Pubdate: Tue, 09 Dec 2003 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2003 Star-Telegram, Fort Worth, Texas Contact: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/162 Author: Max B. Baker, Star-Telegram Staff Writer Cited: Correctional Services Corporation http://www.correctionalservices.com/ CSC TO PAY $38 MILLION IN TEEN'S BOOT CAMP DEATH A Montague County judge says the owner of a former Mansfield boot camp must pay a $38 million jury award to the family of a teen-ager who died while in custody. Visiting state District Judge Roger Towery denied motions by Correctional Services Corp., of Sarasota, Fla., to reduce or set aside the jury's multimillion-dollar award, said lawyer Bill Lane, who represented the teen-ager's family. "I'm not surprised," Lane said. "It was a good, long trial and a righteous trial and there was no reason to reduce it." After an eight-week trial in August, a Tarrant County jury awarded the parents of Bryan Alexander $5.1 million in punitive damages and $35 million in actual damages for their son's death and suffering and their mental anguish. In September, Towery -- who was appointed to the case because the county's criminal judges were named as potential parties in the lawsuit -- set the actual damages at $37.4 million, including interest, and reduced the punitive damages to $750,000. As a result of the latest ruling, CSC must post a $25 million bond and has until Dec. 16 to file its notice of appeal. "We expect it to go through the normal appeal process," said Jim Slattery, chief executive officer of CSC. Alexander's parents, Rickey Alexander and Judy Schumpert, sued CSC and the camp's nurse, Knyvett Reyes, saying they failed to provide Alexander with adequate and timely medical care. Alexander, 18, was serving a six-month sentence for a drunken driving arrest. While at the camp, he had complained of feeling weak and coughing up blood days before he was taken to John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth. Alexander was immediately placed in intensive care but died two days later on Jan 9, 2001. Tests later indicated that he died of a rare penicillin-resistant form of pneumonia. The boot camp and residential drug-treatment programs at the Mansfield facility were closed six months after Alexander's death. Reyes testified during the trial that, based on her evaluation of his symptoms, she treated Alexander for a cold, flu and strep throat. Witnesses testified that Reyes thought the inmate was faking his illness. In a related federal court action, CSC's insurance carrier, Northland Insurance Co., is seeking a declaration that its policies do not cover the $38 million judgment, Lane said. Lane, along with lawyers Jeff Kobs and Mark Haney, represented the Alexander family. CSC has argued that the insurance policies should cover the verdict and that Northland acted improperly in failing to settle the claims before the jury's verdict, the lawyers said. CSC operates 19 juvenile and 12 adult correctional facilities in 15 states, including halfway houses in Fort Worth and Houston. Texas pays the company about $7 million a year to run the two facilities. The company's net worth is about $50 million, according to testimony in the Alexander case. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake