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US: Students protest juveniles death in Florida boot
camp
By Jeff Lincoln
25 April 2006
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On April 21, thousands of students and other young people from
around Florida descended on the state capitol building to protest
the death of Martin Lee Anderson, a 14-year-old African-American
boy who died in a Florida Boot camp one day after being beaten
and choked by guards. The march on the capitol was the culmination
of weeklong protests that included an overnight sit-in outside
Florida Governor Jeb Bushs office.
The protesters chanted, Justice delayed is justice denied
and carried pictures of Anderson in his funeral casket with captions
that read, This is what democracy looks like.
Martin Lee Anderson was sent to a boot camp in the Florida
panhandle after he was caught joyriding in his grandmothers
car and then violated the terms of his probation. This boot camp
was run by the Bay County sheriffs office and operated under
contract with Floridas Department of Juvenile Justice. A
January 11 article in the Miami Herald reports that the
DJJ operates about six such camps throughout the state of Florida,
all run by county sheriffs offices.
The events surrounding Martin Andersons death give a
glimpse into what occurs in these correctional facilities.
A mere three hours after being admitted into the Bay City boot
camp, Anderson was disciplined after he became exhausted
during an orientation drill and stopped running. He was not even
at the facility long enough to eat lunch before being subjected
to a merciless beating that was caught on the camps security
cameras. The footage, which received widespread publicity, shows
numerous guardsup to eight at one pointpunching Anderson
with closed fists, applying wristlocks and other holds, and kicking
or kneeing him repeatedly. The tape shows that this continued
for a period of over 40 minutes. Anderson appears limp throughout
the tape.
After Anderson complained of breathing difficulties, he collapsed
and was taken to a hospital where he died the next day.
Outrage over the event only increased after the initial autopsy
results were made public. Dr. Charles Siebert, the Bay County
medical examiner, performed the first autopsy on Martin Anderson
and concluded that the death occurred by natural causes related
to a sickle cell trait, a usually benign blood disorder. This
seemingly absurd conclusion prompted accusations of a cover-up.
A second autopsy, performed by Dr. Michael Baden at the request
of the Anderson family, concluded that Martin Anderson likely
asphyxiated, pointing to a section of the videotape where it appears
that the guards hands were covering Andersons mouth
and his nose was blocked by ammonia.
The death of Martin Anderson is not an isolated occurrence.
There have been 35 deaths in boot camps since 1983 in addition
to thousands of injuries inflicted by guards, ranging from broken
bones to heat exhaustion.
As the WSWS reported in July 2001, Juvenile boot camps
first came into existence in the mid-1980s, during the Reagan
years, when officials in Georgia and Louisiana experimented with
placing teenage boys in military-type settings. The practice caught
on with politicians anxious to appear tough on crime.
These camps, designed to break the spirit of troubled
teens so that they return home a good soldier, are
symptomatic of the growing brutalization and militarization of
American society.
An article by the Miami Herald (April 2, 2006) discloses
the contents of a Florida Department of Juvenile Justice report
documenting use-of-force incidents at the Panama City boot camp
where Anderson died. Since January 2003, force was used against
juveniles 180 times; only eight of these instances were for hitting
guards, fighting or trying to escape. In fact, the article states
that the overwhelming majority of the youths were subjected
to takedowns, hammer-fist blows and knee strikes for: being unwilling
or unable to perform rigorous exercises, exercising without sufficient
motivation, being insolent with guards,
speaking without permission, breathing heavily, or tensing
themselves. The article also states that on Christmas
Day 2004, one boy was disciplined for smiling.
The Miami Herald has also documented the ineffectiveness
of such programs. In a January 11, 2006 article, the Herald
exposes the track record of the boot camps, stating that DJJs
records show about 62 percent of the youth who graduate from one
of the states boot camps are arrested again for some type
of offensea recidivism rate experts call very high.
On January 29, 2006, the Washington Post cited a 2004 statement
by the National Institutes of Health that concludes boot camp
programs do not work and there is some evidence that they
may make the problem worse. Indeed, some young people leave these
programs with post-traumatic stress disorder and exacerbations
of their original problems.
With the attention that the Anderson tragedy has brought to
Floridas juvenile justice system, there have been calls
from legislators to shut down all of the states remaining
boot camp facilities. Governor Jeb Bush has so far refused to
do so, stating on April 20 that the boot camp programs have yielded
a good result. The next day, Bushs juvenile justice
secretary, Anthony Schembri, confirmed the administrations
position, saying about the five remaining boot camps, I
think the remainder are good options that we can use for certain
kids.
The reaction among layers of students and workers has been
one of outrage. Protests began Wednesday morning when a group
of students took over the foyer of Governor Jeb Bushs office
demanding a meeting with the governor, who was on a trip in the
Middle East at the time. The students, who came from Florida State
University, Florida A&M University and Tallahassee Community
College, refused to meet with the lieutenant governor and instead
stayed overnight at the governors office. They advanced
a list of demands that included revoking the license of the medical
examiner that performed the first autopsy, arresting the guards
caught on the tape beating Anderson, and giving an apology to
Andersons family.
Governor Bush refused the students demands, saying that
the list of demands were [sic] asking for things that I
dont have the constitutional power to carry out. This
excuse stands in stark contrast to the actions taken by Jeb Bush
during the Terri Schiavo incident. In that case, he showed no
hesitancy in intervening to authorize the resumption of life-support
measures, including inserting a feeding tube into Terri Schiavos
body; violating such constitutional principles such as the separation
of church and state, separation of powers and Terris due
process rights. One fundamental difference here is that the death
of Anderson, who came from a black working class family, is not
being promoted by the religious right as a so-called pro-life
issue.
The student sit-in continued throughout the day on Thursday,
with many students skipping final exams to stay at the governors
office. On Friday, thousands showed up for a student-organized
march from the civic center to the capitol building. The march
came just a few hours after the resignation of Florida Department
of Law Enforcement Commissioner Guy Tunnell following revelations
by the Miami Herald that he had compared Illinois Senator
Barack Obama to Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and Jesse Jackson
to the outlaw Jesse James at a department head meeting. Tunnell
was the former Bay County Sheriff and had started the boot camp
where Anderson died in. He was in charge of investigating the
death until Governor Bush appointed a special prosecutor to replace
him.
The protesters assembled on the steps of the capitol building,
demanding that the results of the second autopsy be released,
and shouted, well be back if you dont act.
See Also:
Florida Governor Jeb
Bush intervenes in right-to-die case:
A cruel pandering to the religious right
[31 October 2003]
14-year-old dies in
Arizona, latest casualty of boot camps
[6 July 2001]
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