care about their paychecks and the heck with the people that are being arrested and jailed who are being treated like animals worse then in the dog pound and not fed or cared for and allowed to be injured in daily fights while the guards look the other way because they are private owned facilities whose bottom line is money! Evidenced by the judge in PA getting paid off to send kids to jail and prisons!
david · 5:15 PM, 7/18/2011
    i can predict the end of this story .nothing will happen and everyone involed will be hired back .any one want to bet me.its a lock bet.
audio · 5:16 PM, 7/18/2011
    The good news is the crime rate dropped


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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen"
« Reply #38 on: July 29, 2011, 08:14:26 PM »
Comments left for the above article, "Jail guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen" (by Carol Marbin Miller; July 18, 2011; Miami Herald/Palm Beach Post), #s 21-40:


Joanne · 5:16 PM, 7/18/2011
    as watersisland said: A CRIME HAS BEEN COMMITTED! I hope those responsible for taking this young mans life are held accountable but...... Um... This is Florida and we let criminals off the hook! The poor kid threw up for 7 hours medical help was NEVER called?
Brenda Wayne Wyatt · 5:42 PM, 7/18/2011
    This is happening all over America. To be in a detention center is hard enough, but to not get the help you need is uncalled for. i have some experience in this. Better care should be available for those who need it. Especially medical.
reality · 5:49 PM, 7/18/2011
    This is a state agency meaning no budget and bottom of the barrel employees. If they were any good they would be in a better law enforcement job. Medical care at the county jail is at the other extreme. A scratch that should require a band aid requires medical clearance from the hospital. Thousands of dollars for x-rays a ct scans. All because once in a million an inmate dies. You people crying that this kid deserved better are the same ones wanting lower taxes
reality · 5:51 PM, 7/18/2011
    You all cry for less taxes...for twenty thousand a year to deal with kids their own parents do not want to deal with...this is what you get
mike · 6:19 PM, 7/18/2011
    We Floridians must make real decisions about our incarcerated, how many, how much, how long, what do we expect to accomplish?
    Are we spending too little to expect that medical services are adequate for the inmates?
    Over $23K per year per year is spent on each inmate now.
    Society reviles those we arrest and so many of us are coarse to the point of incivility as the comments here show.
    Being arrested does not mean you are guilty and it can happen to you or me.
    Smug words don't make us better
pjay · 6:32 PM, 7/18/2011
    This is just great.
    Now we're all going to be shelling out MILLIONS OF DOLLARS to the family of a kid who wasn't worth S#!T -- all because of the incompetence of the fools who run these detention facilities.

    I can't wait until Perez's family lawyers start telling a court how many millions this thug's useless life was worth.
corrupt state · 6:33 PM, 7/18/2011
    Florida is corrupt from top to bottom. Education system, foreclosures, prison system, courts, and every politician around. Madoff ponzi scam started in Florida. Rothstein case, Casey Anthony trial. It is one big joke. This country's economic problems started when Jeb Bush and his friends stole the election for his brother G.W. in 2000. It will get worse in Florida. More job loss, more foreclosures, more business failures. The state is filled with racial hatred. Keep away from Florida.
Scubadannyc · 6:35 PM, 7/18/2011
    COME to Florida...The Dirt Bag State!
Alexis · 8:22 PM, 7/18/2011
    I really can't believe that anystaff let alone a supervisor who has acess to any phone in a detention facility was told to not call 911. Supervisors are in charge of a facility at night so who stopped this supervisor from picking up a phone and dialing 911. Perhaps maybe somebody need to look at the failure to provide medical services 24 hours or the pay cuts that DJJ, Law enforcement, and even the school board is incurring. No one advcates for DJJ. Find out where the money is being spent.
trajedy · 12:02 AM, 7/19/2011
    First, these programs are run by Boards. Check your Boards and watch the profit trail from one agency to another. If I recall, Art Johnson, PB super sat on many. The DJJ DOES subcontract, with private agencies. Even the psy intake is a private organization as likely are the medical. Once a contract is signed the payment has been made regardless if these kids get treated; which is less incentive to act on any given problem by staffers.
trajedy · 12:11 AM, 7/19/2011
    Find the Boards, Alexis is right, because the Boards are composed of ED Superintendent, Police, SA, Medical, and they create a one policy fits all in the County so yes it is duplicated. Behind each sits a well paid lobbyist pushing to get favors paid back to get votes and political pull for their clients. The Boards are where the problems are, the corruption is inspired by the lobbyists who in turn bring in private corps to gain income for political donations. Not stopped,we will loose more kids
Lady Justice · 2:30 AM, 7/19/2011
    I am an ex employee at the Palm Beach Detention Center and the staff in question is not lying. I have seen and been in situations there where a superior has told staff not to call 911. Sometimes they will not even call the nurse and if they do call the nurse while she is on duty, depends on who it is, she will not go and see a juvenile. They always feel like the juvenile is lying or being dramatic but that should be up to a medical professional to decide if the juvenile is not being truthful.
Theresa · 9:26 AM, 7/19/2011
    This is beyond ridiculous, Whoever is in charge of this site needs to handle the comments that are disrespectful. I am a friend of the family, and Nobody deserves this.. I don't wish it on anyone. But Pjay, or whatever your name is.. You have no respect, He was not a "Thug" He was a troubled teen. He was trying to straighten out his life, I'm sure you've been there some where in your life, So why don't you stop judging, this whole world does not revolve around idiots like you,Being inconciderate
Theresa · 9:29 AM, 7/19/2011
    This happened because the guards at the facility neglected an innocent child. And yes that's what he was. & Before any one starts saying anything about him, why don't you stop pointing fingers, and make sure your own hands are clean.And yes, I will stay he was troubled. But he brought joy into hundreds and hundreds of peoples life. He made a difference in mine, and his family and friends life. The guards should not just be fired they should be arrested and put in jail for neglecting this child
Gwen · 10:07 AM, 7/19/2011
    What a shame this young man had to lose his life for absolutely no reason other than some incompetent, lazy, ignorant people being in positions they should not be in. There should be a lot of firing going on,and I hope the family sues the pants off of the state and every one involved.It is so obvious the guard was let go because he told the truth, and it didn't give certain people time to cover it up, or get thier lies straight.
Rush · 10:16 AM, 7/19/2011
    Radstaz....... be careful what you wish for on others, it usually comes back to YOU.!!!! I feel sorry for your family.
FLDOCGIRL · 10:47 AM, 7/19/2011
    Allow me to clear up a few misconceptions. Officers do not have cell phones inside of facilities as it is a felony punishible by 3 years in prison to introduce one into a facility. ALL Florida institutions are under a federal mandate to provide care comparable to what is available in the outside world. It is a shame that 911 was not called, if only for the fact that the DOC budget and law suit judgements are paid out of the same pot: your taxes. 18 is young enough to be rehabilitated.
Xperienced w/system · 12:49 PM, 7/19/2011
    It doesn't profit them to change. So, until someone makes it unprofitable not to they won't.
Kristina · 1:37 PM, 7/19/2011
    Bottom line is the guard felt he should call 911 but didn't. I don't care if his supervisor told him not too. He knew he should have called, and SHOULD be fired for not calling. Supervisor is a moron and should be fired too. Yes, these kids lie and try to get out of their cell, but the guard knew the kid was really sick. To the guard you can try to blame your boss to ease your guilt, BUT you did have a role..own up to it and quit blaming your supervisor. You let a child die.
SANDRA · 4:47 PM, 7/19/2011
    IT IS REALLY AN HORRIBLE INCIDENT THAT HAPPENED BUT IM NOT SURPRISED BY ONE MINUTE OF IT DUE TO THE MEER FACT THAT MY SON TO HAS BEEN INCARSERATED IN THE DETENTION CENTER AS WELL ON 45TH STREET BUT THERE ARE SOME EXCELLENT OFFICERS AND ITS A SHAME THAT THIS HAPPENED.THOSE KIDS ARE THERE FOR HELP AS WELL AS SUPPORT.MY HEART GOES OUT TO THAT MOTHER AND FAMILY !!!!!! AND I DO PRAY THAT JUSTICE IS SERVED...........


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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen"
« Reply #39 on: July 29, 2011, 08:19:20 PM »
Comments left for the above article, "Jail guard: I was fired over 911 call for sick teen" (by Carol Marbin Miller; July 18, 2011; Miami Herald/Palm Beach Post), #s 41-46:


nanci · 5:59 PM, 7/19/2011
    Lord history is repeating itself, first it was martin, paisly and now this kid, why cant these kids get the attention they need, its better to call 911 regardless, if the child was vomitting for three days and headaches something is definitely wrong, but these workers only care about their jobs.
nanci · 6:04 PM, 7/19/2011
    I wont care about the stuipid guards I would go outside and call 911 on my cell phone, let the supervisors go to hell. They dont care about people's children they just care about a paycheck, the child was vomitting and in clear distress but supervisors dont want to use their common sense, they just care about being promoted
Alexis · 9:09 PM, 7/19/2011
    Yes justice should be served and everybody involved should be held accountable for the role they played in this incident. It doesnt matter what type of crime he committed he should have been provided care. The detention centers have competent people who run the facilities so dont be so quick to judge the staff just because a few failed to do their job. DJJ take better care than some of the parents. Its the Legislators who is failing you and not putting the money where it should be.
Toni · 10:04 PM, 7/19/2011
    Bottom line is the supervisors have probably been told to limit medical calls, especially those that might involve outside treatment (like at a hospital) so the state can save money. After all they need it to build which costs more than $50 million bucks. Just shows our Republican leaders have their priorities and is does not include the average joe.
Alexis · 10:04 PM, 7/19/2011
    Yes justice should be served and everybody involved should be held accountable for the role they played in this incident. It doesnt matter what type of crime he committed he should have been provided care. The detention centers have competent people who run the facilities so dont be so quick to judge the staff just because a few failed to do their job. DJJ take better care than some of the parents. Its the Legislators who is failing you and not putting the money where it should be.
Angela · 4:38 PM, 7/20/2011
    What's very interesting is that so many people have space to "JUDGE" another persons actions in a time of distress.We can all say what we should've, could've and would've done but the reality of it all is we don't know nor should we point fingers.
    The bottom line is the state does have a budget and with that recently had a major lay-off enforced on Jun. 30,2011.
    My suggestion is anyone that feels so strongly about medical, housing and neglect or abuse, "STOP JUDGING,GET INVLOVED AND ACT."


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Offline Ursus

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Guardia: 'Me echaron por llamar al 911'
« Reply #40 on: July 29, 2011, 10:21:39 PM »
Here's the Spanish version of the above article:

-------------- • -------------- • --------------

El Nuevo Herald
Publicado el martes, 07.19.11

Guardia: 'Me echaron por llamar al 911'

CAROL MARBIN MILLER
[email protected]


Un guardia del Centro de Detención Juvenil de West Palm Beach afirma que fue despedido el viernes pasado después que informó a investigadores estatales que se le prohibió llamar al 911 cuando un adolescente se quejó de repetidos y fuertes dolores de cabeza, además de haber vomitado varias veces. Eric Pérez, de 18 años, murió después que las autoridades esperaron varias horas para pedir atención médica.

La muerte de Pérez el 10 de julio a las 8:09 a.m. es objeto de una investigación del Departamento de Justicia Juvenil de la Florida (DJJ) y de la Policía de West Palm Beach. Desde su muerte, la DJJ ha despedido a dos empleados y suspendido a seis. Las autoridades del DJJ se han negado a hablar sobre la muerte de Eric alegando que la investigación no ha concluido.

El guardia, Floyd Powell, que trabajó en el DJJ 5 cinco años, dijo el lunes a través de una abogada que fue despedido "después de revelar a los investigadores estatales que se le ordenó no llamar al 911".

"Este hombre estaba desesperado por llamar al 911", declaró la abogada, Cathy L. Purvis Lively, a The Miami Herald.

"Se le dijo: No, usted no va a hacer eso".

Powell no pudo hacer la llamada por su propia cuenta, dijo Lively. El módulo donde Powell supervisaba a varios jóvenes no tenía teléfono y Powell no podía alejarse de su puesto y dejar a los jóvenes sin supervisión.

Las autoridades del DJJ no le explicaron a Powell la razón de su despido, dijo Lively; sólo que estaba técnicamente en período de prueba. Powell fue promovido en los últimos meses, por lo que técnicamente estaba en período de prueba para el cargo mayor.

Samadhi Jones, portavoz del DJJ en Tallahassee, se negó a discutir las afirmaciones de Lively el lunes.

Powell, dijo su abogada, demandará al estado por daños y perjuicios por "despido injustificado".

Los abogados de la madre de Eric, Maritza Pérez, dijeron el lunes que Eric vomitó durante unas siete horas y se quejó de un fuerte dolor de cabeza antes de morir.

"El joven tenía todos los síntomas de una lesión cerebral grave: dolor de cabeza y vómitos. Lo colocaron en una habitación y lo dejaron solo y sin atención", dijo Richard D. Schuler, abogado de West Palm Beach. "Estas personas no tienen ninguna capacitación médica".

Tanto Schuler como Lively dijeron que los guardias de la cárcel también trataron que un enfermero examinara al adolescente, pero la persona no respondió a dos llamadas telefónicas.

La muerte de Eric es muy similar a la muerte de Omar Paisley, de 17 años, que murió en junio del 2003 en el Centro de Detención Juvenil de Miami-Dade.

El 9 de junio del 2003 Omar murió de una ruptura del apéndice después de haber suplicado a los guardias, supervisores y personal de enfermería durante tres días que lo llevaran al médico. Los registros y testimonios de las audiencias legislativas y de una investigación penal muestran que los guardias habían pedido permiso para llamar una ambulancia pero los supervisores no lo permitieron,

Después de la muerte de Omar, las autoridades del DJJ anunciaron cambios radicales en la atención médica de los centros de reclusión en todo el estado. Entre las nuevas normas, cualquier guardia, supervisor o incluso voluntarios tendría absoluta autoridad para llamar a una ambulancia.

Dale Dobular, que dirigió el centro de reclusión de Miami casi cuatro años después de la muerte de Omar, recuerda haber creado un cartel que las autoridades ordenaron colgar en todos los centros del DJJ en todo el estado, que establecía claramente que los empleados de menor nivel no tenían que pedir permiso para llamar al 911, dijo Dobular.

Pero Dobular dice que cuando dejó el centro de Miami, en el verano del 2008, muchas de las medidas establecidas después de la muerte de Omar ya habían comenzado a desaparecer.

"Una de las razones por las que me fui es que pensaba que no podía garantizar la seguridad de los muchachos en esas instalaciones, porque seguían reduciendo los servicios", dijo Dobular a The Miami Herald.

"Me pareció que iba a hacer falta otro Paisley antes que la organización reconociera que podría ocurrir de nuevo".


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Offline Ursus

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Comentarios: "Guardia: 'Me echaron por llamar al 911' "
« Reply #41 on: July 29, 2011, 10:32:19 PM »
Comments left for the above article, "Guardia: 'Me echaron por llamar al 911' " (by Carol Marbin Miller, 07.19.11, El Nuevo Herald), #s 1-20:


megamenvlad · 07/18/2011 09:07 PM
    en que diferencia este acto inhumano a los animales de las carceles de cuba? ese no es un guardia es un salvaje y debe ser puesto frente a la ley por violar los derechos humanos de los demas. que ha causado su negligencia la muerte de un ser humano o sea asesino involuntario pero  es culpable!. debe responder por su crimen .
    Wuacala · 07/18/2011 11:13 PM en respuesta a megamenvlad
      Creo que estas acusando al guardia que intento llamar al 911, el no cometió ningún delito, ni por omisión, quienes cometieron el delito fueron los superiores al negarse llamar al 911, y cuando se esta en esta posición la responsabilidad la toma el superior. Y fíjate la manera como reaccionan, lo despiden del trabajo por hacer cumplir su obligación, eso también es un delito grave que se suma la mal llamada institución.
    normachina2005 · 07/19/2011 07:30 AM en respuesta a megamenvlad
      Ud llama este delito asesino involuntario.Por favor ver a una persona que esta muriendo frente a sus ojos y no llamar para que le den los primeros auxilio., Ud te cree que eso es asesinato involuntario.Se lo dejo de tarea para que analice
      cublibre · 07/19/2011 10:42 AM en respuesta a normachina2005
        no se dio cuenta y se equivoco ,quiso decir lo contrario
      [/list][/list]
        cantarilla · 07/19/2011 10:27 AM en respuesta a megamenvlad
          la noticia esta en su titulo disminuida......se trata de un ASESINATO PREMEDITADO IGUAL AL ASESINATO PREMEDITADO DE ZAPATA TAMAYO.....horas de horas sin asistencia medica para que se muera lo mataron premeditadamente sin juicio ni compasion.....esa madre debiera ir al coongreso que gobierna al pais donde nacio este joven que ha sido ASESINADO PREMEDITADAMENTE.
          cublibre · 07/19/2011 10:36 AM en respuesta a cantarilla
            exactamente ,es abusibo lo que esta pasando ,cada dia mas muertes y la mayoria no investigadas,y hablamos de la corrupcion en mexico ,ayer el doral ,hialeah ,corrupcion ,muerto diarios ,y los que se quieren hacer los bobos por miedo
          [asi es][/list][/list][/list]
          gabo378 · 07/18/2011 09:12 PM
            No puedo creer que esto este pasando en las prisiones de este pais. Como pueden dejar morir friamente a un nino que pide a grito ser atendido? Como pueden despedir a un empleado por querer llamar al 911? No puedo creer que el director de una prision decida irse por miedo a no  poder garantizarle la vida a esos jovenes. Donde esta la ONU para que vele por la salud y el bienestar de esas personas ? Que pasa con los derechos humeanos de esta gran nacion?
          rashmiel · 07/18/2011 10:35 PM
            Lo que sucede en esta gran nacion, es que en todas partes hay asesinos  y personas despiadadas que se le suben los poderes a la cabeza y se creen que los presos son perros, pero en este pais,hay una prensa que te permite leer en este periodico todo lo sucedido, le permite al guardia nombrar a un abogado y demandar por despido injustificado  y ya veraas caer el peso de la ley sobre los responsables, a diferencia de  los paises totalitarios, donde se comenten estos criminis todos los dias y nadie se entera de nada y cuando se filtra alguna noticia, dan la callada por respuesta y la prensa no dice ni "pio" como ocurrio con los muertos de mazorra, y con tantos y tantos asesinatos que se han cometido y se cometen en las carceles cubanas y venezolanas o no???
            normachina2005 · 07/19/2011 07:16 AM en respuesta a rashmiel
              Si hay todo lo que ud dice , Pero tambien hay 2 madres que perdieron a sus hijos . Quien les va ha reponer esa perdida.los medios , abogados etc.No es la primera ves que ocurre y no pasa nada.Señor no quiera tapar el sol con un dedo, este caso salio a la luz publica y los que no salen que se quedan bajo el tapete.Hay mas asesinos y delincuentes trabajando dentro el mismo gobierno que los que hay en las calles.Lo ocurrido en mazorra salio a la luz publica y los responsables fueron condenados, y las leyes alla no son como aqui que a los pocos mese estan en las calles como si nada y cometiendo el mismo delito o quisas peor.En cuba si se la aplican y bien y no van a las carceles a vivir la dulce vida como aqui.Donde estan todos esos muertos que segun ud mueren en las carceles de cuba no hable por hablar compruebelo.Dia, mes año nombres y apellidos.
              peterbetancourt · 07/19/2011 09:21 AM en respuesta a normachina2005
                En Cuba hay casos peores que nadie se entera, aqui al menos se hace publico y se juzgan a los culpables.No solo en las carceles sino en los hospitales los familiares ni se enteran de los que mueren por errores y/o negiglencia medica.No me explico que hacen en este pais  esas personas para los cuales en Cuba todo es mejor que aqui, regresen al "paraiso" no sufran mas.
                El dia que se abran los archivos de la dictadura se sbarn cosas que ahora parecen increibles, que te perece lo del remolcador juzgaron a los culpables que asesinaron a tantas personas inclusos niños? Juzgaron a los que hundieron el ferrocemento de Canimar donde perecieron muchisimas personas?, por favor ejemplos sobran de la injusticia despiadada de ese dictador. Se te olvidaron los juicios donde  mandaban al paredon por cualquier delacion sin tener pruebas? Busca informacion y despues opina
              [/list][/list]
                elvergon1 · 07/19/2011 08:14 AM en respuesta a rashmiel
                  lo que sucede en esta gran nacion es que es un estado represivo policivo peor que cualquier pais totalitario,con la diferencia que te hacen creer lo contrario,la prensa esta amordazada pues esta en manos de grandes corporaciones con nexos politicos pues son esas grands corporaciones las que dan dinero para las campanas politicas como sucede con las grandes petroleras,tabacaleras,administradoras de salud,aseguradoras,etc,etc.debieran ud lectores averiguar los nexos de nuestros queridos representantes y senadores republicanos y algunos democratas con esas grandes corporaciones y asi entenderian porque nos estamos yendo pa la m....da
                [/list]
                normachina2005 · 07/19/2011 07:08 AM
                  Son unos hijos de la gran p.Dejar morir a un ser humano, es indignante esta noticia ni a los perros se le tratan de esa forma.El mismo cuento de siempre el caso esta bajo investigacion.Deben castigar con todo el peso de la ley a estos asesinos, eso es lo que son , no brindarle los servicios medicos a un ser humano íDios mio! en el pais que se jacta de acusar a los que violan los derechos humanos en el mundo.¿Porque nuestros flamantes congresitas no salen y piden publicamente que se haga una investigacion profunda de estos casos y los culpables paguen por este crimen? estos hechos ocurrieron en su propio patio.No , jamas lo harian porque este caso no esta relacionado con cuba, si no estarian como perros de cazas vociferando en la prensa y  t.v.de lo ocurrido Politiqueros baratos de pacotilla.JUSTICIA PARA ESTOS 2 JOVENES
                david0521 · 07/19/2011 07:39 AM
                  El guardia que fue despedido debe volver a su trabajo , el supervisor que evito la llamada de emergencia no solo debe ser despedido debe ser acusado de negligencia medica  y homicidio en segundo grado
                Carlos Bauza, Desdemipantalla.com un blog de Carlos Bauza donde el escribir se convierte en una forma d · 07/19/2011 07:50 AM
                  Cuando muere un detenido o bajo custodia en USA se disparan las alertas
                  locales, estatales y federales hasta dar con el meollo del asunto y tomar todas
                  las medidas correctivas para que el caso no se repita, ni decir del juicio que
                  se les abre a los involucrados y responsables del hecho. El proceso legal
                  comienza y la ley se aplica sin importar a quien.  
                http://www.desdemipantalla.com[/list]
                  cublibre · 07/19/2011 10:24 AM en respuesta a Carlos Bauza
                    esta seguro que con todo es asi ,no le creo y usted sabe que no es verda que todo se tapa o solo ,despidos ,pero pobres civiles si lo hacen ,lea noticias viejas de este periodico y despues me dice ,conclusiones ,tengo buena memoria para lo que leo ,y odio el abuso ,poreso vine a este pais ,todo no es querer escribir bonito ,es mejor hablar la verda ,o no hablar y que castiquen duro a los criminales ,corruptos ,y abusadores cobardes ,eso es justicia y denunciarlas sin miedo
                  [/list]
                  tinguaro1980 · 07/19/2011 08:25 AM
                    SI ESTO HUBIERA PASADO EN CUBA   QUE CLASE DE ESCANDALO SE HUBIERA FORMADO AQUI EN EL GUETO
                    acubaniche · 07/19/2011 08:55 AM en respuesta a tinguaro1980
                      De acuerdo con ud estubieran los periodicuchos con grandes titulares en primera plana dando la noticia y que decir de los noticieros mediocres de este gettho serian los comentarios mañana tarde y noche  y despues los analistas cubanologos dando sus opiniones  la verdad es que algunos cubanos de miami tienen lo que se merecen.
                    [/list]
                    cantarilla · 07/19/2011 10:27 AM
                      la noticia esta en su titulo disminuida......se trata de un ASESINATO PREMEDITADO IGUAL AL ASESINATO PREMEDITADO DE ZAPATA TAMAYO.....horas de horas sin asistencia medica para que se muera lo mataron premeditadamente sin juicio ni compasion.....esa madre debiera ir al coongreso que gobierna al pais donde nacio este joven que ha sido ASESINADO PREMEDITADAMENTE.
                    cublibre · 07/19/2011 10:30 AM
                      es inmoral lo que esta pasando ,precemos ciudad del 3 mundo donde permites la muerte de un ser humano y es normal ,solo te despiden,y donde intimidad hasta los politicos
                    lazel17 · 07/19/2011 10:38 AM
                      Esas cosas pasan muy seguidas aca, algunas se saben rapidito, y otras no te enteras de ella, hasta que han pasado,años, incluso, cuando, han matado,inocentes, y han dejado,libres a asesinos y delincuentes,por el dinero, que puedas pagar,eso se sabe , en Cuba pasan esas cosas, tambien,no hay que cegarse, pero, alla, el que cae en cana, tiene que joderse el lomo, y le duele la carcel, aca no, aca tiene TV, por cable y sattelite, juegos, comida buena y gratis, en fin deja de contar, y quien paga todo, eso, menda, como decimos los cubanos, mas facil, los constribuyentes de este gran pais, que somos todos, asi, que, de contra que delinquen, tenemos que mantenerlos, sin que se den ni un arañaso. deben ser mas cuidadosos,un chico, a esa edad,puede ser un poco, atrevido,pero, aun estan a tiempo, de arreglarlo, no tratarlo, como, un asesino,confeso,que los hay.


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                    Offline Ursus

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                    Comentarios: "Guardia: 'Me echaron por llamar al 911' "
                    « Reply #42 on: July 29, 2011, 10:38:13 PM »
                    Comments left for the above article, "Guardia: 'Me echaron por llamar al 911' " (by Carol Marbin Miller, 07.19.11, El Nuevo Herald), #s 21-22:


                    cublibre · 07/19/2011 10:50 AM
                      cuando llegaran los federales a limpiar esto ya es hora todo no era carlos alalvarez ,decempleo ,miserias si yo no ni usted ,pero miles si y seguimos igual ,parece que esta es la ciudad equivocada ,tercermundista
                    cantarilla · 07/19/2011 11:25 AM
                      la voluntad humanitaria de los congrsistas y representantes cubanos americanos como ileana,mario,david rivera, marco rubio ciro,etc etc esta atrapada entre cuba y la florida porque en ambos lados se cometen desmanes y abusos como este de ahora que motivo la muerte de un joven que sufria un derramen cerebral y lo permitieron PREMEDITADAMENTE  tal vez si le controlan la presion alterial se hubiese evitado esa muerte PERO CREO YO QUE LOS CONGRSISTAS MENCIONADOS TIENEN SS CORAZONES ATRAPADOS ENTRE ESTAS DOS REGIONES DEL MUNDO DONDE SE VE QUE SE COMETEN CRIMENSS PREMEDITADOS YA SEA POR NEGAR ATENCION MEDICA O PATEADURAS.....DEBE SER MUCHO EL DOLOR QUE SUFREN ESTOS REPRESENTANTES DEL PUEBLO CUADO NINGUNO SE HA PRONUNCIADO EN ESTAS MUERTES PREMEDITADAS DE EL LADO DE ACA DEL GOLFO


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                    Offline Ursus

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                    West Palm Beach guard says he wanted to call 911 before...
                    « Reply #43 on: July 30, 2011, 10:45:59 AM »
                    Video news footage at the below title link:

                    This article was also published on TCPalm.com on the 19th of July with a slightly different title: Guard says he was ordered not to call 911 before sick Fort Pierce teen died | Video (video news footage also at that title link).

                    -------------- • -------------- • --------------

                    The Palm Beach Post

                    West Palm Beach guard says he wanted to call 911 before 18-year-old died at detention facility

                    State juvenile justice administrators have a tape of a dying teen in custody in Palm Beach County. Two lockup workers have been fired and several others suspended.

                    BY JULIUS WHIGHAM II
                    Palm Beach Post Staff Writer


                    Updated: 11:54 p.m. Tuesday, July 19, 2011
                    Posted: 9:49 p.m. Monday, July 18, 2011



                    Maritza Perez, the mother of Eric Perez, at a press conference Monday afternoon. (Damon Higgins/The Palm Beach Post)


                    Richard Schuler, the attorney for Maritza Perez, speaks to the media Monday afternoon during a press conference. (Damon Higgins/The Palm Beach Post)


                    Eric Perez was 18 when he died. Family photo


                    Eric Perez Photo provided

                    A guard who was on duty when an 18-year-old died at a West Palm Beach juvenile detention center stepped forward today, saying that he was ordered not to call 911 when he thought something was wrong.

                    Attorneys for officer Floyd Powell said that at least two supervisors gave a directive not to call 911, although Powell suspected that Eric Perez needed medical attention. However, state officials said that Powell and another officer on duty, were fired because they did not call 911.

                    Perez, who turned 18 this month, died the morning of July 10 while in custody at the state-run Palm Beach Regional Juvenile Detention Center on 45th Street.

                    Powell, speaking through his attorneys, said that he was fired after disclosing to state investigators that he was ordered not to call 911. Four other officers were suspended in the wake of the investigation.

                    "The direction was that he was not to call 911," Powell's attorney, Cathy L. Purvis Lively said this afternoon. "In order to do so, Mr. Powell would have had to have left the (holding area) where he was responsible. There was not a phone directly in the (area), and he is prohibited from having a mobile phone on his person while he was on duty."

                    Powell, who was a five-year employee of the State Department of Juvenile Justice, was recently promoted and was told that he was dismissed because he did not meet the terms of his probationary status with the new position, Lively said.

                    He is seeking damages for wrongful termination, she said.

                    In a prepared statement, Florida Department of Juvenile Justice Secretary Wansley Walters said officers Powell and Terence D. Davis were terminated because "we cannot tolerate staff not following policies and procedures, especially as it relates to the medical care of youth in our custody,"

                    In the meantime, an attorney for Perez's family alleges that the teen repeatedly complained of headaches and vomited for seven hours while awaiting medical attention.

                    "It doesn't take a genius to realize this is a very serious condition," Richard Schuler, the attorney for Perez's family, said. "When the young man was finally taken back to the medical detention holding area, which was basically just a bare room and put there, no one was called there. Someone was told to stand guard out front and later on, that person wasn't even there."

                    Schuler said that based on conversations with one of the fired employees, there was a flagrant violation of rules and standards by the detention center's employees.

                    "We don't know, because the investigation hasn't been completed, exactly what the time sequences are," Schuler said during a press conference today with Perez's mother, Maritza Perez. "But we suspect that he was left alone in that room to die by himself without any medical care whatsoever."

                    DJJ officials did not immediately respond to Schuler's allegation.

                    Maritza Perez said that she was hoping to find answers as to why her son died. Perez said during initial conversations, investigators told her that Eric died of a sudden illness. A lieutenant from the detention center said Eric had an enlarged heart and had bleeding in his brain, Perez said. A representative from the Palm Beach County Medical Examiner's office indicated his office needed to examine Eric's lungs, she said.

                    But Perez said today that she believes her son's death could possibly have been avoided.

                    "Why do they have to go through this? Why do they have to die?" she said at the law office of Schuler, Halvorson and Weisser. "My son didn't have to die like this. They could have done something to help him out. If a kid complains about a headache, why couldn't they take care of it (or) pay attention to it?"

                    Perez said she wants other families to avoid having to deal with similar circumstances.

                    "I just want justice, that's all," she said. "I want other kids not to go through what my son went through."

                    Schuler said that any litigation on the family's behalf would be pending the outcome of autopsy results and the state's investigation, which could take up to six months.

                    Schuler and child advocates say the case reminds them of the death of Omar Paisley, a 17-year-old who died of a ruptured appendix in June 2003 while in DJJ custody. Wracked by excruciating pains, Paisley suffered for three days as his condition went untreated, his cries for help ignored by guards and nurses at the Miami juvenile jail.

                    The case led to sweeping reforms at the Department of Juvenile Justice, spurred the departure of more than 20 employees. It resulted in criminal charges for two nurses and a more than $1 million payment for Paisley's family.

                    "This seems to be a déjà vu event here," Schuler said. "A very similar situation occurred down at the juvenile detention center in Dade County . . . This was eight years ago. There were rules and regulations that were put in effect at that time as result of that event that were put in effect today that were ignored."

                    Staff Writer Michael LaForgia contributed to this report.

                    User comments are not being accepted on this article.


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                    Offline Ursus

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                    Officials failed to call 911 when teen fell ill
                    « Reply #44 on: July 30, 2011, 06:20:41 PM »
                    The Associated Press encapsulation of events:

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                    The Miami Herald
                    Posted on Tuesday, 07.19.11

                    Officials failed to call 911 when teen fell ill

                    The Associated Press

                    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- State juvenile justice officials say guards and supervisors at a West Palm Beach facility did not seek emergency help when a teen in their care became seriously ill.

                    Department of Juvenile Justice spokeswoman Samadhi Jones confirmed Monday that 911 was never called July 10 as 18-year-old Eric Perez suffered in pain and eventually died.

                    Officials say Superintendent Anthony Flowers was among four employees who were suspended last week. The department also fired two other employees.

                    Jones says it is the department's policy to call 911 during a medical crisis.

                    One of the fired guards, 35-year-old Floyd Powell told The Miami Herald he was forbidden by a supervisor to call 911. He says the teen was screaming that his head hurt and had vomited for several hours.

                    Information from: The Miami Herald, http://www.herald.com


                    Copyright 2011 Miami Herald Media Co.
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