|  The
Orlando Sentinel archive
EARLY ARREST INSPIRES
CAREER
When E. Clay Parker
was Detained for No Reason, He Decided to Become a Lawyer.
By Chris Cobbs
of The Sentinel Staff
In the summer
of 1960, a young man and his wife sat in a Mercury sedan admiring
the moonlit ocean when a suspicious police officer rapped on the door.
The officer ordered
the man to get out and put his hands on the roof of the car. The man
was arrested and detained at a police station in Jacksonville for
eight hours before the charges were dropped and he was released.
On that night,
E. Clay Parker decided to become a lawyer. More significantly, he
decided to put up a lifelong fight against the abuse of authority.
Parker, 60, is
an Orlando attorney whose practices has attracted regional attention
as a result of his representing the family of Daniel B. Sagers, an
inmate who died last year of injuries suffered at the Osceola County
Jail.
Parker and Osceola
County are in the process of settling the case. In fact, the County
Commission could approve an agreement Monday. Originally, the civil
suit asked for $20 million from the county and other parties, including
the Sheriff's Office.
Parker also was
part of the team of attorneys that reached a $3 million settlement
with Orange County in the death of Susan Bennett, an inmate who died
during a 12-day jail stay last year.
Bennett, 42,
died of a heart attack after jail workers left her to vomit and defecate
uncontrollable for 12 days without treatment, said a county investigation.
"The one
and only time I had to sit in jail was one of the most terrifying
experiences of my life," Parker said. "I was outraged. I
had been a child of the 1950s who thought police officers could do
no wrong."
Instead, said
Parker, he learned the utter futility and powerlessness of any resident
at the whim of someone authorized to carry a badge and a weapon.
"There are
1,000 Danny Sagers out there," Parker said. "These are the
powerless people who come within the power of the state and fall into
the subculture of being victimized."
If Sagers had
survived his encounter with Osceola corrections officers, no one would
have paid much attention to his case, Parker said.
Sagers would
have been seen as an inmate who was in jail for a reason, and there
would have been no inquiries into conditions at the jail.
"So Danny's
death has far-reaching implications beyond this one case," Parker
said.
The high-profile
Sagers case has put Parker in the limelight.
The attorney
said he received dozens of calls from inmates in Osceola and Orange
counties, describing abuse by guards and seeking help.
Some of the calls
warranted inquiry and some didn't, but the common thread, Parker said,
"was an utter and complete sense of powerlessness."
Parker said he
never thought that jail should be a pleasant place or that discipline
isn't necessary.
"But it
bugs me to see people stripped of dignity and mistreated," he
said.
Early in his
career, Parker said he represented a half-dozen victims charged with
capital offenses. One involved a young black Bethune-Cookman College
student charged with raping a woman on spring break.
"The case
was tried before an all-white jury, yet we were able to get an acquittal,"
Parker said.
"What I
learned, early in my career, is how authority in the form of police,
local or state government has a way of rendering people powerless,
and that made me angry. I decided I couldn't just stand idly by and
watch."
Copyright
2000, Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
|