|

Boot Camp Video Shows Beating of
Boy Who Died Next Day
Richard Luscombe in Miami
February 20, 2006
A controversy is growing over the future of
Florida's notorious 'boot camps' for young offenders after the release
of a video appearing to show five officers beating a teenager who died
the next day.
Gina Jones, the mother of 14-year-old Martin Lee
Anderson, has accused the state-run facility of murdering her son and
covering up the incident by refusing to release the grainy, 10-minute
video until forced to do so by a court order.
According to the family's lawyers, the video shows
the officers beating, choking and kicking Martin, who died in hospital
the day after the incident at the Bay County sheriff's department boot
camp in north Florida on January 5. Two other black teenagers have died
in boot camps.
The Bay County coroner ruled last week that
Martin's death was due to internal bleeding brought on by sickle cell
disease, a condition that afflicts about one in 20 African Americans.
None of the officers have been disciplined, although a criminal inquiry
has been launched.
"They picked on him so much until they murdered my
baby," Mrs Jones said. "Martin didn't have a chance. I couldn't stand to
see ... my baby like that."
The camp's CCTV cameras recorded the alleged
beating after Martin complained of being short of breath. In one scene,
his body jolts up and his head snaps back after an apparent knee to his
back.
Several state politicians have called for the
closure of Florida's five juvenile boot camps, which gained popularity
in the 1990s as a character-building alternative to prison. Supporters
say that offenders are more likely to be rehabilitated in camps, but
critics say there have been too many incidents of unnecessary violence.
"Anyone watching this video can see that the child
was very, very ill," said Dan Gelber, a Democratic party Florida
congressman. "This is not a kid who needed an attitude adjustment, this
is a kid who needed medical attention."
|