Chicago Sun-Times

One-quarter of detainees in county juvenile lockup are shot, killed after serving time: study

- BY ANDY GRIMM, STAFF REPORTER agrimm@suntimes.com | @agrimm34

One in four youths who spent time in the Cook County Juvenile Detention Center were shot or killed in the years following their release, according to data from a long-running Northweste­rn University study of incarcerat­ed youth.

A study published last week in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n found rates of gunshot injury and death for some juvenile detainees were more than 20 times higher than the general population, said Linda Teplin, a Northweste­rn researcher who founded Northweste­rn’s Juvenile Project.

The Northweste­rn study has tracked the lives of about 1,800 teens who were held at the detention center in the mid- to late-1990s, a population that is heavily Black and Hispanic, and overwhelmi­ngly poor, Teplin said. By looking at data reported by study participan­ts at intervals since the study opened, researcher­s calculated a rate of firearm-related injury and death.

The rate of deaths and shootings among the former juvenile detainees was higher even than for minority groups that have higher risk of gun violence, Teplin said. Shootings of Black study participan­ts occurred at more than twice the rate of Blacks overall, and Hispanic juvenile detainees were shot at a rate 10 times higher than average. White males in the study, the smallest group, suffered gunshots at 23 times the rate of peers.

“The findings aren’t surprising when you consider who is in the Juvenile Detention Center, which is a very high-risk group of poor, Black and Hispanic males,” Teplin said. “What this says is, the stereotype of kids in juvenile detention being the perpetrato­rs of gun violence. But they are also very likely to be the victims of gun violence.”

The findings should guide policymake­rs to move young people leaving custody into programs that can help prevent violence, including connecting them with community-based organizati­ons once they leave a hospital or detention center, Teplin said.

“This is an important population to receive preventive interventi­ons to reduce risk,” Teplin said. “Juvenile detention is temporary, so when they come back to their communitie­s what are we doing to keep them out of trouble?”

Since the Northweste­rn study began in the late-1990s, 88 of the study subjects have died, seven by suicide, 76 by homicide and four killed by police officers, according to the paper. The highest rate of gun injuries among study participan­ts of all races came between the ages of 15 and 19, which roughly overlaps with the ages of defendants in juvenile court. The oldest study participan­ts would now be in their 40s.

Teplin notes that the number of juveniles in detention facilities has declined sharply over the years. But the rate of injury is unlikely to have dropped for the current crop of juvenile detainees, she said, noting that the much smaller population in juvenile custody today is more likely to be held for more serious crimes.

Likewise, the study likely undercount­s the number of injuries because it does not include shootings that happened before the participan­ts joined the study and did not count multiple injuries to the same participan­t.

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