In Lake Worth's Growing Together, kids don't kick drugs. They're beaten and humiliated.
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"If they had to go to the bathroom in the middle of night, it was trouble. It was like a prison." |
He was 16 and scared. Jason was a newcomer at Growing Together, a boot camp-style drug treatment center for adolescents in downtown Lake Worth. During the day, he attended group therapy at the program's two-story, banana-yellow building, which is equipped with security gates and barred windows. At night, he'd sleep at a private home endorsed by the facility. In February 1997, during one of Jason's first days in the program, George Johnson (not his real name) arrived to pick up five boys who were to stay at his place in Palm Beach Gardens that night. Among them were his son, George Jr., and four others, including Jason.
On the ride home, the boys began to discuss what they would do to Jason that night. "The Naked Crusader was going to appear," Jason later remembered one of them saying. It frightened him; he pretended not to hear.
That night at 10 o'clock, after doing chores and eating dinner, all five boys went to the bedroom where they were to sleep. They wore only underwear. The rest of their clothing was kept in a different room. Three of them lay down on mattresses on the floor. Jason and another boy wriggled into sleeping bags.
Several hours later, Jason suddenly noticed some noise. The other four boys were masturbating. "The Naked Crusader is coming," one of them said.
Then George Jr., naked, suddenly jumped on Jason's back, according to a statement Jason gave to police. Another boy held down his legs. Two others slapped Jason in the face with their erect penises.
"Stop!" he pleaded.
They did. But the boys weren't finished. They returned to their beds and masturbated again. A few minutes later, they assaulted Jason once more. Again, two boys slapped Jason with their penises. One of them tried to put his penis in Jason's mouth. Jason clenched his jaw shut. Then he felt warm liquid on his back. One boy had climaxed. Another ejaculated in his hand and rubbed the semen in Jason's hair.
Finally, they were finished.
If he ever told anyone about the incident, the boys warned, they'd do it again. And worse. But three months later, Jason could no longer stay silent. He told his father what had happened. Together, they filed a report with the Palm Beach Gardens Police Department on June 18, 1997.
During the one-month investigation that followed, two of the boys told the detectives that they too had been victims of "The Naked Crusader" soon after entering the drug treatment facility. The Palm Beach County State Attorney's Office filed misdemeanor battery and indecent exposure charges against the four boys but later dropped them. The records have since been purged, so there's no more explanation.
Growing Together's 17-year-old, nonprofit facility treats 25 to 40 children at a time. It rakes in roughly $1 million annually from donations and fees paid by parents of drug-addicted kids, some of whom are ordered by judges to attend. It has powerful friends and donors, including West Palm Beach Mayor Lois Frankel, banker Warren W. Blanchard, attorney Jack Scarola, and Republican U.S. Rep. Mark Foley.
Yet physical and sexual abuse appears to be common there, according to a New Times investigation that included reviews of state records, police reports, and interviews with about two dozen former patients and parents. Kids rioted at the facility in April 1997, and last year, state investigators found that Growing Together was too quick to use physical restraint on children. Moreover, police have written more than 800 reports related to the program since 1995.
"I still can't get the screams out of my head from hearing kids dragged down the hall by the hair on their heads," says a former graduate of the program who asked to remain anonymous. "The crimes that were committed there have never been told in public. Nobody has ever put these people on trial."
Rik Pavlescak, a former investigator with the Department of Children and Families (DCF), wrote reports on the program in the early '90s that detailed beatings, restraint, imprisonment, and systematic humiliation. He alleges that influential outsiders have undermined investigations of the group.
Growing Together Executive Director Pat Allard denied a request to tour the facility, citing laws that protect confidentiality of patients. In three phone interviews in November, she maintained that children are not abused and claimed not to be aware of any of the evidence uncovered by New Times. "We would never beat any child," Allard said.
Every Friday evening, 50 to 100 adults and children, most ages 13 to 17, gather inside Growing Together's facility at 1000 Lake Ave. The open house begins the same way every week. Parents sit in chairs at one end of a large room. Their children, who are enrolled in the program, sit at the opposite end. At first, an accordion divider separates the two groups.
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One parent described Growing Together as a "concentration camp." |
Then the session begins. The partition is pulled back. The music starts. The children sing: I am a promise, I am a possibility
I am a promise with a capital P
I am a great big bundle of potentiality
And I am learning to hear God's voice
And I am trying to make the right choice.
I am a promise to be anything that God wants me to be.
Vicky Butler, a Jupiter woman who enrolled her troubled, 16-year-old son, John, in Growing Together in the fall of 1999, remembers these sessions well. "The songs they made these kids sing -- and they were teenagers -- were songs intended for 4- and 5-year-olds," she says. "It was degrading. You just had to look at the kids. Behind their eyes, they would be saying, 'This sucks. '"
Butler says she began to wonder, when she attended her first open house, whether she'd made a mistake. "My son was no angel," she admits, "but no one deserves the treatment these kids receive." During the session, Butler remembers, staff passed around a microphone to parents, who would tell everyone in attendance about their children's misdeeds. There were drugs, illicit sex, violence, theft. The microphone would then move to the other side of the room. Assuming a child had behaved well during the week and earned the "privilege" to speak, he or she would then confess.
During one session in October 1999, Butler's son became agitated before she spoke. He stood up and flailed his arms. "He was totally flipping out," Butler remembers. John began to walk off. An alarmed Butler started toward her son. As she did, a large behavioral therapist parents referred to as "The Enforcer" also headed for John. Suddenly, the accordion divider rolled across the room and blocked Butler.
"All of a sudden, I heard my son screaming," she recalls. Butler panicked and confronted Growing Together staff. "That's my kid behind that curtain, and I don't know what's going on," she told them. They assured her that John was fine and that he would see a psychiatrist soon. Butler returned to her suburban home in Jupiter, convinced that John was in a safe place.
Meanwhile, she continued hosting other Growing Together children at night. She had modified her $169,292 home following directions from the program's staff. All pictures and mirrors were removed from walls. Knives were hidden. The bathroom was stripped, leaving only the sink, toilet, and bathtub. The windows and doors of the bedroom where five kids slept were rigged to an alarm system. Once they went to bed at 10 p.m., they could not leave the room until the next morning. "If any of them had to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night, they would have been in trouble," Butler admits. "It was like a prison."
Before bed, the children would write in their journals about what they had learned that day. Often, their entries involved confessions they had made during therapy. Growing Together refers to these journal entries as "moral inventories." To advance through the phases of the program, children must confess to illicit behavior or abuse they suffered, then describe the incidents' effects on their lives.
Butler recalls asking the kids about their entries. They told her that they made up most of their confessions because Growing Together required such admissions before graduation. Accounts that included sexual abuse or underage sex were particularly encouraged by staff, the kids allegedly told Butler.
The children also claimed staff had beaten and physically restrained them, Butler says. She even met one young girl who claimed a therapist had broken her arm. Other kids asserted that the building was always filthy. Growing Together administrators admitted to Butler (and later in court documents) that the facility had rats and that several urinals had been backed up for days at a time.
In March 2000, Butler and her ex-husband, Stephen, who shared custody, removed John from the program. Stephen Butler was moving to Arkansas and wanted to take the boy. Once free, John told his mother that he had suffered a sprained wrist at Growing Together when a therapist slammed him down on a table. Mickey Bowman, then the executive director of Growing Together, showed little concern for the injury. In a letter to Vicky Butler dated June 20, 2000, Bowman wrote: "Regarding the 'purported injury' to your son's wrist, he was laughing at the issue immediately following."
Soon after, a private psychiatrist examined John and determined that his problem wasn't drugs. He was bipolar. "You would think that, being in the program, someone would have said, 'Oh, by the way, your child is bipolar,'" Vicky Butler says. "Nobody picked up on that because no psychiatrist or psychologist ever saw him."
Butler later refused to pay Growing Together the roughly $5,000 she owed for John's treatment. She claimed the facility had billed her for clinical exams that never occurred. "Kids got more messed up in there than they were when they went in," she says. The facility sued and turned the debt over to a bill collector. Butler eventually forked over a reduced amount.
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⌠Dr. Ross left Straight because he didn¨ˆt like some of the shenanigans.¡ö |
"My teeth grit every time I hear the words Growing Together," she says. "They used to say, 'What goes on here stays here.' Now I know why. They don't want the outside world to know what's going on."
Growing Together Executive Director Allard says today that she has no knowledge of the "Naked Crusader" incidents or the types of child abuse alleged by Butler. "Could things like this happen in an institutional setting? Yes," Allard says. "Would it blemish the institution? Yes, it would. Would anyone condone it? Absolutely not."
The history of Growing Together begins 28 years ago and more than 200 miles from South Florida. In 1976, Mel Sembler, who made millions developing strip malls throughout the Sunshine State, opened a nonprofit juvenile drug treatment center in St. Petersburg called Straight Inc. His reasons were altruistic: The only adolescent drug treatment facility in the Tampa Bay area had shut down, and Sembler wanted to give back. One of his own sons had been rehabilitated in such a program.
During the late '70s, Straight became a well-known and apparently effective drug treatment center. Its methods, which were designed by psychiatrists Miller Newton and George Ross, were a kind of hybrid of the common 12-step model used by Alcoholics Anonymous; but there were only six steps and a hierarchical system. Children who had been in the program for a few months graduated to higher levels and became "oldcomers." They were then put in charge of new attendees, known as "newcomers." Newcomers weren't allowed to move around the facility unless oldcomers held them by the belt in a technique known as "belt looping."
Privacy was elusive. Newcomers were watched at all times, even in the bathroom. Boys had to keep their hair cropped close to the scalp. Girls were not allowed to shave their legs or armpits. During the day, children attended hours of group therapy. At night, they went to host homes run by parents of other children in the program.
At its height, Straight operated three facilities in Florida and others in California, Georgia, Michigan, Massachusetts, Maryland, Ohio, Virginia, and Texas. They were based on a "tough love" philosophy that required a minimal staff because children did some of the disciplining and restraining.
The facility's success, coupled with Sembler's wealth, helped raise the developer's political profile. In 1980, he donated $100,000 to the Republican Party and exploited his network of wealthy friends to raise millions more. Eight years later, though Sembler had no political or diplomatic experience, President George H.W. Bush named him ambassador to Australia.
Ross, who would later write about his theories in a book titled Treating Adolescent Substance Abuse: Understanding the Fundamental Elements, left Straight in 1980 and formed two similar programs: LIFE in Osprey, near Sarasota, and Possibilities Unlimited in Lexington, Kentucky. Soon after Ross' departure from Straight, allegations of malfeasance surfaced. A state attorney's investigation shut down Straight-Sarasota in 1983 amid charges of child abuse. The organization also paid out substantial sums in settlements and judgments, according to court records and news reports. One former patient, Karen Norton, won a $720,000 jury verdict in St. Petersburg after she was strip-searched and humiliated by staff, then slammed against a wall by Newton. "Dr. Ross left Straight because he didn't like some of the shenanigans," Allard says, alluding to these abuse charges.
One of Straight-founder Ross' new programs also had problems. In 1985, the psychiatrist, who declined to comment for this article, was charged and acquitted of falsely imprisoning teenagers in Kentucky.
In 1987, two of Ross' top assistants from LIFE started Growing Together in Lake Worth. "In the LIFE program, there were so many people from the West Palm Beach area that were traveling across the state that they basically asked if they could start their own program on this side," Allard explains. To this day, Allard cites Ross' theories as the foundation of her program.
Children generally attend for 18 months. Parents pay a flat $14,000 fee, and financial aid is available. Additionally, a public school teacher visits every day so children in the program can progress to the next grade level.
Straight's militant style of drug treatment piqued the interest of Barry Lane Beyerstein, a professor of psychology at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Colombia. In 1992, Beyerstein penned a scathing report on Straight's methods for the Drug Policy Foundation, a nonprofit organization that advocates changes to U.S. drug policy. He compared them to the mind-control techniques used by communists on American POWs during the Korean War.
"Straight tried to break down individuality," Beyerstein recalls. "That's what the Koreans succeeded beautifully in doing, making people dependent on their captors and removing any individuality and any ability to think about what they're being told. They never give any time alone. They keep them frantically busy all the time so they're always exhausted and hungry. That makes people more malleable. Straight was like a cult."
The same year Beyerstein released his report, Richard Bradbury, a graduate of Straight-St. Petersburg who had become a staff member after spending two years in the program, started collecting evidence of child abuse. In December 1992, the insider provided his findings to the state Inspector General's Office.
"I was brainwashed," the 39-year-old Bradbury says today. "As children, we believed it was for our own good when we were beaten or stabbed. We believed we were pieces of shit."
In April 1993, one month before Acting Inspector General Lowell Clary was to release his report, Straight closed its Florida clinics and moved the headquarters to Atlanta.
According to Clary's five-page account, Ambassador Sembler's political influence had kept Straight in business despite evidence that staff withheld medication and food, used excessive force, and deprived children of sleep in an effort to control them. "It appears that some [state regulators] experienced some degree of pressure to grant Straight a license," Clary wrote. That pressure included calls from Sembler and state senators, though the report does not specify which senators. Additionally, according to the Clary report, a top state official named Dr. Ivor Groves made it clear to his underling, Linda Lewis, that she should not take action against Straight. According to the report, when Lewis expressed concerns about child abuse, Groves told her, "If you do anything other than what I tell you to do on this issue, I will fire you on the spot." Groves then reportedly made the same threat to another state inspector.
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Allegations can be found on an Internet bulletin board used by former patients. |
Three months later, Straight went under. But some former staffers went on to form new facilities based on the program's model. Newton, for instance, formed KIDS of North Jersey, which closed in 2003 after the psychiatrist settled a lawsuit that alleged abuse for $6.5 million.
Growing Together is one of about a dozen facilities nationwide that continues to employ the controversial Straight model. The program's parent-patient manual and treatment method are similar to Straight's. The terms that Straight developed -- oldcomer, newcomer, and moral inventories, among others -- are used by Growing Together.
In 1989, two years after Growing Together had gone into business as an offshoot of Straight, Rik Pavlescak began to receive complaints of abuse. The state's director of substance abuse services in the West Palm Beach regional office of DCF, Pavlescak inspected the facility during two days in March 1990.
"As a state employee, I had access to all client files, interviews with staff, and clients," the 42-year-old Pavlescak explains. "I could make unannounced visits to the program at any time and review their records for compliance with state laws."
New Times requested all Florida records about Growing Together, but the state appears to have purged papers related to the investigation. Luckily, before leaving his job in 1990, Pavlescak made copies of records related to the program. Among his findings: A female client complained that she had severe cramping and bleeding. Staff did not refer her to a medical doctor. Only days later, when her mother became aware of the condition, did she see a physician. The girl was pregnant and miscarried.
Another female client was forced to stand in front of a mirror and yell, "I am a whore, a slut, and a druggie."
When asked what would happen if he reported child abuse, a 17-year-old male commented, "I'd be ignored and told to shut up." That boy said he had restrained other children at least 15 times. Once, he allegedly witnessed a staff member punch a child.
A 16-year-old boy told Pavlescak that he regularly killed cockroaches during mealtimes and was not given privacy when showering or using the toilet. The boy said he did not want to be "brainwashed." Pavlescak wrote in his report: "He believes that is what has happened to other clients."
An oldcomer told him: "I sleep in front of the [bedroom] door... [to keep] newcomers from escaping."
A 15-year-old boy attempted suicide while in the program, and staff never referred him to a psychologist. "The [suicide] issue appears to have been dropped by the program staff," Pavlescak wrote. Months later, the boy said he still had suicidal thoughts.
Children were given lessons on how to restrain other kids. (Using patients to restrain patients is a violation of state law.) "They said to kick in their knees to knock them down if you have to," one girl said.
Following his visits in March, Pavlescak issued a probationary license that required the facility to address the state's concerns and undergo another site visit within 90 days.
Also in March, Karen Weiss, whose teenaged daughter Dana had been committed to Growing Together, complained to Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Michael Gersten. Weiss, who then lived in Coral Springs, said Dana had been a newcomer for 15 months. Two psychiatrists who examined Dana alleged the girl had suffered severe psychological trauma.
Stephen E. Moskowitz, a Coral Springs psychiatrist, told Gersten that Dana was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. "When discussing returning to the program," Moskowitz wrote, "she seemed quite fearful and seemed to project an image of a child whose spirit and sense of confidence had been totally crushed." Growing Together's psychological reports on Dana were "incomplete and really lacked a professional type of organization and presentation," Moskowitz stated.
What's more, Moskowitz recommended that Judge Gersten talk to Dana privately. "One must use the analogy of people who were part of a cult and felt indoctrinated into the cult and were fearful of repercussions," Moskowitz advised.
Gersten ordered the girl out of Growing Together, saying in court that he would refuse to send more children to the program unless its treatment improved. "Everything I see smacks of child abuse," Gersten said.
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Children reported being restrained by other kids in this technique called belt looping. |
Growing Together refused to yield to either Gersten or the DCF. In a letter dated March 30, 1990, then-Board President Warren Blanchard appealed the probationary license. Blanchard also disputed nearly all of the state's findings. The only actions Growing Together had taken, according to Blanchard's letter, were to stop giving classes to children on restraining their peers and to define more clearly when staff should use physical restraint. That's when Pavlescak discovered that Growing Together held sway in Tallahassee. The group's request for a review hearing went to Pavlescak's boss, program supervisor Linda J. Giesler, and then on to Pam Peterson, the state chief of alcohol and drug abuse in Tallahassee. Both of Pavlescak's superiors attended the licensing hearing with Growing Together's attorneys. That was unprecedented, he says. (Neither Giesler nor Peterson could be reached for comment.)
"We licensed over 90 different treatment centers in the area, and this was just one," Pavlescak says. "But the entire team was never involved with any of the issues with any of the other treatment centers."
The state ignored Pavlescak's reports and gave Growing Together full license. The buzz at the West Palm Beach DCF office was that the political push had come from the top. Gov. Bob Martinez was one year away from becoming the nation's drug czar under President George H.W. Bush.
"It wasn't until later that I learned that Martinez had ties to the program," Pavlescak explains, "and that some strange things had happened." During his investigation of Growing Together, Pavlescak had personally reported one complaint to the state's child abuse registry. Upon inquiry, a state official later told him that no complaints existed.
Pavlescak left state employment in April 1990 following an unrelated dispute with one of his bosses, who was later chastised for a financial conflict of interest by the Florida Commission on Ethics.
Even after Pavlescak left public service, the state continued to document abuse at Growing Together. An August 1993 investigation by Pavlescak's successor, James Kouba, documented that "there appears to be a lack of clinical supervision" at Growing Together. Some staff members couldn't identify their supervisors, state officials learned, and the children complained about the "lack of adult supervision."
Growing Together also failed to correct the violations Pavlescak had cited three years earlier. Among DCF's findings in 1993:
Teenagers would restrain fellow patients by sitting on them.
In two instances, a group of parents who called themselves the "restraining fathers" kidnapped runaway girls and returned them to Growing Together. One girl's aunt reported that several men had pulled up to her house and dragged the girl into a van.
Kids of both sexes were forced to use a jar or pot in the bedroom if they needed to relieve themselves in the middle of the night.
The rigorous program is also associated with a suicide. Travis Stone, a 20-year-old African-American who had successfully graduated from Growing Together and become a staff member, told peers as early as January 23, 1993, that "he was feeling helpless and overwhelmed." Those remarks were not passed on to clinical or executive staff members, Kouba alleged. Six months later, on July 27, 1993, Stone took a combination of pills and alcohol and then put a plastic bag over his head.
Kouba blamed Growing Together, claiming that the facility did not send Stone to a psychiatrist or psychologist. "His feelings were discounted by peer staff as merely 'manipulative,'" the report stated. "Only a trained professional should be in the position of making this evaluation, which, in this case, may have been a life-and-death assessment."
The state ordered Growing Together to stop using children to counsel other children. "They are still involved in their own early recovery process and cannot be expected to take on the role of counselor while they are clients themselves," Kouba wrote. Allard claims that today, kids have easy access to licensed mental health professionals.
In the past ten years, Growing Together has filed roughly a dozen lawsuits to collect fees that parents have refused to pay. In nearly every case, the defendants have cited Growing Together's lack of therapeutic value and abysmal treatment of children as reasons for not settling the debt.
In two cases, parents described a prison-like facility that emphasizes revenue over kids' needs. Ellen Decter, a single mother in Jupiter, said her son was examined by a psychologist in October 1999 only after she agreed to fork out the $14,000 tuition upfront. By then, Growing Together had a financial interest in seeing her son diagnosed as suitable for treatment, she alleged. The program was "a concentration camp for clients and parents," Decter wrote in a letter submitted to the court April 3, 2002.
Cathy Snyder of Fort Myers Beach told the Palm Beach County Circuit Court on May 21, 1997, that Growing Together misdiagnosed her son's problems. Rather than being drug-addicted, he had a chemical imbalance that an independent psychiatrist discovered after she removed the boy from the program.
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Piotr Blass, whose son David was in Growing Together, says the program puts profits over children. |
Reports from the Lake Worth Police Department, which is located across the street from Growing Together's building, seem to substantiate parents' claims. Since 1995, police have written more than 800 reports related to 1000 Lake Ave. for incidents including assault, drugs, noise complaints, and runaway juveniles.
On April 27, 1997, at 8:30 a.m., teenaged patients rioted inside the facility, according to police reports filed that day. Three boys took chairs and shattered the second-story windows, spraying glass on construction workers and pedestrians. They then barricaded themselves inside a room. Police later barged in to regain control of the facility.
Since 2000, police have written 28 reports related to battery and 22 to missing juveniles. In some cases, officers documented instances of abuse or violations of state law but declined to pursue charges:
On June 1, 2001, an oldcomer beat a newcomer because he was reading a book.
On July 6, 2001, an oldcomer slapped a newcomer after finding that the newcomer had been innocently drawing.
On October 23, 2003, police reported that a teenaged patient was "enforcing the rules with other patients" -- the same violation Pavlescak cited in 1990.
On January 2, 2004, police observed Growing Together's 54-year-old clinical director, Laura Hughes, restraining a teenaged girl on the ground after she "had been disrespectful and disobedient to Growing Together staff throughout the day."
While DCF's investigations of Growing Together are less aggressive than they were ten years ago, the state agency continues to find significant problems. During the most recent inspection, on December 19, 2003, investigators discovered documents that suggested staff was too quick to use physical force and that children continued to sleep on mattresses on the floor. State law requires children to have a full bed and frame.
Both issues are misunderstandings, Allard says. She contends her staff does everything possible before using physical force. "I think what was happening was that the staff wasn't putting down [in their paperwork] everything that happened before a child was restrained," Allard says. As a result, Allard says, Growing Together started using a form that provides additional space for the narrative. "There are times when a kid needs to be restrained if they are a threat to themselves or others," Allard explains. "If a child picked up a heavy chair and was going to throw it at another client, I can tell you that they would be restrained... Restraining is the last resort. No one wants to restrain anyone. You don't want that for the child, and you don't want that for the adult."
Allard refuses to alter her policy on bed frames, claiming that children could use the metal to cut themselves. "We can't do that in good conscience," she says.
On July 27, Piotr Blass, a computer-science professor at Key College in Dania Beach, sued Growing Together after his 16-year-old son, David, was court-ordered into the program. In his lawsuit, Blass alleges that Growing Together "often kidnaps children from their parents and then employs draconian, sadistic, destructive, and highly damaging psychological techniques to destroy the relationship between parent and child, all for their own benefit and financial gain."
These types of allegations can also be found on an Internet bulletin board (www.fornits.com/wwf) used by former patients of Growing Together and other Straight-based clinics. Most of the messages detail physical, psychological, or sexual abuse. Allard claims the allegations are "made up" and written by "people who are still involved in the druggie scene."
It's noon on Friday, November 19, and Jessica Norris sits quietly on a bench near the fountains at the end of Clematis Street in West Palm Beach. An anxious, pretty 18-year-old with long brown hair and a disarming smile, Jessica (not her real name) considers herself a survivor. At 14, she experimented with cocaine. Her parents placed her in Growing Together, where she says she endured 18 months of physical and psychological trauma. "When I first got there, the other girls were telling me about Naked Crusader," she says. "Everyone in Growing Together knew there was abuse. But no one said anything. We were all too scared."
Inside the facility, Jessica says she witnessed beatings and child neglect. In the "white room," where children were sent to calm down, clumps of hair lay on the floor and blood was smeared on the walls, she claims. Every day, staff interrogated the kids, making them give more and more outlandish confessions about their past. "I made up that my uncle molested me," Jessica says. "It was the only way to move up."
Now a student at Palm Beach Community College, Jessica is still adjusting to life on the outside. During her time at Growing Together, she claims she couldn't take a shower in private. She believed she was worthless. She became accustomed to the sight of staff members throwing children to the ground. To this day, she hears the screams that rolled through the halls like thunder between buildings.
"I've tried not to look back," Jessica says, brushing a string of hair behind her right ear. "What we went through was a terrible thing."
Youth died amid chaos, confusion
By CAROL MARBIN MILLER
Miami Herald, February 27, 2004
 Omar Paisley Dies in custody at age 17
∙ Case timeline
∙ March 24, 2003: Paisley is arrested for aggravated battery after getting into a fight with a neighbor. Police say he cut the neighbor with a soda can.
∙ March 26, 2003: Prosecutors announce they are reviewing Paisley's case to determine whether to try him as an adult. In response to the announcement, Paisley writes a letter to prosecutors: ``I am sorry for what I have done. I made a stupid mistake.''
∙ April 23, 2003: Paisley is given a comprehensive physical exam by a registered nurse practitioner at the Miami-Dade detention center. He did not report any problems.
∙ June 6, 2003: Paisley enters into a written guilty plea to the battery charges, and agrees to enter a ''moderate risk'' residential program at Bay Point Schools.
∙ June 7, 2003, morning: Paisley tells corrections officers he is sick, and fills out a formal request to see a doctor. ''My stomach hurts really bad,'' he writes. ``I don't know what to do.''
∙ June 7, 2003, 12:10 p.m.: The detention center log book records that Paisley again tells an officer he is sick, and he refuses to eat lunch.
∙ June 7, 2003, sometime between 12:10 p.m. and 2:30 p.m.: Licensed practical nurse Gaile Loperfido visits Paisley in his module. She ''determined'' that he had a stomach virus, the log book states, and recommends bed rest and a liquid diet.
∙ June 8, 2003, 9 a.m.: Loperfido visits Paisley again. She orders that he remain on a liquid diet with bed rest. The log book entry on the visit says Paisley was ``complaining of serious abdominal pain.''
∙ June 9, 2003, 5:30 a.m.: Paisley wakes up ''urgently'' requesting medical care, the grand jury reports. Officers tell DJJ nurses of his condition at breakfast.
∙ June 9, 2003, 5:30 p.m.: Officer Terry Mixon, at dinnertime, informs nurse Dianne Demeritte that Paisley is very sick, and asks her to visit. During the next three hours, Mixon radios his supervisors frantically seeking help.
∙ June 9, 2003, after 8:00 p.m.: Demeritte sees Paisley. She forces the near-dead youth to exit his cell, and does not examine him. At 8:30, she finishes paperwork to transfer Paisley to the hospital, then leaves the lockup for a 45-minute break.
∙ June 9, 2003, about 9 p.m.: As officers tried to move Paisley into a wheelchair, and shackle him, for a trip to the hospital, copious amounts of brown fluid drain from his body. He no longer has any pulse.
∙ June 9, 2003, 9:12 p.m.: Paramedics arrive.
∙ June 9, 2003, 9:43 p.m.: Paisley is declared dead at Jackson Memorial Hospital.
∙ Jan. 27, 2004: Demeritte and Loperfido are indicted by a state grand jury, accused of aggravated manslaughter and third-degree murder.
∙ Feb. 14, 2004: George LaFlam, superintendent of the lockup, resigns.
∙ Feb. 19, 2004: Three other high-ranking DJJ administrators, including Assistant Secretary Larry Lumpee, also resign.
∙ Feb. 21, 2004: Secretary Bill Bankhead announces he will take a four-month medical leave. |
Seven boxes of previously unreleased documents tell of the chaos that enveloped the Miami juvenile lockup as Omar Paisley's life slipped away.
After hearing Omar Paisley weep and retch and moan for two days while curled up in a fetal position, detention officers at the Miami juvenile lockup became convinced that the Opa-locka teenager needed help.
''Man, someone needs to get down here, because this kid is sick,'' one officer beseeched a supervisor over the telephone.
"AIN'T NOTHING WRONG WITH HIS ASS"
But a supervisor scolded Paisley to ''suck it up'' -- ignore the pain -- while a nurse declared, ''Ain't nothing wrong with his ass.'' Paisley, his belly filling with poisons from a ruptured appendix, may have paid for their callousness with his life.
Seven boxes of previously unreleased photos, work logs and sworn testimony, part of a Miami-Dade grand jury investigation into the 17-year-old's death, paint a picture of a detention center wracked by chaos the night Paisley died.
Paralyzed by fear, trained to eschew independent thought or action, officers took no action until a supervisor finally showed up at Paisley's cell with a wheelchair, handcuffs and shackles. Feeling no pulse, they stopped short of handcuffing a dead child.
''Policies and procedures killed Omar Paisley,'' a Miami-Dade guard testified before lawmakers last week.
AN ALTERCATION
Arrested March 24, 2003, after an altercation in which he cut a neighbor with a soda can, Paisley pleaded guilty to aggravated battery on June 6 and was awaiting a bed at a residential program for troubled youths when he fell ill. He made a formal request for ''sick call,'' hoping to see a nurse or doctor.
''My stomach hurts really bad,'' he wrote on the form. ``I don't know what to do.''
At 12:10 p.m. on Saturday, June 7, an officer recorded in the lockup log book that Paisley complained he was sick, and refused to eat his lunch -- oatmeal and pancakes, which he gave to his friend Jonas Claude. The nurses' station was alerted.
NURSE ON DUTY
Both records and interviews suggest the nurse on duty Saturday and Sunday, Gaile Loperfido, made only one visit to Omar Saturday, sometime between the 12:10 p.m log notation and 2:30 p.m. ''Nurse Gail on ward to see Paisley, O.,'' the log book states. ``She determined that [he has] a stomach virus.''
None of several officers who were interviewed saw Loperfido examine the youth or ''palpate'' his abdomen, a medical procedure in which a doctor or nurse feels for signs of appendicitis.
On Sunday, June 8, shortly after 7 a.m., Paisley woke up the two youths in the cell next to him ''moaning and crying,'' they said. Shae Smith and Antwan Walker knocked on their glass doors to get the attention of an officer, Michael Johnson, who then made a phone call to get help.
At 9 a.m., Loperfido visited the youth again, the log book shows. Officers testified she failed to examine him for a second day, although she did order that he remain on bed rest with a liquid diet.
That afternoon, Paisley was sweating profusely, and had trouble talking, the youths in adjacent cells said. When Paisley vomited, Smith and Walker cleaned up the mess. ''Got gloves, bleach and pine sol,'' a report from the Public Defender's Office quotes them as saying.
By Monday morning, the severity of Paisley's condition was becoming more apparent. At 5:30 a.m., a corrections officer, who is not identified, wrote in the log book: ``Paisley is not looking real well, he requested to see nurse.''
Corrections officer Michael Johnson, nicknamed ''Heavy D'' by detainees in a nod to the 1980s rapper of large stature, was working the ''A'' shift in Paisley's module that morning. He told investigators he tried repeatedly to enlist help from either a supervisor or a nurse -- as the lockup's policy required.
`THIS KID IS SICK'
Another officer on Module 3 with Johnson, Classy McCullough, overheard Johnson's conversation with a boss as she was standing nearby. ''Man, someone needs to get down here, because this kid is sick,'' she quoted him saying.
''He was upset, and he was fussing, and was was using other choice words,'' she recalled several days later in a statement.
McCullough herself sought help, she testified. 'I went back in a hurry to see supervisor [Jack] Harrington and said, `Hey, something's wrong with that kid. Somebody needs to get over here and see him.' And he yelled at me.''
Harrington did, eventually, come to the module to see what the fuss was about. Paisley tapped on the glass outside his cell to get Harrington's attention, the supervisor said. ''I informed him that the nurse had said it was a stomach virus, and they ordered him not to come out with the other kids,'' he said.
`SUCK IT UP'
''I told him he had to suck it up and walk around, to wait another day or so,'' Harrington said.
Terry Mixon, a detention officer since 1989, was in charge of the 28 detainees in Mod 3 during ''B'' shift, beginning at 3 p.m. As soon as he arrived, a knot of about eight kids came up to him. Referring to Paisley, of whom Mixon was known to be very fond, they said: ``Your son is sick.''
Johnson briefed Mixon before leaving, as well: ''He stated the kid is in -- Omar is in bad shape,'' Mixon testified.
And, indeed, he was. ''He was laying there and heavy sweating,'' Mixon said in a sworn statement. ``It looked like he had urinated on himself. And I saw the room [was] filthy and dirty. And he grabbed his stomach. With a soft voice, [he] stated to me that his stomach is hurting.''
At first, Mixon left Paisley in his room. ''He asked me not to close his door,'' Mixon testified.
Later, though, Mixon, with the help of another youth, moved Paisley into a red plastic chair just outside the cell. With Paisley out of the room, Mixon enlisted two detainees to help clean out the cell. The sight -- and smell -- were harrowing.
''The smell was awful,'' Mixon testified. The sheets were stained with what appeared to be diarrhea and urine, and Paisley's jumpsuit was filthy.
''He was just holding his stomach, saying he wants to see a doctor,'' Mixon continued.
CALLING SUPERVISORS
At dinner time, around 5:30, Mixon told the nurse on duty, Dianne Demeritte, she needed to see Paisley, records show. After dinner, he began calling supervisors on his radio, requesting that Paisley be given medical attention. Officers and supervisors on duty that night all described Mixon's dispatches in similar terms.
''I heard the officer from Mod 3 frantically calling for the nurse, supervisor, anyone that could help,'' officer Johnny Byrd testified in a sworn statement. ``Mr. Mixon, to be frantic about it, to keep calling and calling, something has to be terribly wrong.''
At about 7:50 p.m., Mixon talked with Demeritte over the phone.
''What's wrong with him?,'' she asked.
''How in the hell [should] I know,'' he says he replied. ``All I know [is] something is wrong with him.''
``And she stated, `I'm coming down there, but I don't want to take this [mess] home to my kid.''
MADE HIM WALK
Demeritte arrived 10 or 15 minutes later, and insisted on making Paisley, who could barely ''get enough strength to get up,'' walk out of his cell. ''And she walked over and stuck the little thermometer in his mouth,'' Mixon testified. ``And two minutes went by. And she said, `ain't nothing wrong with his ass. Let his ass go back in the room. And then she left.''
After speaking with her boss, Demeritte did an about-face, and completed paperwork to transfer Paisley to Jackson Memorial Hospital, before leaving the lockup for a 45-minute break.
It was not until about 9 p.m. before other officers and supervisors arrived to take Paisley to the hospital.
Jeffrey Stringer, a supervisor at the lockup, was told to bring a wheelchair, handcuffs and leg shackles. Policy had to be followed.
''His eyes were closed,'' Stringer said in a sworn statement. ``He was slumped.''
``His body was just limp, and we just shook him; hey, hey, hey.''
Said Officer Joseph Archange: ``I walked over there and I tapped him. I said, `Omar. Omar. And I tapped him on the shoulder. So I gave him a little strong shake.''
A moment or two later, when officers tried to move Omar to a wheelchair, he drained brownish, foul-smelling fluids from all over his body. ''That frightened them,'' Mixon said of the other officers, ''and they let him lay on the ground.'' Paramedics finally were summoned.
None of the officers attempted CPR however, and an emergency kit, which should have been sealed and included a mask, had been previously used.
By the time paramedics arrived, according to testimony, Paisley had been motionless for at least 10 minutes.
AFTER HIS DEATH
Even after Paisley died, the chaos lingered.
| Jailed teen's death leads to charges; Two nurses are charged in the death of Omar Paisley, 17, who was pleading for medical attention at the Dade juvenile lockup. Read article. |
When then-Assistant Superintendent Victor Davidson went to Mod 3 to secure the crime scene, he discovered Paisley's evidence-laden soiled jumpsuit, sheets and pillowcase had been sent to the laundry.
''I said, `Well, you need to go back to the laundry room and get it and bring it back over to the mod, because homicide might want it when they come,'' Davidson, who was fired in November, testified.
But the linens were already gone
04/28/04 Former counselor arrested in abuse case
Chris Tisch, St. Petersburg Times
Police found that the child had been the subject of a take-down on March 6, 2003, because she would not stop talking after lights-out. Collins and another staffer, Betherea Stokes, then took the girl to a timeout room, which was out of range of the facility's 72 surveillance cameras.
Collins and Stokes then began a "beat out" in which they punched the girl in the arms, legs and torso, arrest reports state. The girl told police that a "beat out" was a rite of passage for those who are about to be released from the facility.
A doctor's report later showed the girl suffered deep tissue bruising. Click here for complete article.
04/23/04 Pines juvenile center accused of denying dental care to aching 17-year-old
Megan O'Matz, Sun Sentinel
...youth contracted a foot fungus from fecal matter on the floor of a shower stall at South Pines. . . .all restrooms were found to be in need of cleaning, as foul odors were apparent. The program has been providing Pop-Tarts to subsidize the small portions of food
04/14/04 Clean it up
Editorial, Orlando Sentinel
Our position: The juvenile-justice system needs both punishment and treatment.
Improving the oversight of the agency and its contractors is critical. It's shocking that internal reports at the agency found gross deficiencies in performance standards. Click here to read Clean it up
04/11/04 Young offenders at risk
Rene Stutzman, Orlando Sentinel
One of the most egregious child abusers in Florida is the very agency that's supposed to rehabilitate troubled youths: the state Department of Juvenile Justice. In case after case, records suggest an agency that cannot control its employees or those of the dozens of private companies it pays to run most of its field operations. Claudia Wright, professor at the Levin College of Law at the University of Florida, represented a child housed in the Polk City facility when it was run by Youth Services. "We saw a lot of abuse," she said, "overuse of isolation, using children to supervise other children, provoking fights between the children." "It's just impossible to effectively either punish or treat children in large institutions," Wright said. "They're just throwing money absolutely down a rathole." Click here to read Young offenders at risk
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March 2004 Pinellas County School failed to report sexual abuse!
Sexual abuse of a child against another child is alleged to have occurred at Westgate Elementary School. The school is mandated to follow the law (Florida Statute 39.201) when there is suspicion of child abuse. Following the law includes reporting the allegation to the Abuse Hotline 1-800-96-ABUSE.
For more information, contact: Pinellas County School Board 727-586-1818 or Matt Sullivan at 727-343-8231
The Pinellas County School Board attorney gave a statement at the March 9, 2004 School Board meeting relative to this incident. The next Pinellas County School Board meeting is scheduled for: April 13, 2004 - 10 am
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 June 21, 2003 Pinellas JDC Sheriff's deputy tells Cathy Corry that DJJ staff want her removed from the premises. She asked why; no one had an answer, so she stayed!
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June 20, 2003 Guard hits youth at Pinellas JDC
A 15 year-old at Pinellas JDC receives stitches in his face after altercation with guard.
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| May 31, 2003 TRAGEDY: Teen dies in fight at Pinellas JDC...
Daniel Matthews, 17 years-old, died in a fight with another detainee at the Pinellas County Juvenile Detention Center in Clearwater, Florida on May 31, 2003. What follows are newspaper reports by the St. Petersburg Times and communications received by justice4kids.org concerning this tragedy.
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Oct 9, 2003:Justice officials admit errors led to fatal fight, St. Petersburg Times |
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August 9, 2003: Report: Guard's error opened cell doors St. Petersburg Times |
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July 7, 2003: Teen not charged in fatal fistfight St. Petersburg Times |
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June 15, 2003: Detention often a terrible option... St. Petersburg Times |
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June 5, 2003: Protesters rally at juvenile center St. Petersburg Times |
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June 4, 2003: Charges sought in deadly jail fight St. Petersburg Times |
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June 3, 2003: Video details fatal jail fight St. Petersburg Times |
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June 2, 2003: Message from DJJ Secretary Bankhead Dept. of Juvenile Justice |
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June 2, 2003: Sent to jail for help, teen killed St. Petersburg Times |
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June 1, 2003: "Well it's too late, last night a detainee died..." Anon. |
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November 9, 2002: "A first warning..." Anon. |
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September 13, 2001: A warning to Gov. Bush Steven Sundquist, JDO, et.al. |
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Click here to read letters justice4kids.org has received. |
If you have information, contact Curtis Krueger, Staff Writer at the St. Petersburg Times, 727.893.8232 or email him at krueger@sptimes.com. |
 June 4, 2003: justice4kids.org rallies at Pinellas JDC over teen tragedy

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April 6, 2003 Tampa Tribune examines Baker Act...
Statewide, a Tampa Tribune investigation has found, there were 16,000 cases last year of children being taken to crisis centers under the Baker Act. Often they are kept for days, put on prescription psychiatric drugs and then released with only a recommendation they seek outpatient care. To read the 4-part article, click here.
March 18, 2003 Youth abuse investigation leads to 2 arrests...
The employees at Florida Youth Academy may have hit teens during a rite of passage for those leaving the program. Click here to read the full text of Leon M. Tucker's report in the St. Petersburg Times on March 18, 2003.
August 14, 2002 This place is out of control...
...said a report about the Sago Palm Academy, the 350-bed juvenile offender facility in western Palm Beach County. This St. Petersburg Times Editorial published August 14, 2000 may be relevant today. Click here to read the the editorial. Then, ask yourself if you, or someone you know, has a child in these conditions today.
January 22, 2002 "If fighting to save my child makes me a criminal, then there's really a big, big problem"...
Click "Mother's effort to help her son prompts arrest" and "Boy put in state care after mom is arrested"
We, as parents, seek help for our children. We are too often turned away; then we are accused and threatened in a manner that does not help anyone. Where is the village? Where is the community effort to help those who seek help? - Cathy Corry
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| Mother's effort to help her son prompts arrest |
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| Copyright Times Publishing Co. Jan 22, 2003
Dona Faulkenberg says she is screaming for help with her troubled son.
The Pasco County Sheriff's Office says she is not taking proper care of him.
The 41-year-old mother is facing charges of felony child neglect after she refused on Monday to retrieve her son, who had been institutionalized for setting a fire. She posted $5,000 bail early Monday and was released from jail.
Faulkenberg adopted the boy, whose name is being withheld by the St. Petersburg Times, at 16 months. She says he needs intensive, long-term care for behavioral and emotional problems that have worsened during his 14 years.
Faulkenberg said she refused to take him home Monday because he is dangerous and needs more care.
"I needed him to be in a secure environment so he cannot hurt himself and others," said Faulkenberg, who also has a 6-year-old daughter.
A spokesman for the Sheriff's Office could not be reached for comment.
Faulkenberg said sheriff's officials contacted her late Tuesday afternoon to notify her of a shelter hearing before Circuit Judge Lynn Tepper at 8:30 a.m. today in Dade City. She hasn't been able to speak to the boy and has been told only that he is in protective custody.
"I don't know where my son is. I don't know who has my son," she said, adding that if he is placed in a foster home with other children, he could pose a danger to those kids.
The boy was placed in the Harbor Behavioral Health Care Institute in Dade City on Jan. 11 after setting a fire in his mother's van. It was the second fire he had set in three weeks, Faulkenberg said.
After a little more than a week in the facility, he was discharged.
Instead of picking him up, Faulkenberg got an order from Circuit Judge Linda Babb on Friday to keep the boy at the Harbor longer.
"I left him in a secure facility," she said.
On Monday, she said, the Sheriff's Office called to tell her to pick him up. She refused again and was arrested late that night.
"If fighting to save my child makes me a criminal, then there's really a big, big problem," she said.
Faulkenberg, a single mother, has been fighting for her children for years. After she was told she couldn't have children, she adopted two boys, ages 3 years and 16 months, in 1989. She later became pregnant with a daughter. She gradually learned that the boys' biological mother had abused drugs and alcohol during her pregnancies and was physically abusive to the boys, Faulkenberg said. "This is what happens to children when the biological mother drinks and self-medicates," she said.
A psychiatric evaluation of the 14-year-old details his violent behavior. Faulkenberg said he has been taking psychotropic medications since age 4. The school system considers him severely emotionally disturbed.
All these factors, Faulkenberg says, are an omen of what is to come: crime.
Faulkenberg knows because that's the path her older son followed. That boy, who's about to turn 17, is in a detention center after committing what his mother calls "a very, very, very serious crime."
She fears the same future for her younger son, whom she described as loving and smart.
"(He) is basically a good kid," Faulkenberg said. He loves to read, she said, and makes good grades in school when he's stable.
But he's had a fascination with fire since a young age. In December, he set fire to a plastic bucket inside the house.
Faulkenberg is worried about her daughter's safety and her own. She said her son is a danger to himself and that she will do whatever it takes to get help for him.
"I would much rather go to jail than be planning my son's funeral or my daughter's funeral," she said.
Even so, she's furious that instead of receiving help, she is being charged with a crime.
"I am not abusing my child," she said through tears. "I am not neglecting my child. I am screaming for help."
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission. |
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[Dona Faulkenberg] said sheriff's officials contacted her late Tuesday afternoon to notify her of a shelter hearing before Circuit Judge Lynn Tepper at 8:30 a.m. today in Dade City. She hasn't been able to speak to the boy and has been told only that he is in protective custody.
The boy was placed in the Harbor Behavioral Health Care Institute in Dade City on Jan. 11 after setting a fire in his mother's van. It was the second fire he had set in three weeks, Faulkenberg said.
Faulkenberg, a single mother, has been fighting for her children for years. After she was told she couldn't have children, she adopted two boys, ages 3 years and 16 months, in 1989. She later became pregnant with a daughter. She gradually learned that the boys' biological mother had abused drugs and alcohol during her pregnancies and was physically abusive to the boys, Faulkenberg said. "This is what happens to children when the biological mother drinks and self-medicates," she said.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission. |
Florida camp delinquents get red ant punishment
Yahoo News, March 14, 1999
FLORIDA CITY, Fla. (AP) - Prosecutors are investigating a program for juvenile delinquents after allegations that a guard forced two boys to lie on nests of red ants because they tried to escape.
The two boys, aged 14 and 15, suffered hundreds of ant bites last summer after trying to escape from the Hurricane Conservation Corps program in southern Miami-Dade County.
Their accusations have led to a broader inquiry that found other complaints of abuse at the state-financed, privately run program.
Both the U.S. attorney's office civil rights division and the Miami-Dade state attorney's office are investigating.
Boys in the program told police and public defenders that weaker boys were targeted for group beatings called ``blanket parties,'' and that new boys were forced to perform mock sexual acts.
A memo by Assistant Public Defender Marie Osborne says the two boys who suffered the ant bites tried to escape in July and were caught by guard Andrew McCray.
The boys alleged that McCray forced them to lie on the ground, one on top of the other, on a mound of the biting ants, and that McCray placed his foot on top of them and pushed them down into the ants.
McCray said he considered the boys escaping felons and that he was trying to restrain them until help arrived. ``I got bitten, too,'' he said.
At the time, the program was operated by Gator Human Services, based in Michigan. The program contract has since been sold to its current operator, Youth Track.
An attorney for Gator told The Miami Herald that Gator had not known of the allegations until after the contract was sold in November.
Four guards have been terminated and one was suspended for three days, according to Rex Uberman, spokesman for the state Department of Juvenile Justice.
McCray said he resigned because he was told to spend more time at work. The juvenile justice department maintains he was terminated because of its investigation.