Posted on Wed, Apr. 19, 2006
BOOT CAMP DEATH
Crist raises doubts on autopsy
At a meeting with the parents of
a boy who died at a Panama City boot
camp, state Attorney General Charlie
Crist offered sympathy but refused
their request to broadcast his
support on television.
BY MARC CAPUTO
TALLAHASSEE
- Florida's attorney
general met with the parents of
Martin Lee Anderson on Tuesday to
offer his condolences for the death
of their son at a Panama City boot
camp and pledge his future support,
but stopped short of a request by
the parents to make his views known
on television.
In the intimate 30-minute
meeting, Attorney General Charlie
Crist also said it was
''unbelievable'' that a nurse
rendered almost no aid to the teen,
and cast doubt on the official
autopsy claiming the 14-year-old
died of natural causes from a blood
disorder -- not from the Jan. 5
beating, captured on video, by
numerous camp guards.
''It was very disturbing,'' Crist
said of the video, which The Miami
Herald sued the state to obtain.
`YOU DON'T INTERFERE'
Still, Crist said, he won't touch
the case right now because it has
been assigned to a special
prosecutor, Mark Ober, a friend of
Crist's from the Tampa area. Ober
ordered a second autopsy last month,
the results of which have yet to be
released, though his office did say
it showed the boy did not die of
natural causes.
''One thing you do in law and
criminal justice is you don't
interfere with other investigations.
I don't want to step on Mr. Ober's
toes,'' Crist told the parents. He
said his office still could initiate
a civil-rights action if the
criminal investigation yields
nothing or if legislation designed
to reform boot camps fails.
Martin's parents, Robert Anderson
and Gina Jones, said they
appreciated Crist's decision to meet
with them, but wanted more help.
Crist, who hugged Jones at one
point, is the highest-level state
official and the only one of the
four major candidates for governor
to meet them. The two Democrats, Rod
Smith and Jim Davis, have said
little except when asked, and
Crist's Republican opponent, Tom
Gallagher, refuses to comment at
all, despite a ''pro-life'' campaign
platform premised on protecting
children.
Supporters of the family plan to
have a march in Tallahassee on
Friday headlined by the Revs. Jesse
Jackson and Al Sharpton. Miami state
Sen. Frederica Wilson said she wants
to bus residents from Miami to take
part.
That's not enough for the
parents, who want an arrest. They
want the new autopsy to be released,
and they want the residents of the
small conservative community of
Panama City to see that the state's
top lawyer is in the family's
corner.
'If we can just do it on TV, for
them back there. Because right now
[the guards] are saying, `So far
nothing's been done' and they're
going to get away with it. Just
something public. You know, your
sorrow,'' Gina Jones told Crist.
Said Crist: ``I'm sorry for your
loss. I can't imagine what that's
like.''
''You're right,'' she responded.
``If only you would walk in those
shoes, then you'll know. Being
impatient -- very -- that's what we
are right now.''
CLOUD OF DOUBT
Jones said she visited her son's
grave Sunday with an Easter basket.
She buried him, then saw his coffin
exhumed and wrapped in evidence tape
for the second autopsy, only to be
buried again. Martin, a good student
and chess champ, was sent to the Bay
Boot Camp on Jan. 5 after he was
caught joyriding in his
grandmother's car.
Hours later, he was flown to an
emergency center in Pensacola, where
he was pronounced dead. His body was
sent back to Bay County's medical
examiner, Charles Siebert, at the
request of the sheriff who ran the
boot camp. But the parents and their
attorney, Benjamin Crump, saw a
conspiracy, especially after Siebert
decided that their son died of
natural causes from sickle-cell
trait, a blood ailment primarily
affecting people of African descent.
Even Crist's father, a doctor,
was surprised, the attorney general
said.
Though Martin's parents still
have serious doubts about the
justice system -- especially after
the head of the state investigation
into the case was found to have sent
friendly e-mails to Bay County's
sheriff -- Crist urged them to
``have faith.''
''I wanted to have a chance to
look in your eye to let you know
people care. And it's real. It's
real,'' Crist said. ``Whether I go
on TV or not, my job is to make sure
justice is done. And when the
governor directed it to Mr. Ober, it
gave me good confidence that justice
will be done.''