Miami Herald has a full article on the matter including links to videos and timeline.
The person who initiated the coverup was Cruel, Sgt. David Cruel.
On the morning of Jan. 5, Bay County sheriff's Sgt. David Cruel called 911 to report a medical emergency at a boot camp for juvenile delinquents.
''We need an ambulance over here immediately, please,'' Cruel said. ``We got an offender that we just entered this morning. Looks like he's passed out.
What Cruel didn't say: At least seven of his co-workers had spent more than half an hour manhandling 14-year-old Martin Lee Anderson. They punched and kneed him, dragged him around and shoved ammonia capsules in his nose. When they were through, he lay on the ground, dying.
Hidden truth of youth's death at camp
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A case is in parallel to the plight of Haleigh Poutre.
Maine's highest court is considering a case that asks if the state has the right to make an end-of-life decision for a child in foster care, or whether that right remains with the child's parents.
On Monday, attorneys presented their arguments before the Maine Supreme Judicial Court. Nationwide, only a handful of courts have addressed the issue.
The case revolves around an 8-month-old boy referred to in court documents as Matthew W., who suffered irreversible brain damage when he was 6 weeks old. His father, Matthew L. Williams, 22, of Bangor has been charged with aggravated assault for allegedly causing his son's injuries.
If convicted, Williams faces up to 10 years in prison. If the child dies, Williams could be charged with manslaughter.
Four days after the baby was injured in September, District Court Judge Jessie Gunther granted a do-not-resuscitate order to DHHS when she gave the agency custody of Matthew W.
Court weighing state's rights in end-of-life case
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So far I'm getting an error message -- in both Netscape and IE -- on both video links. ("Requested file not found." etc.)
As the video showed, she had "few concerns" watching the boy get beaten to a pulp by so-called law enforcement officers. She had no objection to the sadistic brutality and did not intervene. She was as guilty as the others because she could have stopped the beating.
Now we know your name, Kristin Schmidt. What we don't know is what happened to your heart and soul.