Delaware County District Library

The Dozier School for Boys, forensics, survivors, and a painful past, Elizabeth A. Murray, PhD

Label
The Dozier School for Boys, forensics, survivors, and a painful past, Elizabeth A. Murray, PhD
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
resource.interestGradeLevel
Grade 9 to 12
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The Dozier School for Boys
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
Elizabeth A. Murray, PhD
Sub title
forensics, survivors, and a painful past
Summary
From the outside, the Dozier School for Boys in Florida looked utterly charming. But the reality of life at Dozier was ugly. In 2008, almost one hundred years after the reform school's founding, Robert Straley and Roger Dean Kiser discovered they shared similar abusive experiences while students at the Dozier School for Boys. They recalled vicious punishments at a campus building called the white house, where staff used a leather strap to beat inmates. Straley was also raped at Dozier. In their shared grief and trauma, the two men reached out to filmmaker and civil rights activist Michael O'McCarthy. He too had experienced abuse at Dozier. He contacted Miami Herald journalist Carol Marbin Miller to tell their story. As the details went public, investigations into Dozier began. The State of Florida finally closed the school in 2011 and officially apologized to survivors in 2017. A forensic investigation took place on the campus, including digging up its cemetery, since it was alleged that some boys had been killed at the school. Yet none of the investigative or scientific work could prove any of the allegations. No perpetrators could be brought to justice. In the end, survivors and their families must live with the knowledge that justice may never be served
Target audience
juvenile
Classification
Content

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