Author Topic: The world will never know how Eric Perez died  (Read 31830 times)

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Offline Ursus

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Call SWAT: Another death in detention
« Reply #75 on: August 02, 2011, 11:44:16 PM »
And... here's an Editorial from the Miami Herald:

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The Miami Herald
Posted on Saturday, 07.23.11

The Miami Herald | EDITORIAL

Call SWAT: Another death in detention
 
OUR OPINION: Get to the bottom of why Eric Perez's torment was ignored

BY THE MIAMI HERALD EDITORIAL
[email protected]


If, as state Department of Juvenile Justice administrators say, anyone who works at a youth detention facility is authorized to call for emergency help at any time, then why is Eric Perez dead? The public is waiting for the answers from several investigations into the obviously ill teenager's last tortured hours at a West Palm Beach facility.

Indeed, the pain that the 18-year-old endured appeared as agonizing as if guards at the detention center were physically torturing him. But they weren't. Instead they simply, tragically, "failed to call 911," as a letter firing an allegedly derelict detention center supervisor stated. A guard, too, has been fired, and four other employees, including the lockup's superintendent, have been suspended.

Despite the wait for answers about a death that absolutely should not have happened, here's what needs to happen immediately: The Department of Juvenile Justice must prove to the public that policies are in place — and that employees are committed to carrying them out — to ensure the safety and security of children and teens in state care. Second, it's imperative that DJJ create community task forces to evaluate and review everything from the detention policies to the condition of brick-and-mortar facilities to ensure that these troubled youths are being treated humanely and with a goal of making sure they don't return.

And in the case of Eric Perez, a veritable SWAT team of advocates must be drawn in quickly.

This means delivering to the community a level of transparency that too often is missing in public agencies. In light of young Eric's death, building roadblocks and hurdles to the truth is unacceptable.

Unfortunately, South Florida has seen this tragedy before — and heard vows that it will never happen again. Eight years ago, Omar Paisley, 17 and held in a detention center in Miami-Dade, writhed in unfathomable pain for three days — three days — from a ruptured appendix. No one called for help, one nurse insisted he was faking. (That nurse, by the way, pleaded guilty to culpable negligence after Omar died.)

There was outrage, and then reforms — or so we thought. Among them, anyone, from janitor to supervisor was authorized to call 911 in an emergency, something employees hadn't been allowed to do.

DJJ's current chief, Wansley Walters, says that this policy remains in force and that detention center employees are frequently reminded through training sessions and posters. If that's the case, then other policies must be reviewed in order to drive home the point.

For instance, one guard said that he desperately wanted to call 911 to come help Eric (there are no nurses on duty at night or weekends — another situation that warrants attention). However, the supervisor would not allow it. The guard says, too, that he was prepared to defy that misbegotten order, but couldn't leave his post to go to a phone — and had no cell phone on him because they are not allowed in the lockup. What's the sense behind the no-cellphone rule after what happened?

In his brief life, Eric Perez made some mistakes, as have the other youths who end up in detention. Officers stopped him because his bicycle didn't have a night light. They found a small amount of marijuana on him. This was a probation violation from a former robbery charge.

That's how he ended up in detention. But he should not have ended up dead. Get to the bottom of this, and make sure that it never, ever happens again.


Copyright 2011 Miami Herald Media Co.
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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Call SWAT: Another death in detention"
« Reply #76 on: August 02, 2011, 11:48:48 PM »
Comments left for the above Editorial, "Call SWAT: Another death in detention" (by The Miami Herald Editorial, 07.23.11, Miami Herald):


onebaud · Yesterday 05:14 AM
    Let me get to the bottom of this for you. People are cruel and studies have shown that people in total control of you, like jail guards, are especially cruel. In other words, to be inhuman is to be human. Don't ever let yourself get in that helpless position. Stay out of jail.
TrujilloPatty · Yesterday 12:38 PM
    As a mother, in my personal experience, nobody cares about our children when they are in detention.  They refused to allow me to bring the medications my child had been on for years to the jail.  When I asked them to have the jail doctor to prescribe them for him, they called me back to tell me their doctor said he didn't need them. When I asked that his doctor be allowed to visit him, they refused to put him on the visitor list.

    As a nurse, I can tell you that the law may say that any employee may call 911, but anyone who does so without permission is punishedon his next evaluation.  The general mindset of the nurses, doctors, supervisors and guards is that the child will do anything to get out, especially pretend to be sick. The doctor is rarely in the facility, leaving the decisions to the nurse. The nurse is afraid to make a command decision, because she works for a private company whose only agenda is to make a profit; and trips to the hospital cost money.  The child is caught in the middle of all this and loses valuable time when he could be receiving needed emergency care.


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Offline Ursus

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Transparency? Not so much
« Reply #77 on: August 03, 2011, 08:09:48 PM »
And... here's another Editorial from the Miami Herald:

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The Miami Herald
Posted on Tuesday, 07.26.11

The Miami Herald | EDITORIAL
Transparency? Not so much
 
OUR OPINION: Floridians kept in the dark in recent death cases

BY THE MIAMI HERALD EDITORIAL
[email protected]


When 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson died after a beating at a notorious Florida boot camp for wayward youth, the state's public records law allowed release of the tape showing what happened — all in the public interest. The public outcry was such that state-sanctioned boot camps were shut down.

What can Floridians learn about their taxpayer-financed programs aimed at helping troubled juveniles straighten up? The case of Eric Perez, who died at a West Palm Beach lockup for juveniles, warrants that transparency. Why did Eric die? Why wasn't a doctor or nurse alerted immediately when the painfully ill youth cried out for help?

For that matter, what can Florida taxpayers learn to improve the state's foster care and adoption programs after the death of Nubia Barahona? Right now Nubia's twin brother, Victor, and two other children adopted by Jorge and Carmen Barahona — the Miami-Dade couple accused of torturing Nubia until she died — are in dependency hearings so that a court can determine where they will live and with whom.

In both those cases Floridians have been left in the dark. Which raises the question: What is the government trying to hide? This isn't China or Cuba. So why the secrecy?

In June, Gov. Rick Scott signed into law a bill that exempts from Florida's public records law any photos or video or audio tapes depicting a death. Only a victim's immediate family can have access to the material. But even then public agencies like the Department of Juvenile Justice can delay releasing the tape of Eric's stay at a taxpayer-funded facility on grounds there's an ongoing "investigation."

Last week, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Maria Sampedro-Iglesia decided to close to the public the dependency court hearings for the Barahona children. The judge ignored the public's quest for transparency and sided with the Guardian ad Litem program, which advocates for children in court. The problem is the ad Litem program was among the agencies facing scrutiny for Nubia's death because the child "advocates" didn't seem to see the warning signs of abuse despite numerous calls over the years to the abuse hotline raising concerns about the Barahonas.

Both cases cry out for justice. The public's right to know can be balanced with privacy rights. Journalists protect minors' names in many cases, for instance. But when young people die in state-sanctioned care, there's no legitimate reason for the state to hide in the dark.


Copyright 2011 Miami Herald Media Co.
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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Transparency? Not so much"
« Reply #78 on: August 03, 2011, 08:20:54 PM »
Comments left for the above Editorial, "Transparency? Not so much" (by The Miami Herald Editorial, 07.26.11, Miami Herald):


michael wind · 07/27/2011 09:36 PM
    florida is worse than china or cuba or even former soviet union just ask herald reporters from cuba or soviet union,there is much more corruption here.
Lynsu · 07/28/2011 03:22 AM
    Rick Scott is  the devil


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Offline Ursus

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Reform underway at juvenile justice agency
« Reply #79 on: August 04, 2011, 11:12:18 PM »
Geeezz. Governor Rick Scott adds his two cents:

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The Miami Herald — Other Views
Posted on Tuesday, 07.26.11

FLORIDA

Reform underway at juvenile justice agency
 
BY GOV. RICK SCOTT
http://www.flgov.com


Like all Floridians, I was deeply saddened to learn of the tragic death of a child in the Palm Beach County Juvenile Detention Center. More than saddened though, I take Eric Perez's death personally. It's a sobering reminder of the urgent need for comprehensive juvenile-justice reform in Florida. Investigations into his death continue, and we won't rest until every unresolved question about it is answered.

The Florida Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) manages more than 120,000 juvenile delinquency cases each year. On any given day, we have more than 5,000 children in secure custody — more than 1,000 of whom are in facilities like the one where Eric spent the last days of his young life. Those numbers are far too high.

Since I appointed Wansley Walters earlier this year to lead DJJ, her agency has launched a statewide reform effort that will enhance public safety, conserve scarce resources and improve youth outcomes. As the former head of Miami-Dade's Juvenile Services Department, Secretary Walters spearheaded cost-effective reforms that were recognized internationally. As a result, Miami not only has the lowest juvenile incarceration rate in the state, but also boasts one of Florida's lowest juvenile crime rates.

Each element of DJJ's reform initiative is critical to ensure that youth receive the right combination of services and sanctions, in the right place at the right time.

• Diversion. The expansion of civil citation and other innovative diversion practices will stem the flow of first-time misdemeanant youth into the system. Historically, Florida has spent millions of dollars on interventions for low-risk youth who would probably never re-offend.

• Detention reform. Statewide detention reform, including the development of real alternatives to detention, will fuel continued reductions in unnecessary and inappropriate detention. Reduced detention over the past five years allowed DJJ to close hundreds of beds, yielding a cost-savings of more than $25 million.

• Right-sizing residential care. The past five years have also revealed significant inefficiencies at the deep end of Florida's juvenile justice system, with far too many low-risk youth confined in expensive residential institutions. They consume scarce resources that could instead be invested in community-based sanctions that hold youth accountable, protect public safety, create jobs and promote healthy futures for children. Community-based sanctions are more effective at reducing juvenile crime and cost much less than correctional institutions.

These three aspects of juvenile justice reform are urgently needed, now more than ever. We cannot afford the financial or the societal costs of unnecessary juvenile incarceration. By shifting our focus — and our investments — to the front end of the system, we will save not only money, but also lives.

Rick Scott was elected governor of Florida in 2010.


Copyright 2011 Miami Herald Media Co.
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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Reform underway at juvenile justice agency"
« Reply #80 on: August 04, 2011, 11:21:33 PM »
Comments left for the above 'Other Views' piece, "Reform underway at juvenile justice agency" (by Gov. Rick Scott, 07.26.11, Miami Herald):


ytrewq · 07/27/2011 10:58 AM
    Whenever Rick Scott uses the word "reform" look out. Someone is about to get plooked.
FromthePulpit · 07/27/2011 11:37 AM
    FROM THE PULPIT...
    The struggle continues and efforts made to improve the
    quality of services provided to detainees must not be lost.  It is of great importance that Secretary
    Wansley Walters, not negate the importance of collaborating with the faith
    community, and other Civic organizations, to ultimately advance the efforts to
    improve the Juvenile Justice system in the state of Florida.  I echo the Secretaries gratefulness to have
    been chosen and recognized by the Georgetown University's Center for Juvenile
    Justice Reform project.  Yet with this
    honor the faith community and the work Pastors do in the community, must be
    brought into this dialogue.  To improve
    reform, create, and implement anything within a community, without the input of
    Clergy, and the social aspect that we cover on a daily, weekly, monthly, and
    sometimes on an annual basis, is to negate an intricate part of the whole process
    of reform.

    True research is a welcome venture for all who seeks
    improvement in a system that is broken.
    However, research that impacts reforming agendas, must address the
    grassroots issues that permeates the communities of color.  I used communities of color, because the
    African American community is not the only ethnic group impacted by the Juvenile
    Justice System, but I dare say all the ethnic groups are impacted, but by in
    large the margins, and the gap between ethnic groups shows a larger number of
    African America, and Caribbean tips the scale, in the amount of arrest and
    commitments.  

    The answers needed to address the needs of mothers, and
    fathers who have children who are incarcerated, is not always found in the
    systems and policies created by politicians.
    Often times these needs find themselves on the Pastor's desk.  Therefore, accessibility to venues where by
    Clergy can voice their position on matters involving families that are in need,
    must be a part of the prevention agenda, and reentry process.  The Old African proverb, "It takes a village to raise a Child,"
    rings true when one seeks to address matters at the grassroots level.  This proverb is diminished when the state and
    church sees themselves as being separate, rather than being one in the struggle
    for reform and equality across communities.
     
    Pastor Mark Gardner, Senior Pastor
    Northside Church of God
    Miami, FL
lmmd · 07/27/2011 12:34 PM
    surely ricky, you're not proposing the outsource DJJ to GEO or another privately run company are you?


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Offline Ursus

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Governor Takes Teen's Death At Juvenile Facility 'Persona
« Reply #81 on: August 05, 2011, 12:07:02 AM »
abc25 - WPBF

Governor Takes Teen's Death At Juvenile Facility 'Personally'
18-Year-Old Died While In Custody At Palm Beach Regional Juvenile Detention Center

Terri Parker, Reporter
POSTED: 3:58 pm EDT July 27, 2011



Attorney Bill Zoeller and Maritza Perez speak to WPBF 25 News' Terri Parker about the governor's letter to The Miami Herald.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- Gov. Rick Scott said he is taking the death of a teenager at a West Palm Beach juvenile detention center "personally."

In a letter to The Miami Herald, Scott wrote that he "won't rest until every unresolved question" about the death of Eric Perez is answered.

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

An attorney for the family said the 18-year-old died after hours of complaining of severe headaches and vomiting, even though guards knew he was in distress and didn't call 911.

The Department of Juvenile Justice has since fired two employees and suspended six others.

Scott said he wants to reduce waste and inefficiency at expensive juvenile facilities, and he's advocating less expensive community-based programs that hold juveniles accountable and create jobs instead of paying for "unnecessary juvenile incarceration."

"I think it shows that even he recognizes that what went on at this facility is clearly, clearly unacceptable," attorney Bill Zoeller said Wednesday in response to Scott's surprise support. "I think he recognizes that common sense by a few people would have prevented Eric's death."

Perez's mother said she's happy the governor is getting involved.

"I don't want no other kids to die the way my son did," Maritza Perez said.

The investigation into Perez's death continues.


Copyright 2011 by WPBF.com.
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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Governor Takes Teen's Death ... 'Personally' "
« Reply #82 on: August 05, 2011, 12:16:33 AM »
Comments left for the above article, "Governor Takes Teen's Death At Juvenile Facility 'Personally'" (by Terri Parker; July 27, 2011; ABC News 25 - WPBF):


cv2065 · Jul. 27, 2011 5:26pm EST
    Scott is interested only in what this negligence will cost in state legal fees to satisfy the suing parents. He has no interest in the well being of others, unless its with respect to big business profits or when voting time comes around.
TimothyBarbieri · Jul. 28, 2011 7:58am EST
    scott has some endearing attributes...hes a great liar thief and really good at embezzlement....and we voted for him because better liars are more likely to get to the truth...its like buying a gift...buying gifts allows us to demonstrate how little we know about a person...i give scott credit for at least being interesting.


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Offline Ursus

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Guard suspended in teen's death was fired from last job
« Reply #83 on: August 05, 2011, 10:31:40 PM »
Uh-oh. Somebody wasn't too thorough about doing employee background checks...

The below article was also published on July 27th by the Orlando Sentinel under a slightly different title: Staffers suspended in teen's death at West Palm Beach lockup have checkered work histories, as well as by the Palm Beach Post, also on the 27th, under the title Guard, suspended in teen's death in custody, was fired from last job.

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The Miami Herald
Posted on Tuesday, 07.26.11

Guard suspended in teen's death was fired from last job
 
Two of the staffers suspended after the death of a teen at the West Palm Beach lockup have checkered work histories.

By CAROL MARBIN MILLER
[email protected]



Eric Perez

When Laryell King was forced to leave her job at the Department of Juvenile Justice lockup in Orlando for "negligently" leaving a youth alone in a room, juvenile justice administrators left a clear warning in her personnel file: "NO rehire in any position."

But rehire her they did.

King ended up on the payroll at the DJJ lockup in West Palm Beach. Now, she is one of five guards suspended after staffers ignored the suffering of 18-year-old Eric Perez, who died at the West Palm Beach juvenile detention center following seven hours of vomiting, hallucinating and complaining of severe headaches.

The person who hired King despite the admonition, lockup superintendent Anthony C. Flowers, has a work history that raises other questions.

When Flowers was hired by the state, he was the assistant program director for the Florida Institute for Girls, a 100-bed prison for hard-to-manage girls that was being closed down amid a Palm Beach County grand jury report that found it rife with violence, sexual abuse by guards, and endless lockdowns due to chronic short-staffing.

"The culture of some staff was to protect each other, fostering cover-ups and unprofessional conduct," the grand jury wrote in February 2004.

The employment records for Flowers and King were provided to The Miami Herald in response to a public records request. Samadhi Jones, an agency spokeswoman in Tallahassee, declined to comment about the two employees. "While the Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) is committed to being open and transparent to the greatest degree possible, due to ongoing investigations by the DJJ Inspector General's Office and the West Palm Beach Police Department we cannot comment further on the death of the young man at the Palm Beach Regional Juvenile Detention Center," Jones said Tuesday.

Eric, who turned 18 on July 2 while detained at the West Palm Beach center, was locked up after officers found marijuana in his possession when they stopped his bicycle for a broken light. The arrest violated his probation years earlier on a robbery charge.

Beginning around 1:30 a.m. on July 10, the teen began to complain of a severe headache, and vomited the rest of the night. He also appeared to be hallucinating, waving his arms and screaming at officers to extricate him from an imaginary assailant. Records and interviews suggest guards moved Eric by dragging his mat from room to room, but did nothing to help him until just before 8 a.m., when they called for an ambulance. By the time paramedics arrived, a heart monitor showed only a "flat line," records show.

King, who had been honorably discharged from the U.S. Army, was first hired by DJJ to work in the Orange County detention center in late 2001. She had been working for a security company at the time. Her evaluations from the early 2000s were generally positive, though unremarkable. "Officer King is dedicated to her work and the department," a supervisor wrote in March 2005, for example. "She's respectful, cooperative and committed to excellence."

But in March 2008, Jeffrey Lonton, the then-superintendent of the Orlando lockup, moved to fire King.

King had "negligently" left a youth alone and unsupervised for 45 minutes, until another staff member heard the child "banging on the door" to get out. "Ms. King also placed three youths in the laundry room the same day unsupervised; they let themselves out after several minutes," a memo states. "Additionally, after reviewing video surveillance, the same events had occurred over several days in the month of February."

The memo noted that King would be allowed to resign "in lieu of termination." The subject line of the memo stated: "NO rehire in any position for Laryell King."

But in September 2010, King applied at DJJ for a job as a probation officer and correctional treatment specialist. When asked on the employment application why she left the Orlando lockup, King gave a one-word answer: "advancement."

On Sept. 28, 2010, Flowers informed King of her job offer. "In accordance with the provisions of the state of Florida's personnel rules, you have been selected for position of juvenile justice detention officer," he wrote.

She was making about $25,000 a year.

Less than a year later, when administrators suspended King, personnel managers in Orlando were asked in writing by DJJ whether King had ever been counseled or disciplined. "No disciplinary actions in the personnel file," was the response.

King could not be reached for comment.

Flowers was hired by DJJ in October 2003 as a senior detention officer. At the time, he was working as the assistant program director at the Florida Institute for Girls, or FIG. His application said he was "responsible for the day-to-day operation of the intensive mental health wing" of the prison, where he supervised staff, monitored compliance with state regulations and standards, and evaluated employee performance. He had been an assistant superintendent at the West Palm Beach lockup before his employment at FIG.

Though FIG was being paid $5 million per year by DJJ to operate the treatment center, a company personnel manager refused to answer a single question about his performance when asked by juvenile justice administrators doing a background check.

"What were the major duties performed?," a reference check asked. "Per company policy cannot give out information," was the reply. "How effectively did he perform these functions?," the questionnaire asked. "Same as above," FIG answered.

Roy Miller, who heads the Florida Children's Campaign, questioned why administrators would have hired a guard from a program that was rife was abuse — and why they would have allowed a contract agency to refuse to provide personnel information that is covered under the state's public records law.

"It's a matter of public record that girls were abused sexually and physically at the Florida Institute for Girls," Miller said. "Why they would hire employees from FIG without knowing explicitly their employment record is beyond comprehension," said Miller, whose group has long been a DJJ watchdog.

DJJ records obtained at the time by The Herald showed one girl complained that she had been taken to the facility's "boom boom room," where officers "slammed her head into the wall and struck her in the mouth." The girl suffered bruises and welts, said a report that verified the girl's claims.

After his return to DJJ, Flowers rose quickly through the ranks: senior detention officer, assistant detention center superintendent, superintendent. His work was described as "outstanding" and "exceptional" in yearly evaluations. His personnel file shows he has never been disciplined. His yearly salary is about $65,000, records show.

Flowers, who was suspended after Eric's death, did not return calls for comment from a reporter.

FIG was shuttered about the same time a Palm Beach County grand jury blasted it, but not because DJJ administrators took the action. Lawmakers sliced the program's funding from their spending plan, at the urging of children's advocates.

"It was a hellhole for girls," Miller said.


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Offline Ursus

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Comments: "Guard suspended in teen's death was fired from...
« Reply #84 on: August 05, 2011, 10:36:44 PM »
Comments left for the above article, "Guard suspended in teen's death was fired from last job" (by Carol Marbin Miller, 07.26.11, Miami Herald), #s 1-20:


sinbadsailor · 07/26/2011 10:36 PM
    This is exactly why we need to privatize these institutions. Government employees cannot be trusted!
    PirateCafe · 07/27/2011 06:53 AM in reply to sinbadsailor
      This is exactly why privatization WON'T work.
    jdizzle · 07/27/2011 07:08 AM in reply to sinbadsailor
      Abuses in privatized prisons are infinitely worse and accountability even less transparent. Like it or not, incarcerated people still have rights.
      sinbadsailor · 07/27/2011 03:56 PM in reply to jdizzle
        What's worse than the death of a child?
        jdizzle · 07/27/2011 04:12 PM in reply to sinbadsailor
          It's a matter of scale.

          Nothing is worse, of course, than the death of a child. However, privatized prisons are notorious for the kind of negligence that led to this young man's senseless death. The difference is that the private prison's negligence is a design element of a profit-driven enterprise in an institution where the profit motive has no place. You can expect many more such deaths in Rick Scott's Florida:
        http://www.privateci.org/rap_geo.html[/list][/list][/list][/list]
        frankinwiltonmanors · 07/26/2011 10:37 PM
          Can you say 'affirmative action hires'?
        kareem98 · 07/27/2011 05:17 AM
          Read the article again !!! The private company was over the  Florida Institute for Girls were the the young ladies were being sexually assaulted !!!! Thats why in the article Roy Miller asked why was a contract agency able to keep personel records private when under state law it should be public records .
        PirateCafe · 07/27/2011 06:52 AM
          Privatization will only exacerbate this problem.  There will be less accountability, costs will be cut to improve the company bottom line, and more children will die.  Mark my words.

          Privatization without firm oversight is a losing proposition, and legislators know this but knowingly ignore it while taking campaign contributions from the very companies who will treat the children like chattel and profit making widgets.  Profits over child protection.

          See Our Kids Miami/Dade for a prime example.
        neiman1 · 07/27/2011 06:59 AM
          Is it incompetence or corruption?  Government can't seem to do anything properly, especially cleaning their ranks of the stupid and lazy.
        jdizzle · 07/27/2011 07:06 AM
          Police stopped him for a broken light on his bicycle? If you're going to make up an excuse for profiling, you can do a little better than that.
          yokolee · 07/27/2011 11:36 AM in reply to jdizzle
            And for a little bit of weed incarcerated and paying with his life, how sad
          [/list]
          Tomasin · 07/27/2011 08:03 AM
            I look like someone is going to profit from these crazy ideas, this may be unconstitutional!!!!
          ZOOT · 07/27/2011 08:27 AM
            I was a treatment specialist for 26 years at Michigan's 'reform school' for boys, 12yrs old to 21. I was also a Union Officer and stewart. We had incompetent and abusive staff hired on occasion, but the Union Reps worked with Management to weed out the ones who wouldn't or couldn't learn to follow reasonable guidelines for teatment of our 'students'. Management encouraged staff and youth to report abusive treatment, and documented allegations and occurances, followed progressive disiplinary practices and provided counseling and training opportunitiues for staff with problems. They also closely monitored problem staff, so they weren't given the opportunity to repeat 'mistakes'. Where is the accountability in Florida's DJJ? Are ALL DJJ management personnoll incompetent? This Dept. needs a thurough hosecleaning, professional training and strict monitoring by an outside commission, in my opinion.
          Observer101 · 07/27/2011 09:04 AM
            Very interesting!    I find it interesting that the article never says what this guy died from????   He was in the slammer for about 8 days before he started seizing......  HUMMMMM, could someone have slipped him a bunch of drugs?    WHAT CAUSED HIS DEATH?  And should someone be held responsible (manslaughter, at the very least)?

            This also points out SOME of the MANY problems with our Juvenile systems......
            shelacked · 07/27/2011 01:10 PM in reply to Observer101
              Heard it was appendicitis
            constructionqueen · 07/27/2011 05:17 PM in reply to Observer101
              Ruptured spleen
            [/list]
            leo · 07/27/2011 09:45 AM
              at 18 he was on parole for a robbery a few years ago!? wow! nice citizen!
            fdgsr · 07/27/2011 10:14 AM
              "DJJ records obtained at the time by The Herald showed one girl complained that she had been taken to the facility's "boom boom room," where officers "slammed her head into the wall and struck her in the mouth." The girl suffered bruises and welts, said a report that verified the girl's claims."

              There seems to be a culture of abuse by people in some capacity of authority. Police, military, and even county court house employees display their sadistic tendencies in deal with the public. When entrusted with inmates arrested and not yet tried or with incarcerated people, they take it to extremes. 'Law and order' is a catch phrase is interpreted to mean, "I am the law and I order you to do what I say." Government employment seems to be a ticket to abusive treatment. The club held over the head of those who refuse is heavy indeed. I wonder which hurts most, a club held by a legal flogging agent, or a club held by a sadistic misfit in law enforcement? Let us deepen the vetting process for all positions of law enforcement that could give license to sadistic officers to vent their nature.
              PirateCafe · 07/27/2011 10:53 AM in reply to fdgsr
                It is much worse in a private system where accountability does not exist.
                fdgsr · 07/28/2011 12:44 AM in reply to PirateCafe
                  Very likely, but I have no personal experience with private run prisons. I am relying on my own experience over my life time. It includes little incidences when a government employee of any level deals with a citizen, they assume the full stature of the dictatorial power of the state to emphasize their power. Police seem to have the mentality that they can torture and intimidate with impunity. This has always been the case and individual police even use weapons to threaten when it is not justified as self defense. Watch a police arrest in Florida. Guns are drawn in a threatening posture and the suspect ordered to go down to the ground and forced if he doesn't comply hastily. Even in the driver license office, you are subject to the 'authority' at each phase of the process.
                [/list][/list]


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                Offline Ursus

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                Comments: "Guard suspended in teen's death was fired from...
                « Reply #85 on: August 05, 2011, 10:41:17 PM »
                Comments left for the above article, "Guard suspended in teen's death was fired from last job" (by Carol Marbin Miller, 07.26.11, Miami Herald), #s 21-26:


                Jim Mac · 07/27/2011 12:08 PM
                  Cops are unskilled punks with badges, who have no other skills so Florida makes them cops.
                  HHERALD99 · 07/27/2011 05:11 PM in reply to Jim Mac
                    You can not generalize this, you are mistaken. Not all cops are the same.
                  merrychristmas · 07/28/2011 04:31 PM in reply to Jim Mac
                    cops were not involved in this it was jailers,  two different animals. and btw most police depts require a college educatione before hiring and all require college education for promotion.  This hiring smells of favors and unfortunately "favors" occur in all industries.
                  [/list]
                  cp111 · 07/27/2011 12:40 PM
                    How many idiots in DJJ did not see "NO REHIRE IN ANY POSITION" in this lazy, negligent's (I cannot use the word I want here) personnel file? Anthony Flowers in a position to be able to hire? Nepotism or exchange of "favors" methinks.
                  HHERALD99 · 07/27/2011 04:23 PM
                    Well, it is time for a big law suit. Nail the department. BIG TIME.
                  Pat · 07/27/2011 05:51 PM
                    This is so sad, I hope his parents will demand justice. This should not have happened, especially not to someone so young.  The state of Florida must be held accountable for the actions of its employees.


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                  Offline Ursus

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                  Comments: "Guard, suspended in teen's death in custody, was.
                  « Reply #86 on: August 05, 2011, 11:34:16 PM »
                  Quote from: "Ursus"
                  The [above] article was also published ... by the Palm Beach Post, ...on the 27th, under the title Guard, suspended in teen's death in custody, was fired from last job.
                  The publication of Carol Marbin Miller's article in the Palm Beach Post also elicited some discussion:

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

                  Comments left for the above article, "Guard, suspended in teen's death in custody, was fired from last job" (by Carol Marbin Miller; July 27, 2011; Miami Herald/Palm Beach Post):


                  leslie · 7:54 AM, 7/27/2011
                    Now heres a real story, corruption and incompetence involving government run institutions. Never heard this before, must be a new trend.

                    This is what happens when people are hired based on federal tax credits and to fill quotas. You get the employees that no self respecting private business would hire.
                    Yet we as tax payers get to pay for this continued incompetent behaviour from civil servents.

                    And people are calling the shooter in Oslo crazy. He's more sane than any government worker.
                  Sa · 8:10 AM, 7/27/2011
                    Sounds like the kid was poisoned and left to die an agonizing death.
                  Mohawker · 8:17 AM, 7/27/2011
                    NOW fire the one that hired this one and so on . 0% tolerance . No more morons .
                  Sandy · 8:40 AM, 7/27/2011
                    A simple phone call verifying her last employment record, and a child might still be alive. Flowers should go also.
                  @ Sa · 8:45 AM, 7/27/2011
                    @ SA NO THEY DIDNT POISON HIM HE HAD A BRAIN ANERISM THAT BURST.....
                  The Truth · 10:48 AM, 7/27/2011
                    They stopped him for a broken bicycle light???? COME ON!!!! I'm all for locking up thugs, but the cops obviously had it in for this kid. I agree he shouldn't have had dope on him. There's definately more to this story that's not being told.
                  R.C · 12:17 PM, 7/27/2011
                    SOMEONE REALLY NEEDS TO COME IN A CLEAN HOUSE WITH THIS PEOPLE WHO DON'T GIVE A **** ABOUT THIS YOUNG KIDS. HOW WOULD THEY LIKE IF SOMEONE LOCKED THEM UP IN A ROOM AND LEFT THEM TO DIE? BECAUSE THAT'S WHAT THEY DID THAT'S WHY THIS WORLD IS SO F***** UP NOW. BECAUSE PEOPLE DON'T GO THAT EXTRA MILE TO PROTECT THESE KIDS.
                  leeeo · 1:51 PM, 7/27/2011
                    Our community need to know that Anthony Flowers has an outstanding reputation amongst juvenile justice advocates in Palm Beach County.
                    He also is well respected by his staff and the youth under his care.
                  JS · 5:08 PM, 7/27/2011
                    Ms. King was cleared by WPB Police of any wrong doing due to the video tape that showed the entire incident. Ms. King was not involved but was on duty at the time of the incident. If you place someone in a situation (Orlando) where they are over worked and the facility under-staffed, mistakes happen. If you waited tables, washed dishes, seated people, and answered the phone; something will obviously get overlooked. Of course the PTB never fall on their sword and we all know what rolls down hill!


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                  Offline Ursus

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                  PEREZ ATTORNEY: DJJ suspended guard previously fired...
                  « Reply #87 on: August 05, 2011, 11:58:15 PM »
                  Video news footage at the title link:

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                  WPEC - CBS12 News

                  PEREZ ATTORNEY: DJJ suspended guard previously fired in Orlando facility

                  July 27, 2011 9:30 PM

                  WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- Just more than one week ago Maritza Perez buried her 18-year-old son Eric after he died in custody at the Palm Beach Regional Juvenile Detention Center in West Palm Beach.

                  On Wednesday Perez sat down with one of her lawyers William Zoeller, tears welling up in her eyes, as she reacts to a news report in the Miami Herald. The Herald got the file of detention center guard Laryell King. She was on duty the day Eric Perez died at the facility and is now on suspension.

                  "She was the guard that was put in front of his room to watch him, while he was put into the medical confinement room about 5:00 in the morning," said Zoeller.

                  Zoeller says that information comes from one of the two guards fired following Eric's death.

                  "She apparently was sitting outside the door in a chair when he went to the cafeteria. When he came back, there was nobody watching him," said Zoeller.

                  The Herald reports the documents show that guard Laryell King had been fired from a DJJ facility in Orlando for negligently leaving a child alone in a room. In her file is a notation, "no rehire in any position."  Yet here she was working in West Palm Beach.

                  "Apparently on their employment file, it said do not rehire. Why do you hire that person again? Obviously it's got to mean someone was negligent in what they were doing," said Zoeller.

                  "They should not have her there. They should not have rehired again. If it happened one time, it's going to happen again. It's going to happen again," said Maritza Perez.


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                  Offline Ursus

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                  Mom will get video of son's death in lockup
                  « Reply #88 on: August 06, 2011, 10:28:53 AM »
                  The Florida DJJ expresses its intention to release the video to the mother, as they are required to do, by law, upon request of a family member. Why haven't they already done so?

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                  The Miami Herald
                  Posted on Thursday, 07.28.11

                  Mom will get video of son's death in lockup

                  The head of Florida's Department of Juvenile Justice promises to release the video of a teenage boy dying in a lockup to the teen's mother.

                  BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER
                  [email protected]


                  Florida's top juvenile justice administrator said Thursday that several hours of video depicting a teenager's death at a South Florida lockup will be released to the teen's mother.

                  Department of Juvenile Justice Secretary Wansley Walters told The Miami Herald Thursday that she intends for her agency to speak openly in the coming days about what happened to 18-year-old Eric Perez, who died July 10 at the Palm Beach County detention center after his distress and pleas for medical attention were ignored for several hours.

                  At the center of ongoing investigations into Eric's death are seven to eight hours of video shot by two cameras at the lockup.

                  A new Florida law, passed this spring, forbids state agencies from releasing pictures, audio or video tape capturing the death, or events leading to the death, of any person — except to family members, who are entitled to any such footage.

                  Eric's mother has formally requested the video.

                  "Absolutely," Walters said Thursday afternoon. "We are going to release it as soon as we can."

                  "They are the only ones who have the power to do with the tape what they want to do — not us," Walters said of Eric's family.

                  The youth's mother, Maritza Perez, repeated her vow Thursday to make public the images. "I want everybody to know what happened to Eric," she said. "I don't want this to happen to any other kid. I don't want any other mother to go through what I'm going through."

                  Eric, who turned 18 on July 2 while detained at the West Palm Beach lockup, had been arrested a few days before his birthday when police found a small amount of marijuana in his possession after they stopped his bicycle for having a broken light. Beginning around 1:30 a.m., records show, Eric began to complain of a severe headache, and he spent the next several hours vomiting and apparently hallucinating that someone was on top of him. He was pronounced dead at 8:09 a.m.

                  A lockup guard who was fired as a result of Eric's death told The Herald his supervisor and the detention center's superintendent barred him from calling 911 to seek help for the teen.

                  In June 2003, DJJ was involved in a similar episode when 14-year-old Omar Paisley died at the Miami lockup of a ruptured appendix after begging guards and nurses for medical care. In the wake of a stinging grand jury report, as well as a series of tense legislative hearings, DJJ administrators vowed to ensure that the health of detainees never again would be compromised.

                  Since Eric's death, Walters has insisted that policies, procedures and training were in place to prevent another tragedy.

                  "Those policies are not only on the books, but probably among the single, strongest policies we have," Walters said. "We have documents that show people have been regularly trained in them."

                  Administrators currently are researching the number of times guards and supervisors have either called 911, or driven a detainee to the hospital themselves, Walters said, adding that "this occurs on a regular basis."

                  The tape of Eric's death is soundless, Walters revealed, despite a grand jury's 2004 recommendation that DJJ surveillance cameras be equipped for audio as well as video. At the time, the panel said it was hindered in its investigation of alleged mistreatment of detainees by the lack of audio-equipped cameras.

                  "I suspect it was a money issue," said Walters of the continued lack of audio equipment. She took over the agency earlier this year following the inauguration of Gov. Rick Scott.

                  Administrators also are looking into how Laryell King, a guard on duty the night Eric died, was hired by the West Palm Beach lockup despite being forced to resign from another lockup three years earlier for "negligently" leaving detainees unsupervised. At that time, a notice was put in her file stating she should not be rehired.

                  "That entire thing is under review," Walters said. "How did it happen? Trust me, we're asking the same question."


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                  Offline Ursus

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                  Comments: "Mom will get video of son's death in lockup"
                  « Reply #89 on: August 06, 2011, 10:37:30 AM »
                  Comments left for the above article, "Mom will get video of son's death in lockup" (by Carol Marbin Miller, 07.28.11, The Miami Herald), #s 1-21:


                  Carl Ellis · 07/28/2011 08:15 PM
                    This comment was flagged for review.[/list]
                      MIAMIVICING · 07/29/2011 06:17 AM in reply to Carl Ellis
                        A bad means for a good end.  Who said life was fair?
                        CarolMarbinMiller · 07/29/2011 11:57 AM in reply to MIAMIVICING
                          Here's the deal, people: If my newspaper won't moderate the discussion here, I will. We will not be congratulating ourselves that a mother's son is dead for the crime of smoking marijuana. We will not be expressing joy at the death of a teenager - any teenager. If you can't live by these rules, go post your venom somewhere else, because I will personally ensure that you go away.
                          OnLine · 07/29/2011 11:31 PM in reply to CarolMarbinMiller
                            I agree with you, but as much as we may not like it, that is just how it goes. They have as much right.
                          jim444 · 07/30/2011 07:48 AM in reply to CarolMarbinMiller
                            You go girl, I'm behind you 100 percent.
                          [/list][/list][/list]
                            Hopie · 07/29/2011 07:59 AM in reply to Carl Ellis
                              What???? What an idiotic reply
                            cassiuscasio · 07/29/2011 08:50 AM in reply to Carl Ellis
                              Would you say the same thing if Rush Limbaugh was arrested for all of his illegal narcotics and died the same way?
                              OnLine · 07/29/2011 11:29 PM in reply to cassiuscasio
                                Rush is a Billionaire he would never see a day in jail, this America.
                              [/list][/list]
                                enriquesanchez · 07/29/2011 10:48 AM in reply to Carl Ellis
                                  Carl Ellis:  You're response is so typical... of alien life forms that have littered the landscape of America for +500 years.  Always spewing hateful manure.
                                [/list]
                                Richard Nixon 2012 · 07/29/2011 12:18 AM
                                  Only reason mom wants the tape is so she can use it to sue and get a paycheck.
                                  Hopie · 07/29/2011 08:00 AM in reply to Richard Nixon 2012
                                    Really? Were it a child of yours put into jail for possession of "a small amount of marijuana" and died.
                                  OnLine · 07/29/2011 11:28 PM in reply to Richard Nixon 2012
                                    so? the kid went in breathing, and came out in a box, she should drag them through the streets.
                                  jim444 · 07/30/2011 07:57 AM in reply to Richard Nixon 2012
                                    Is that such a bad thing? That's the least they can do. She lost her child.I feel awful for her.I feel awful for you too,because you are a very sad and sick person to say what you said.
                                  [/list]
                                  MIAMIVICING · 07/29/2011 06:14 AM
                                    Great rule.  This allows the families to capitalize on early moneys, due to effects of supply and demand of these videos for the media, who then heralds and exposes these wonderful acts.  Then you sue these dumps run by nazi rednecks. I love it.
                                  Steph Rendon · 07/29/2011 08:34 AM
                                    she will do what any mother would do if put in that situation.
                                    OnLine · 07/29/2011 11:27 PM in reply to Steph Rendon
                                      agree.
                                    [/list]
                                    vic1 · 07/29/2011 10:08 AM
                                      If a person knows that 911 needs to be called then what is stopping that person from calling 911 if he or she is really concerned....there is no logic in that statement.
                                      I think the law prohibiting the public from obtaining the video is not right because that prevents public scrunity of a public official.
                                      Most likely the state was negligent in his death.  The state is negligent the majority of the time when it comes to abuse and the death of a child in Florida.
                                    creator · 07/29/2011 04:26 PM
                                      IN CA  WOULD HAVE NEVER BEEN ARRESTED
                                      WE JUS LIVE IN DA BACK WOODS
                                      OnLine · 07/29/2011 11:25 PM in reply to creator
                                        We are not in"CA", why are you here?
                                      [/list]
                                      William Keeley · 07/29/2011 10:59 PM
                                        I hope the mother sues and wins at least 12 million dollars.  This should help the D.J.J. change its behavior.  $12 million dollars is about a week's worth of budget for the Department of Juvenile "Justice." If the state decides to fight the award, it should also be held responsible for both sides' legal fees on top of the award.


                                        It is time to change the D.J.J.'s behavior in how it treats kids in its custody.  The D.J.J.'s budget should not be increased to offset the award either.  My pay was not increased to offset a speeding fine I received.  If I were to take my case to (a kangaroo) court, I would have to pay court costs on top of my fine.

                                        When I was caught speeding, it costs me a weeks pay even though I harmed absolutely nobody for driving over the speed limit.  The officer told me that the fine is to change my behavior.  The state's behavior in this case caused actual harm.  What's the state considers appropriate for citizens should be appropriate for its agencies.
                                        OnLine · 07/29/2011 11:26 PM in reply to William Keeley
                                          I hope she wins also, but I don't agree with your comparison.
                                        [/list]


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