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Boot Camp Autopsy Doctor
Questioned Before
Feb 20, 2006
By BRENT KALLESTAD
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - The medical examiner who
ruled last week that a teenager died of natural causes after he was
struck by Panama City boot camp guards earlier signed mistake-filled
autopsy reports on a man and his adult daughter killed in a September
2004 tornado, their widow and mother said Monday.
Donna Faye Reed's autopsy report, which was signed
by Dr. Charles F. Siebert Jr. , said "the prostate gland and testes are
unremarkable" - organs that are part of the male genitalia. The autopsy
of her father, James Terry, failed to mention major wounds on his body
that were obvious, his widow says.
"I was extremely upset about my daughter having
testicles - any mother or daddy would be," Frances Terry said. "And my
husband not having any visible scars really upset me, too."
She said she has been complaining about Siebert to
officials for a year, with little success.
Siebert has drawn national criticism since he ruled
Thursday that 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson died last month from
hemorrhaging caused by sickle cell trait, a usually benign blood
condition that one in 12 African Americans has. Security camera
videotape taken at the Bay County juvenile boot camp Jan. 5 and released
Friday shows that Anderson was struck and kneed several times by guards
during a half hour encounter. The guards said he was not cooperating
during an exercise drill shortly after he checked in.
Siebert did not return calls Monday left at his
home and his office, which was closed for Presidents Day.
James Terry, 55, and Reed, 34, died Sept. 15, 2004,
as a result of a tornado spawned by Hurricane Ivan that ripped through
the Blountstown area in Calhoun County, just northeast of Panama City in
the Florida Panhandle.
Frances Terry, who spent more than three weeks
hospitalized for treatment of the injuries she received in the tornado,
missed the funeral of her husband and daughter while on a ventilator.
Her husband's autopsy report noted no major wounds
on his body even though there were several, including some on his belly
and back and a 12-inch wound along his shoulder blade that Terry said
required 80 stitches to close.
"It bothered me no end," she said.
She said there were other problems with her
daughter's autopsy besides giving her male organs, including comments on
an appendix and female reproductive organs that she says were both
removed in earlier surgeries. Reed's age was also wrong.
Although Siebert's signature was on both autopsy
reports, it was unclear if he had actually performed the procedures but
no other doctors are named.
Gina Jones, Anderson's mother, was blunt in her
criticism of Siebert after learning of Terry's allegations.
"That doctor needs to go back to school," Jones
said.
Siebert's autopsy report on her son created a stir
in the medical community where some experts said there are rare cases of
sudden death after exertion among people with sickle cell trait, but
that it would've been unlikely that it alone would've caused Anderson's
death.
Terry saw a television report Saturday that led her
to Jones' attorney, Ben Crump, in Tallahassee. He is suing the Bay
County Sheriff's Office, which runs the boot camp, and the Department of
Juvenile Justice, which oversees the programs statewide.
"When I heard that this child died in Bay County,
the first thing that crossed my mind was 'I wonder who did his
autopsy?'" she said.
Frustrated that she had been unable to get any
Panama City attorneys or State Attorney Steve Meadows to listen to her,
Terry called Crump. Meadows did not immediately return a message left at
his home Monday.
At one point, Terry said, she did reach Lesa
Forehand, director of investigation for the 14th District Medical
Examiner, to complain about the autopsy reports on her daughter and
husband.
"She was very apologetic," Terry said. "She said
she wasn't trying to make any excuses, but they were out of power in Bay
County for a few days.
"I told her they must've performed the autopsies in
the dark," Terry said.
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