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By MELISSA NELSON
Associated Press Writer
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) -- The father of a 14-year-old who died at a boot camp was ordered out of the courtroom Wednesday after a judge accused him of making noises throughout the trial of seven guards and a nurse accused of killing his son.
Earlier Wednesday, the boy's mother left the courtroom in tears as a videotape of the guards overpowering Martin Lee Anderson played and one defendant described how he hit the teen on the arm while he was limp on the ground.
"I cannot take it," Gina Jones sobbed before leaving.
Prosecutors say the guards suffocated Anderson early last year by covering his mouth and forcing him to inhale ammonia fumes.
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Another guard, Joseph Walsh II, later told jurors that he and others were trying to "motivate" the boy during the Jan. 5, 2006, altercation. The guards repeatedly hit and kneed him and forced him to inhale ammonia. Anderson died a day later at a hospital.
The 30-minute video of seven guards hitting and kneeing Anderson shocked many and helped prompt the state to close its juvenile boot camps, but the guards said they were doing what they were trained to do at a tough-minded facility aimed at discouraging juvenile offenders from becoming adult felons.
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Walsh detailed how he used pressure points behind the boy's ear and made him inhale ammonia to get his attention. He also said he used hammer strikes on his arms to get him to unclench his fists.
When Anderson's body went limp, Walsh said, he suspected the boy of feigning illness because that was something common among the youth in the camp.
Walsh said he threw the ammonia capsules he used on Anderson over the camp fence because they had the teen's saliva on them and he didn't want to put them in his pocket.
Guard Henry McFadden later testified that Anderson asked to be taken to a hospital during the altercation and told the guards he could not breathe or see. But like Walsh and other defendants, McFadden testified that he thought the boy was faking his problems.
The guards and nurse face up to 30 years in prison if convicted of manslaughter.
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BOOT_CAMP_DEATH?SITE=OKPON&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT
Associated Press Writer
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) -- The father of a 14-year-old who died at a boot camp was ordered out of the courtroom Wednesday after a judge accused him of making noises throughout the trial of seven guards and a nurse accused of killing his son.
Earlier Wednesday, the boy's mother left the courtroom in tears as a videotape of the guards overpowering Martin Lee Anderson played and one defendant described how he hit the teen on the arm while he was limp on the ground.
"I cannot take it," Gina Jones sobbed before leaving.
Prosecutors say the guards suffocated Anderson early last year by covering his mouth and forcing him to inhale ammonia fumes.
cut
Another guard, Joseph Walsh II, later told jurors that he and others were trying to "motivate" the boy during the Jan. 5, 2006, altercation. The guards repeatedly hit and kneed him and forced him to inhale ammonia. Anderson died a day later at a hospital.
The 30-minute video of seven guards hitting and kneeing Anderson shocked many and helped prompt the state to close its juvenile boot camps, but the guards said they were doing what they were trained to do at a tough-minded facility aimed at discouraging juvenile offenders from becoming adult felons.
CUT
Walsh detailed how he used pressure points behind the boy's ear and made him inhale ammonia to get his attention. He also said he used hammer strikes on his arms to get him to unclench his fists.
When Anderson's body went limp, Walsh said, he suspected the boy of feigning illness because that was something common among the youth in the camp.
Walsh said he threw the ammonia capsules he used on Anderson over the camp fence because they had the teen's saliva on them and he didn't want to put them in his pocket.
Guard Henry McFadden later testified that Anderson asked to be taken to a hospital during the altercation and told the guards he could not breathe or see. But like Walsh and other defendants, McFadden testified that he thought the boy was faking his problems.
The guards and nurse face up to 30 years in prison if convicted of manslaughter.
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/B/BOOT_CAMP_DEATH?SITE=OKPON&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT