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Former boot camp guard: We tried to help teen
By REBECCA CATALANELLO
Published December 30, 2006
A former juvenile boot camp guard charged in the videotaped beating and death of a 14-year-old boy says he tried to help the teen when he realized something was wrong. "I feel terrible," said Charles Helms Jr. in an online interview with ABC's 20/20, a version of which aired Friday night. "It's a devastating thing. I can only imagine what it would feel like to lose one of my children, one of my sons." Martin Lee Anderson died Jan. 6, a day after seven guards - Helms among them - punched and kneed him when he refused to complete a required running drill at a Panama City boot camp. An eighth person, a nurse, stood by and watched. All eight are charged with aggravated manslaughter on a child and are scheduled to go to trial next year. "We were trying to see if the kid was faking it, feigning illness," Helms told ABC reporter Jim Avila in his first public interview since the incident. Anderson was sent to the boot camp after violating probation by taking his grandmother's car on a joy ride. Helms said that when Anderson collapsed on a dirt track after a forced 11/2-mile run, guards thought he might be faking to get out of the exercise, "which happens often with a new kid coming into the program," he said. "He said something to the effect that 'I'm not going to do this' or 'I'll do this tomorrow,' " Helms said in the televised interview. Punching Anderson in the arms to unclench his fists and kneeing him in the thighs was considered by the guards to be standard law enforcement procedure, Avila said during the news segment. "What we did was not enough to kill a child," Helms said. "Not enough to harm a child." But in an Associated Press story about the 20/20 interview, Helms is quoted more extensively than he was on television, saying he rushed to try to help Anderson when he realized something was wrong. Helms said he saw a grain of sand touch Anderson's eye and noticed that the boy didn't blink, according to the AP. "That's an irritant in your eye, and he was not trying to wipe it out of his eye ... I knew he was not faking it, and I said, 'That's it. Call 911,' " Helms said. "We did not disregard the fact that he was in trouble as soon as it was recognized. We changed hats and went to a rescue mode." In the past, Helms' attorney, Waylon Graham, has placed much of the blame for Martin Lee Anderson's death on boot camp nurse Kristin Schmidt. Graham said Schmidt told guards the teen was faking his illness, even as they covered his mouth, forcing him to breath ammonia, he said. The guards waited to call 911 at the nurse's advice, he said. Helms, 50, a father of three, previously served in the Army, working as a drill sergeant. Helms lost his guard job after the boot camp tape surfaced. A Bay County medical examiner first said the teen died from natural causes of complications from sickle cell trait. But after a tremendous public outcry, the Hillsborough County medical examiner conducted a second autopsy and ruled that Anderson died from suffocation because his mouth was forced closed as ammonia tablets were shoved into his nose. Besides Helms and Schmidt, the other defendants are former guards Henry Dickens, Charles Enfinger, Patrick Garrett, Raymond Hauck, Henry McFadden Jr. and Joseph Walsh II. They could each get up to 30 years in prison if convicted. If it hadn't been for the video, Helms told 20/20, he doesn't think he would be facing charges at all.
[Last modified December 30, 2006, 00:58:05]
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by Bruce
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02/09/07 03:01 AM
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I was in the army and the same happend to me in basic but I didnt die. They murdered him but the nurse should get the blunt of the punishment for standing by. They felt bad but didnt crae while they were beating the hell out of him.
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by Gina
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12/30/06 06:45 PM
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Since when does it require the physical force of 7 grown men and a nurse to determine whether a teenager is faking or not? What kind of nurse stands by and watches a human being beaten to death? Add the med examiner to this sorry list of murderers.
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by Mary
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12/30/06 01:51 PM
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The state's services to children are pathetic at best. It breaks my heart to think of the pain his family is going through mistakenly thinking they were nipping future criminal behavior in the bud. What in the world is wrong with those guards?
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by Thad
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12/30/06 01:19 PM
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If it hadn't been for the video...? If the entire state had not seen 7 grown men beating a child....you think? That statement sounds like a I'm sorry I got caught statement. This type of punishment is NEVER ok in this situation nor does it work.
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by Gilbert
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12/30/06 12:59 PM
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I cannot believe this guy would go on national TV to try and excuse this incident. I just hope they don't taint perspective jurors with this sideshow! As a career correctional officer and former Drill Sergeant, I see no justification at all. Hogwash
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by Susan
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12/30/06 11:12 AM
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It is unusual that the guards appear on National TV to show how "right" they are....even though they said NOTHING when the child "died of sickle cell?" Once that report came back they thought they were free and clear knowing they beat him to death.
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by Richard
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12/30/06 11:08 AM
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Once again Pam Bondi and Mark Ober's office are trying a "get them on National TV to lie" type scenerio. Bondi did it with the Couture's, Debra Lafave, and dozens others over the last 15 years.Take Bondi of this case the lies & PR have already begun
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by jeb
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12/30/06 09:26 AM
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do either of you even know which guard this is that appears in the video? presumption of innocence?
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by Ted
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12/30/06 09:03 AM
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Murder, cold blood murder for which they deservs like treatment in a court of law.
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by Heather
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12/30/06 08:34 AM
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More sob stories of officers thinking they are GOD once they are on the State's payroll. Let them all feel the pain that poor kid felt as he took his last breath. Convinct them and put them right out in general population where they all belong.
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