St. Petersburg Times Online: News of Florida
TampaBay.com
Place an Ad Calendars Classified Forums Sports Weather
  • Mental questions delay 2 killers' executions
  • Officials vow primary hassles unlikely to recur
  • Most jury candidates know details of fatal Broward crash
  • Police unions jump on McBride
  • Strangers grieve for emaciated teen
  • Rehab staffers can reject queries on Noelle Bush
  • Pilots in DUI case also face negligence charge

  • From the state wire

  • Hurricane Jeanne appears on track to hit Florida's east coast
  • Rumor mill working overtime after Florida hurricanes
  • Developments associated with Hurricanes Ivan and Jeanne
  • Four killed in Panhandle plane crash were on Ivan charity mission
  • Hurricane Frances caused estimated $4.4 billion in insured damage
  • Disabled want more handicapped-accessible voting machines
  • USF forces administrators to resign over test score changes
  • Man's death at Universal Studios ruled accidental
  • State child welfare workers in Miami fail to do background checks
  • Hurricane Jeanne heads toward southeast U.S. coast
  • Hurricane Jeanne spurs more anxiety for storm-weary Floridians
  • Mistrial declared in case where teen was target of racial "joke"
  • Panhandle utility wants sewer plant moved to higher ground
  • State employee arrested on theft, bribery charges
  • Homestead house fire kills four children, one adult
  • Pierson leader tries to cut off relief to local fern cutters
  • Florida's high court rules Terri's law unconstitutional
  • Jacksonville students punished for putting stripper pole in dorm
  • FEMA handling nearly 600,000 applications for help
  • Man who killed wife, niece, self also killed mother in 1971
  • Producer sues city over lead ball fired by Miami police
  • Tourism suffers across Florida after pummeling by hurricanes
  • Key dates in the life of Terri Schiavo
  • An excerpt from the unanimous ruling in the Schiavo case
  • Four confirmed dead after small plane crash in Panhandle
  • Correction: Disney-Cruise Line story
  • tampabay.com

    printer version

    Strangers grieve for emaciated teen

    ©Associated Press
    October 1, 2002

    PACE -- More than 150 mourners gathered in this Florida Panhandle town Monday for the funeral for 18-year-old Chester Lee Miller, though many never knew the malnourished youth before his death.

    Chester died from a ruptured stomach Wednesday at a hospital in nearby Milton. He was a stranger to the woman who answered his knock at her door four days earlier. He told her he had been beaten and starved by his stepfather and mother in Pennsylvania, who put him on a bus to Florida to look for his father.

    His mother, Lyda Miller, 37, and stepfather, Paul Hoffman Sr., 38, of Hazelton, Pa., remained jailed in Pennsylvania Monday. They are suspected of causing his death by starvation and charged with aggravated assault and reckless endangerment.

    "Why did this have to happen to Chester?" the Rev. Mike Poston asked at his funeral. "Why did he have to suffer the way that he did?"

    Poston, associate pastor at Pace Assembly of God, told mourners to leave the questions to God.

    "I believe in my heart today that Chester is home to be with the Lord," Poston said. "He'll never be malnourished any more. He'll never know what it's like to go without a meal."

    An autopsy showed that Chester's stomach ruptured from peritonitis, a painful inflammation usually related to a bacterial infection. Toxicology tests, expected to take at least six weeks, could determine what caused the inflammation. Starvation is one possibility.

    Gerald and Elva Swift of Milton never met Chester, but they came to his funeral.

    "I think someone needs to show some respect," said Gerald Swift, 65, a retired telecommunications worker.

    His wife said it made her think of their 16-year-old grandson.

    "It tears my heart out to think that someone could do this to a child, and I'm ashamed, and I'm also angry," said the 57-year-old retired collection officer and real estate broker.

    Their presence was part of an outpouring of support for Chester's father, Robert Lee Miller. Chester lived with his father in Milton until he was 16 when he went to be with his mother in Pennsylvania.

    The autopsy showed that Chester, 5 feet 4, weighed 100 pounds at death, nearly 40 more than estimated when he arrived at Santa Rosa Medical Center shortly after knocking on Janice Goodman's door. She took him in and called her mother, Norma Douglas, who notified authorities.

    Back to State news
    Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
     
    Special Links
    Lucy Morgan


    From the Times state desk