State examines juvenile center death
Investigators await autopsy results but
say the 17-year-old boy appears to have died
of natural causes.
By CATHERINE E. SHOICHET and ABBIE VANSICKLE
Published October 15, 2005
LECANTO - The state on Friday continued
investigating the death of a 17-year-old boy at
the Cypress Creek juvenile detention center.
Department of Juvenile Justice officials said
a guard conducting a routine check about 4:30
a.m. Thursday discovered Willie Lawrence Durden
III motionless in his bed at the Cypress Creek
Juvenile Offenders Correctional Center. Durden
was taken by ambulance to Citrus Memorial
Hospital in Inverness, where he was pronounced
dead.
"Based on what the staff saw, we have no
reason at this time to believe that this was
anything other than a natural death," Juvenile
Justice spokesman Tom Denham said Thursday.
"There was no suicide note. Our staff saw no
bruises on the body, no evidence of suicide and
no reason to suspect any type of foul play."
The last time anyone saw Durden alive was
when a corrections officer saw him go to the
bathroom between 2 and 2:30 a.m. Thursday, said
Citrus County Sheriff's spokeswoman Gail
Tierney.
No one noticed anything unusual, she said.
Guards are required to check inmates every 10
minutes, Tierney said. When a guard stopped at
Durden's cell at 4 a.m., he appeared to be
asleep. At 4:10 a.m., the guard still thought he
was sleeping but noticed he wasn't moving.
Ten minutes later, he still wasn't moving,
and the guard entered his cell and shook him to
see if he was all right, Tierney said.
He wasn't breathing, the guard later told
deputies. Officials started CPR and called 911
at 4:31 a.m. The dispatch came in as a signal 7,
a dead person.
Tierney said an autopsy was performed
Thursday, but the medical examiner is
withholding the results until a toxicology
report is completed.
Investigators were not aware of any
pre-existing medical condition or mental illness
and found nothing in Durden's cell that would
point to a suspicious death, Tierney said.
Corrections officers told investigators there
had been no altercations with Durden on
Wednesday, and he wasn't acting strange.
Durden had been at Cypress Creek for nearly a
year, Denham said. He was arrested in September
2004 after committing an armed robbery of a
Domino's Pizza deliveryman in Jacksonville.
According to an arrest report from the
Jacksonville Sheriff's Office, the delivery man
was surrounded by four men, one of whom held him
at gunpoint, demanding his money and pizzas.
Durden admitted to helping plan the robbery and
striking the delivery man in the face.
Denham said news of Durden's death shocked
Cypress Creek staff and inmates alike.
He was scheduled to be released from Cypress
Creek in April, Denham said. But a case manager
at the facility was getting ready to file
paperwork to request an early release in
January.
Contacted at her home in Daytona Beach on
Friday, Durden's grandmother said the family had
no comment. Cypress Creek principal Erica Moore
said Durden was a straight-A student who
regularly kept a journal and was admired by his
peers. He had received a scholarship to play
football at a private Jacksonville high school
and was planning to go there after his release.
"He recently told me his purpose in life was
to help other children," Moore said.
At Cypress Creek, Moore said Durden often
talked other kids out of getting into trouble.
"He challenged them all to do the right thing
... He just had that kind of effect on people,"
she said.
The Citrus County School District sent grief
counselors to Cypress Creek on Friday to help
inmates and staff deal with the teen's death,
Denham said.
Cypress Creek, which opened in 1995, is a
Level 10 juvenile detention center, a rating
that means it houses the state's most hardened
juvenile criminals: rapists, armed robbers and
repeat felons among them.
The 96-bed facility is on Woodland Ridge
Drive in Lecanto, just down the street from the
Citrus County jail.
G4S Youth Services, LLC, a private company
based in the United Kingdom, runs the facility
through a contract with Juvenile Justice.
Hasselbach said G4S Youth Services is also
conducting an internal investigation of Durden's
death.
Catherine E. Shoichet can be reached at
cshoichet@sptimes.com or 860-7309. Abbie
VanSickle can be reached at
vansickle@sptimes.com or 860-7312. Times
researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this
report. |