Posted on Mon, Aug. 21, 2006
Juvenile justice deaths
Eight
youths have died in the custody of
the Florida Department of Juvenile
Justice since 2000:
• Michael
Wiltsie, 12, died Feb. 5, 2000,
at a DJJ youth camp, Camp E-Kel-Etu
in Marion County. Investigations
concluded Michael, who weighed only
66 pounds, died of asphyxia after
being held in a ''full-body
restraint'' by a counselor who
weighed over 300 pounds. While being
held by the counselor, Michael
yelled several times that he could
not breathe. A death review said the
counselor believed Michael was
``playing possum.''
• Anthony
Dumas, 15, died Oct. 14, 2000.
On June 12, 2000, he hanged himself
with a leather belt from his bunk
bed at the Lippman runaway shelter
in Oakland Park. Police reports say
three staff members on duty that
night all failed to cut him down
from the bed, and one snapped
pictures of the teen with an instant
camera. Anthony was not released
from his noose until police arrived.
He died after being in a coma for
four months.
• Shawn
D. Smith, 13, died Oct. 30,
2001, at the Volusia Regional
Juvenile Detention Center. Smith was
found with a sheet tied to his neck
and to the door of his cell. He was
supposed to be on ''close watch'' --
requiring officers to observe him
ever five minutes -- as a suicide
risk.
• Daniel
'Danny' Matthews, 17, died March
31, 2003, at the Pinellas Regional
Juvenile Detention Center in St.
Petersburg. Danny died of blunt
trauma to the head after a detention
officer, a noncertified trainee,
mistakenly opened the cell door of
another youth, who punched Danny
twice, causing him to hit his head.
• Omar
Paisley, 17, died June 9, 2003,
at the Miami Juvenile Detention
Center of a ruptured appendix that
went untreated. Omar had complained
to nurses and guards for three days
that he was sick and in excruciating
abdominal pain. Two nurses, who have
been charged with third-degree
murder, failed to treat him, and
officers waited days before
summoning help. Records show some of
the officers and nurses thought Omar
was faking.
• Willie
Durden, 17, died Oct. 13, 2005,
at the privately managed Cypress
Creek Juvenile Offender Correctional
Center in Lecanto, in Citrus County.
An autopsy concluded Willie died of
ventricular arrhythmia, due to an
enlarged and diseased heart. A
recent report says guards waited
about 20 minutes after discovering
the limp teen before calling 911 and
beginning CPR. A guard told
investigators he waited to begin CPR
because teens sometimes ``play
pranks.''
• Martin
Lee Anderson, 14, died Jan. 6,
2006, at a Pensacola hospital one
day after guards at the Bay County
Sheriff's Office Boot Camp punched,
kneed, and applied pressure to his
head in an attempt to force him to
continue running laps. An autopsy
ordered by a special prosecutor
concluded Martin died of asphyxia
after guards covered his mouth and
shoved ammonia capsules up his nose.
A use-of-force report said the
guards had thought Martin was
malingering.
• Dillon
Tyler Peak, 13, died June 17,
2006, after becoming ill at the
Peace River Outward Bound wilderness
camp in DeSoto County. Officials say
Dillon apparently died of a severe
case of encephalitis. The death
remains under investigation.