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Prison data, court files show link between school truancy and crime

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After that, Chicago officials say, a state rule change meant they no longer had to report dropouts in the elementary grades. Still, the Tribune's analysis of the district's internal attendance database found that thousands of kindergartners through eighth-graders were listed as "unable to locate" or "did not arrive" in the three school years from 2008-09 to 2010-11.

"We know that we have a population of thousands of children who are disengaged from school and who need additional supports to get them re-engaged, back in the classroom, away from possible negative influences and working toward academic achievement," said district spokeswoman Robyn Ziegler.

In juvenile court, the Tribune examined scores of cases in which children had all but disappeared from class before reaching high school, even if they were not officially listed as dropouts.

One 14-year-old who was arrested for aggravated assault and theft in 2011 had withdrawn from school a year earlier, in seventh grade, when he was threatened by gang members and "is not able to return there due to safety issues," a court report said.

Another boy the same age who lived in a West Side crack house and sold heroin rarely attended school and "could barely write his name," according to a court evaluation.

Detached from school long before the legal dropout age, many of these youths became foot soldiers in the violent gangs that have terrorized Chicago's poorest neighborhoods and roiled the politics of City Hall.

"We are all aware of the tremendous impact truancy has had on the school kids of Chicago. It is not surprising that so many of them end up here," said Cook County Circuit Judge Michael Toomin, presiding judge of the Juvenile Justice Division.

Many absent grade schoolers came from single-parent households racked by intense poverty, substance abuse or mental illness, juvenile court records show. Some youths switched schools every year as their families fled foreclosure and debt, while the elementary schools in their South Side and West Side neighborhoods had few resources to retrieve missing students or even connect with their relatives.

Court officials could barely find school records for one 15-year-old accused of selling foil packs of heroin on a West Side street corner in 2011; the boy had not been enrolled for two years, and school officials said "he was not in the system," a court report said.

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