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Wed, May. 10, 2006
Martin Lee Anderson Case
Gov. asks for dismissal of
camp's ex-supervisor
In a sign of his unease with the Martin Lee
Anderson case, Gov. Jeb Bush demanded that a sheriff fire a captain
who supervised the boot camp where a boy allegedly was suffocated by
guards.
BY MARC CAPUTO AND CAROL MARBIN MILLER
mcaputo@MiamiHerald.com
TALLAHASSEE - Hours after a medical examiner
determined a boy was suffocated by ammonia-wielding guards at a
Panama City boot camp, Gov. Jeb Bush fired off a letter to the
sheriff in charge of the facility and asked him to dismiss the
camp's supervisor.
''I believe it is essential that you identify
and take appropriate disciplinary actions for each individual who
may have had knowledge or responsibility for authorizing guards to
force youths to inhale ammonia in order to obtain compliance,'' Bush
wrote Friday to Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen.
''Specifically, I recommend the dismissal of
the former supervisor of the boot camp who is still employed by your
office,'' Bush added in the letter.
The former Panama City boot camp supervisor,
Capt. Mike Thompson, couldn't be reached for comment Tuesday. His
boss, McKeithen, said in a brief interview that he's reviewing
Bush's letter and will respond soon.
Bush has recently grown more vocal about the
highly publicized death of 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson, who was
arrested on a charge of joyriding in his grandmother's stolen car.
His parents complained to Bush in a private meeting recently that
Thompson took part in the ''coverup'' of Martin's death. No arrests
have been made in the case.
Family attorney Benjamin Crump said Thompson
told the parents on Jan. 5 at Bay Medical Center, where the teen had
been taken, that Martin collapsed while running laps. Crump said
Thompson made no mention of the seven guards who beat and choked
their son. An autopsy released Friday said Martin was suffocated --
in contrast to a previous autopsy that found Martin died naturally
from complications of a blood disorder.
The Bay County boot camp was closed April 6 and
none of those under investigation for Martin's death work for the
sheriff's office any longer, according to McKeithen.
In the wake of the case, the Legislature passed
boot camp reforms to make them less physical; a special prosecutor
is investigating; Guy Tunnell, McKeithen's predecessor as sheriff
and the boot camp's founder, resigned as Bush's law enforcement
chief in connection with the case and unflattering descriptions he
made about black leaders who were speaking about it; and the doctor
who performed the first autopsy, Charles Siebert, is under
investigation by the board that oversees medical examiners.
'SYMPATHY' FOR FAMILY
But Bush wanted more. He asked in a May 1
letter to the sheriff that McKeithen investigate Thompson, whose
employment was ''strongly'' objected to by the boy's family, the
governor said.
McKeithen responded three days later in writing
to say he, too, shared Bush's ''sympathy'' for the family, but found
that Thompson, who now works in the civil courts division, did
nothing improper.
Thompson, a career police officer, has a thick
personnel file stuffed with commendation letters and notes of
appreciation from citizens who praised him for his administration of
the boot camp. A teacher at the camp in 1997 praised him for helping
to turn around her teenage son after she caught him smoking
marijuana regularly.
But according to attorney Crump, there's a
darker side to Thompson.
The captain not only lied to the family about
Martin's last moments, he said, but he also cursed in Martin's and
his mother's presence when he had a consultation with the boy's
mother, Gina Jones, before Martin entered the boot camp.
Thompson warned Martin that he would have to
learn to take the yelling by guards and be a ''lover or a fighter,''
Crump said.
''Mama, when I get in the boot camp I'm going
to do whatever they tell me. I'm going to just take it,'' Martin
said at the time, according to Crump.
In the caught-on-tape manhandling, Martin
appeared to do little to resist when a group of guards kneed,
punched, wrestled and pressure-pointed him. The guards tried to
revive the rubber-legged boy by shoving ammonia capsules in his face
-- a practice that another boy from the boot camp said was common.
It proved fatal for Martin, according to Dr.
Vernard Adams, Tampa's chief medical examiner, who performed the
second autopsy.
''Martin Anderson's death was caused by
suffocation due to the actions of the guards at the boot camp,''
Adams said in his autopsy report.
''The suffocation was caused by manual
[blockage] of the mouth, in concert with forced inhalation of
ammonia fumes that caused spasm of the vocal cords resulting in
internal blockage of the upper airway,'' Adams wrote.
CONFLICTING REPORTS
The autopsy conflicted with an earlier one
conducted by Siebert, the Bay County medical examiner. Siebert found
Martin died naturally of complications from sickle cell trait, a
blood ailment primarily afflicting people of African descent.
Siebert stands by his autopsy, saying there's no evidence for Adams'
findings.
Bush at first couched his concerns over
Siebert's autopsy report, but soon said that it ''defies common
sense.'' He later said the acts of the guards were ``deplorable.''
So far, no arrests have been made, though many
expect charges to be filed. Robert Allan Pell, an attorney for guard
Joseph Walsh, expressed fears that the case has become so
''political'' that his client will be charged unfairly, despite
following the protocols established by his supervisors.
McKeithen, who was appointed sheriff by Bush
before winning election in a 2004 landslide, declined to discuss the
governor's concerns.
''I'm trying to figure out what's going on. I'm
confused about this last letter'' asking for Thompson to be
dismissed, McKeithen said. He added that he is ''talking with our
attorney'' to draft a response. Four other people who worked at the
boot camp at the time also still are employed by McKeithen.
For the family, the Republican governor's
involvement is not just helpful, it's surprising.
''It shocked me. It shocked me. But he's
sticking with his word, just like he said,'' Gina Jones said Friday
after the autopsy report was released and Bush called the family.
''This is the first step in making sure that
justice is served,'' Bush said he told them.
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