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Saving Alex

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Starting with Small's initial home visit Aug. 29, Alex and his family allowed Tribune reporters to follow his case as it came to involve school officials, mental health experts, law enforcement authorities and the courts.

The youngest of seven children, Alex was born 15 years after his nearest sibling, when his mother was 42.

As a younger boy, he had no truancy or misconduct problems, his family said. Alex's mother described him as a sensitive, intuitive child who loved to read, romp on the baseball diamond with cousins and chat as she puttered around the house. His fourth-grade report card shows an A, two B's and a C, with four missed classroom days.

But in sixth grade, Alex started getting into fights with other students. He missed months of school because of suspensions and his refusal to get on the bus.

"They start to get at me," Alex said. "That's when I get angry, and don't allow it, and get mad. I've just had enough, and if somebody gets in my way, I'll deal with it."

At the start of seventh grade, officials enrolled Alex in the LaSalle County Regional Safe School, an alternative setting for students with behavioral problems. But as his isolation and anxiety about school built, he stayed home more often, playing "Call of Duty" on his Xbox, watching the History Channel on TV or pacing the floor with the metalcore band Asking Alexandria thundering through his ear buds.

His parents fretted, but they felt helpless to force Alex to venture outside the house.

Hard to reach

Alex's soft-spoken father, Javier Frausto, pleads with Alex to go to school, but he isn't around to make sure that happens.

Frausto leaves the house before 5:30 a.m. to commute to a job as a backhoe operator for a railroad freight company in Chicago. Often he doesn't return until well past 8 at night.

"I'm out working," Frausto said. "It's hard for me. I'm thinking about him."

Alex's mother dropped out of school in seventh grade, when she was 15 and pregnant with the first of the couple's children. She describes herself as burdened by weight gain and depression. As her happy toddler grew into an introverted and difficult-to-reach adolescent, she often was confined to her chair in the dining room.

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