“You have to excuse me, the memories are still there,” Donald Stratton said, with his voice breaking with emotion. “They never go away, because we were all children.”
Stratton, who was at Dozier from 1958 to 1960, said he was beaten and sexually abused at the facility, which operated for 111 years before closing in 2011.
Bryant Middleton, a retired U.S. Army captain, said he was severely beaten six times for minor violations, including eating blackberries off a fence. He said he was sexually abused by two Dozier officials, including a doctor.
“I would rather be sent back into the jungles of Vietnam than to spend one single day at the Florida School For Boys,” said Middleton, who has 20 years of military service. “It is a horrible place.”
Middleton and Stratton are among more than 500 victims who have alleged physical, mental and sexual abuse at the reform school from the 1940s through the 1960s, according to the Senate resolution.
The House will take up a similar resolution (HR 1335), sponsored by Rep. Tracie Davis, D-Jacksonville, and an additional bill being written by the Judiciary Committee that would authorize memorials for the Dozier victims at the state Capitol in Tallahassee and at an unspecified location in Jackson County, which includes Marianna.