Not so gentle reminders of what took place.
In related news, the parent's civil suit has been postponed until after the trial:
Judge delays boot camp suit
January 18, 2007
By David Angier
News Herald Writer 747-5077 / dangier@pcnh.com
TALLAHASSEE
U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle said Wednesday there would be no way to have a fair trial in the boot camp federal lawsuit until the state criminal case is over.
Hinkle reluctantly set aside the April trial date for a $40 million lawsuit from the parents of a 14-year-old boy who died after his first day at the nowdefunct Bay County Sheriff’s Office Boot Camp.
Martin Lee Anderson collapsed Jan. 5 and died the next morning at a Pensacola hospital after drill instructors manhandled him when he failed to comply with their orders to resume a run.
http://www.newsherald.com/free/article.display.php?id=67693 and Siebert keeps his job as medical examiner:
Posted on Thu, Jan. 18, 2007
FLORIDA PANHANDLE
Boot camp examiner can stay on job
The medical examiner who did an autopsy on a teenager who died at a boot camp can work out his contract, a state panel ruled.
BY RON WORD
Associated Press
PONTE VEDRA BEACH - A medical examiner who performed a disputed autopsy on a teenager who died after an altercation with guards at a Panama City boot camp can continue working under supervision the remaining months of his contract, the state's Medical Examiner's Commission said Wednesday.
The commission unanimously approved a quality assurance program under which Dr. Barbara Wolf, a medical examiner in Fort Myers, will review all Dr. Charles Siebert's work. She may then gradually reduce the amount of supervision down to 10 percent. She will also review all his autopsies on homicides and undetermined deaths until his contract ends in June. Wolf and Siebert began the peer review program in November, about three months after the commission first met to discuss his fate.
The commission in August, in an administrative complaint, found Siebert was negligent in performing 39 of 698 autopsies it reviewed.
In Donna Faye Reed's autopsy report, Siebert had said ''the prostate gland and testes are unremarkable'' -- organs that are part of the male genitalia. In the second autopsy of the woman, who died in a 2004 tornado spawned by Hurricane Ivan, Siebert corrected the male genitalia, but incorrectly said she had a uterus. It had been surgically removed in an earlier operation, the complaint said.
In two cases, he misidentified black victims as white in reports, and he failed to consider that a person found face down in a bathtub had drowned. The death was attributed to methadone toxicity, the complaint said.
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http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/16485011.htm