The Trouble with Troubled Teen Programs - 2006-12-28

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F330.png The Trouble with Troubled Teen Programs December 28, 2006, Maia Szalavitz, Reason Magazine

The state of Florida tortured 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson to death for trespassing. The teen had been sentenced to probation in 2005 for taking a joy ride in a Jeep Cherokee that his cousins stole from his grandmother. Later that year, he crossed the grounds of a school on his way to visit a friend, a violation of his probation. His parents were given a choice between sending him to boot camp and sending him to juvenile detention. They chose boot camp, believing, as many Americans do, that "tough love" was more likely to rehabilitate him than prison.

Less than three hours after his admission to Florida's Bay County Sheriff's Boot Camp on January 5, 2006, Anderson was no longer breathing. He was taken to a hospital, where he was declared dead early the next morning.

A video recorded by the camp shows up to 10 of the sheriff's "drill instructors" punching, kicking, slamming to the ground, and dragging the limp body of the unresisting adolescent. Anderson had reported difficulty breathing while running the last of 16 required laps on a track, a complaint that was interpreted as defiance. When he stopped breathing entirely, this too was seen as a ruse.

Wikipedia cite:
{{cite news | first = Maia | last = Szalavitz | title = The Trouble with Troubled Teen Programs | url = http://reason.com/archives/2006/12/28/the-trouble-with-troubled-teen | work = Reason Magazine | date = December 28, 2006 | accessdate = January 14, 2017 }}