Florida Senate Apologizes For Dozier School Abuse

April 27, 2017

With one senator pointing Wednesday to “violations of fundamental human decency,” the Florida Legislature has formally apologized for the mistreatment of juveniles held at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys in Marianna.

The Senate on Wednesday joined the House and unanimously approved a resolution (SR 1440) acknowledging the physical and sexual abuse of boys who were sent to the now-closed reform school, and a related facility in Okeechobee, from 1900 to 2011.

“We apologize. We are sorry,” said Sen. Darryl Rouson, a St. Petersburg Democrat who sponsored the resolution and was joined by 35 other Senate co-sponsors. “This resolution on behalf of this Florida Senate commits to ensuring that the children of Florida are protected from this kind of abuse and violations of fundamental human decency.”

Turning to more than a dozen former Dozier students sitting in the Senate’s public gallery, Rouson said: “Through you, yet the living, the bones still cry out.”

He was referring to a forensic investigation carried out by the University of South Florida that identified 55 graves sites at the Jackson County facility, although there were only official records for 24 burials. The investigation led to the identification of some of remains, allowing families to reclaim their relatives.

The House unanimously passed a similar resolution (HR 1335) on April 18.

“It brought tears to my eyes because it was a good feeling that they had admitted to the wrong that they had done to us,” said Johnny Lee Gaddy, a 71-year-old Brooksville resident who was sent to Dozier as an 11-year-old in 1957.

He spent five years at the reform school, and suffered a half-dozen beatings, because he was labeled as a “truant” while in the fifth-grade.

“I didn’t go to school because I stuttered and the kids used to pick at me,” he said.

In addition to the resolution, Rouson said he hopes the Senate will take up a House bill (HB 7115) that would fund two memorials for the Dozier victims, one in Tallahassee and another in Jackson County. The bill would also authorize the reburial of the unclaimed Dozier remains in Tallahassee and the reinterment of the 1914 fire victims at the Boot Hill cemetery at the former reform school.

Rouson said the formal apologies from the Senate and House were “huge” in affirming the Dozier students’ stories and helping “the healing process.”

“It gives them something to live the golden years of their lives with, the fact that the state acknowledged this shameful part of our history,” Rouson said.

by Lloyd Dunkelberger, The News Service of Florida

Pictured top: A trench dug in the search for human remains at the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys in Marianna. NorthEscambia.com file photo.

Comments

5 Responses to “Florida Senate Apologizes For Dozier School Abuse”

  1. Tonya on May 4th, 2017 6:16 pm

    First step towards justice, Florida needs to immediately stop all pensions going to the surviving named perpetrators. Continuing to pay the criminals is justice denied in my opinion.

  2. john on April 30th, 2017 7:59 am

    Just goes to show you that the government can’t raise children, God has ordained that job to parents “and HE made them male and female”. Now what do you do to parents that refuse that responsibility? Instead of paying people to have babies that wind up in jail, put them into forced labor and make them earn the money to care for their children, until they change their mind! And we need to end all of these social programs, they don’t accomplish anything, but more dependency.

  3. 429SCJ on April 29th, 2017 5:30 am

    I find it obscene that after 70 plus years we are still chasing Nazis, but no effort has been made to locate the butchers of these boys.

    I would like to think that had I been one of those boys, that upon reaching adulthood, that I would have paid a home visit to my tormentors, with the fury of Ashmadia in my heart and hands.

  4. randy on April 28th, 2017 6:11 am

    Right on Chris ..florida hid this for years .now let’s get the criminals involved .. sheriffs judge fdle all that hid this

  5. Chris in Molino on April 27th, 2017 10:02 pm

    The worst part to me is that some of the people involved in the goings on are still living and nothing is being done to them. Further, the folks of that town knew what was happening for years but turned their heads because either their friends or kin worked there or because of the money it brought the town its sick. Almost since its inception that place has been continuously under some form of investigation for the allegations finally admitted to. Its kind of similar to ECSO. Nomatter the circumstances or actions, their always deemed justified by S.A. Bill Eddins. Wish they could break the rubber stamp around here.