Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Dozier School victims could get compensati­on for abuse

Bills that would aid survivors may come up for a vote

- By Romy Ellenbogen

When Ralph Freeman was just a boy, he tried to run.

He was sent at 14 to the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys, a reform school in Florida’s Panhandle for boys who committed crimes large and small.

As he ran through the school’s grounds, thinking he was in a bad dream, a grown man stabbed him in the leg with a railroad spike attached to a pole.

Weeks later, other boys who were suffering physical and sexual abuse at the school planned to run away in Atlanta, where they were to attend a basketball game. But Freeman couldn’t — his leg was too injured.

In front of Florida senators Tuesday, Freeman, now 66, said the things he endured at the Dozier school are the worst he’s seen in his life. He said that he suffers from depression still, and that the only people who understand him are other victims — some of whom sat behind him in the committee meeting, eyes welling up.

“This happened on American soil, people,” Freeman said. “This happened in Florida.

“If any of you want to see what boiling hot water looks like on a kid, the marks are still there.”

Survivors of the Dozier school could soon receive money for the physical and sexual abuse they endured at the state-operated program.

Sen. Darryl Rouson, D-St. Petersburg, has repeatedly filed legislatio­n seeking to create a fund for the school’s victims, but it never got far off the ground. This year, though, bills are nearing their final stops.

House legislator­s heard HB 21 in its final committee Tuesday afternoon. The Senate legislatio­n, SB 24, has one more committee to move through. After passing all its committees, the bills will go to their respective chambers for a full vote, then to Gov. Ron DeSantis for final approval or a veto.

Some lawmakers appeared to become emotional or at a loss for words Tuesday after hearing the surviving men testify about their lasting trauma — having boiling water poured on them, being beaten with a leather strap, fearing being raped by staff members at night.

They spoke of the dozens of boys who went into the school and never left, who are still missing today.

University of South Florida anthropolo­gists unearthed dozens of unmarked graves on the school’s campus. Over the years a group of men who call themselves “White House Boys” in reference to the facility where beatings often took place have spoken out about the wrongs that occurred.

Florida officially apologized to the victims in 2017, and the Dozier school closed in 2011.

Florida has paid out for decades-old wrongs before.

In 1994 Gov. Lawton Chiles signed a bill to create a fund to compensate victims of the Rosewood massacre, in which white Floridians burned down a predominan­tly Black town and drove residents out.

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