TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) The military-style boot camp system that Florida has used to discipline juveniles was formally dismantled under a bill that Gov. Jeb Bush signed Wednesday, as an investigation continues into the death of a boy who was punched and kicked by guards at a state-run camp.
Instead of boot camps where guards can push and yell at detainees, children will go to residential programs that bar physical discipline. Sen. Frederica Wilson, D-Miami, and her colleagues in the Legislature's black caucus pushed for the bill during this spring's session.
Detainees will go through a full medical exam when they enter and leave the new programs and have a hot line they can call in case of trouble, Wilson said.
The bill is named for Martin Lee Anderson, who was sent to the boot camp in Panama City on Jan. 5 for helping steal his grandmother's Jeep Cherokee from a church parking lot.
Security videotape taken there shows a half-hour encounter between Anderson, 14, and up to nine guards, who kicked and kneed him. Anderson died the next day at a Pensacola hospital.
A special prosecutor is still investigating his death. An initial autopsy found he died of natural causes, but a second one ruled he was suffocated by the guards.
http://cbs4.com/floridawire/FL--BootCampDeath-1320739376-dn/resources_news_html
Manatee sheriff says camp's fate uncertain
MANATEE COUNTY -- Manatee County Sheriff Charlie Wells isn't sure how a new law dismantling Florida's military boot camps will affect the camp operating here.
Wells has been a big backer of the boot camp concept ever since he opened the nation's first camp in the early 1990s near Port Manatee in the northwest part of the county.
The boot camp and Youth Academy provide strict discipline and regimentation for a few dozen youths who have committed crimes. The intent is to straighten the young men out before they become hardened criminals.
Wells said the future of the local facility is uncertain.
"I don't know what our future holds; we're just kind of exploring," Wells said Wednesday.
He said it's too soon to say if the camp will shut down altogether. "We have to study the changes in the law closely. It's a different program from the one we've been managing and operating."
Wells has said previously he thought the local camp was operating according to state standards, and he hopes it can remain in operation.
http://heraldtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060601/NEWS/606010396
Last modified: June 01. 2006 5:20AM