
Family Want Boot Camp Guards
Prosecuted
By MELISSA NELSON,
Associated Press
Writer
Sat Feb 18, 4:24 AM
ET
PANAMA
CITY, Fla. - Lawmakers
and the family of a
teenager seen on
videotape being kneed
and struck by juvenile
boot camp guards are
calling for the
immediate arrest and
prosecution of the
guards.
The Bay County Medical Examiner ruled that
Martin Lee Anderson died of internal bleeding
caused by a genetic blood disorder. But his
family said Friday they believe the boy died
because of the 30-minute beating that took place
hours before the 14-year-old died.
The U.S. Justice Department is investigating
possible civil rights violations.
Gov. Jeb Bush said he did not support calls
to shut down the state's juvenile boot camps,
calling Anderson's death "one tragic incident."
"The coroner has suggested that the death was
caused by this child's unique illness ... that
... the force itself did not cause the death,"
he said.
Still, Bush said he is awaiting a series of
recommendations from the Florida Department of
Juvenile Justice about improving the training
and the quality of the camps.
Some lawmakers have called on Bush to appoint
an independent prosecutor. A spokesman for Bush
said earlier Friday that the governor thought it
was too early to consider appointing an
independent prosecutor in the case.
"The investigation by law enforcement hasn't
been completed yet," he said.
Florida Department of Law Enforcement
officials said they provided their investigative
reports to the state attorney's office and to
the U.S. Attorney and that their investigation
would remain active until decisions are made
about criminal charges.
Rep. Gus Barreiro, R-Miami Beach, said the
conclusion that Anderson died of natural causes
"doesn't add up." "It doesn't make sense and
goes against all logic of watching what happened
to this young man," he said.
Sen. Gary Siplin, D-Orlando, called for any
guard who touched Anderson to be arrested. "At
the very least it's aggravated battery, at the
top of the ladder it's murder," Siplin said.
Anderson, who entered the camp Jan. 5 because
of a probation violation, complained of
breathing difficulties and collapsed while doing
push-ups, sit-ups and other exercises. He died
after midnight the next day at a Pensacola
hospital.
On the grainy, 80-minute tape, which has no
sound, as many as nine guards can be seen
wrestling Anderson to the ground and restraining
him. The boy appeared limp for most of the
ordeal and never appeared to offer significant
resistance. While he lay motionless on the
ground, a guard struck him several times, either
on his arm or torso.
At one point, a guard struck him from behind,
lifting his feet off the ground. At the
beginning, as the guards are pinning him against
a pole, they struck him three times with their
knees.
It's not clear from the tape how hard the
blows were or where they landed.
A woman in a white coat was present while
Anderson was restrained and at one point used a
stethoscope to check him.
Near the end of the confrontation, guards
appear to become more concerned, and several run
in and out of the scene. A few minutes later,
emergency medical personnel take him away on a
gurney.
"Martin didn't deserve this right here — at
all," the boy's mother, Gina Jones, said after
viewing the tape Friday at her lawyer's office
in Tallahassee. "I couldn't even watch the whole
tape. Me as a mom, I knew my baby was in pain
and I am in pain just watching his pain."
Anderson was arrested in June for stealing
his grandmother's Jeep Cherokee and sent to the
boot camp for violating his probation by
trespassing at a school.
State police investigating the case released
the tape after a lawsuit by news organizations.
The autopsy blamed his internal bleeding on
sickle cell disorder, which is present in one in
12 African-Americans but doesn't show up in
routine blood work.
There has been research — some involving
recruits at military boot camps — linking the
trait to sudden death after extreme exertion.
Experts on sickle cell trait, however,
questioned Friday whether the disease could be
definitively and entirely to blame for
Anderson's death.
"There is a slight, increased risk at the
extremes of human endurance, but it really takes
a profound amount of exercise and dehydration,"
said Dr. James Eckman, director of the
Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center at Grady Health
System in Atlanta and a professor at Emory
University.
Research shows sudden death with heavy
exertion typically happens either in extreme
heat and humidity or at high altitude. Weather
records show the high temperature was 68 the day
Anderson passed out.
The boot-camp concept for juveniles began in
Florida in 1993, and five camps now house about
600 boys ages 14 to 18.
___
Associated Press reporters Brent Kallestad,
David Royse and Andrea Fanta in Tallahassee
contributed to this report.