[Vision2020] After the Violence, the Rest of Their Lives

Art Deco art.deco.studios at gmail.com
Mon Nov 5 05:09:47 PST 2012


  [image: The New York Times] <http://www.nytimes.com/>

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November 4, 2012
After the Violence, the Rest of Their Lives By ERICA
GOODE<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/erica_goode/index.html>

CHICAGO — Xavier McElrath-Bey drives past the dilapidated houses, liquor
stores and vacant lots in his old neighborhood and sees the landmarks of
his youth.

There is the house at 51st and Throop where, at 11, he huddled near some
steps to avoid a rival gang member’s gunfire; the sidewalk where he carved
his gang nickname into the newly laid cement; the lot at 51st and Ada where
Sam’s store once stood, its back yard a convenient hideaway for weapons.
Nearby is the abandoned building where, in 1989, he crossed the line from
being a troubled 13-year-old, in and out of a detention center, to a
13-year-old convicted of murder.

Mr. McElrath-Bey, who spent 13 years in prison and is now 36, is not on a
nostalgia tour of the violent streets that raised him. He is part of an
effort to understand them, gathering data for an ambitious research project
that for almost two decades has closely tracked the lives of more than
1,800 youths in Chicago who, as he did, entered the juvenile justice system
at an early age.

The subjects of the study, directed by Linda A. Teplin, a professor of
psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern
University<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/n/northwestern_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org>’s
Feinberg School of Medicine, were first interviewed between November 1995
and June 1998 at what is now the Cook County Temporary Juvenile Detention
Center, long known as the Audy Home. They have been followed at intervals
since then and will continue to be tracked throughout their adult lives.

Mr. McElrath-Bey’s job as a field interviewer — he was hired four years ago
— has allowed him to gain perspective on his own life. Traveling around the
city to interview subjects, he sees the same chaotic family dynamics that
landed him in foster care at 6, the hunger to belong that drew him to a
gang at 11 and the bad decisions that led him to participate in a gang
killing. He also sees the good decisions that helped him change course,
leave the gang, complete a college degree while in prison, get a master’s
degree and move on to a steady job, a comfortable apartment on the North
Side, a girlfriend and a 15-month-old daughter he dotes on.

“I get flashbacks every time I interview these guys who are getting out of
prison,” he said. “I can relate to what they’re going through.”

At a time when the homicide rate in Chicago has risen sharply, jumping 25
percent over all since last year and 100 percent or more in a few
gang-heavy neighborhoods, the research project offers a portrait of both
the perpetrators and the victims in struggling, gang-ridden neighborhoods.

Gang killings are nothing new in Chicago, and city officials have brought
in federal agents and requested more police officers in an attempt to stem
the increase. Mayor Rahm Emanuel has also thrown support behind community
programs that seek to address gang problems.

But the study makes clear the challenges that such measures inevitably
encounter.

Dr. Teplin said that when she and Karen Abram, the associate director of
the project, proposed it, they were told it could not be done — that it
would be impossible to locate such transient and troubled groups year after
year, impossible to gain their trust or persuade them to talk honestly
about personal matters. “People said: ‘You’ll never get these kids to
cooperate. They won’t talk to you,’ ” Dr. Teplin recalled.

But the researchers hired trackers to find the study subjects as they moved
through their lives, searching them out in other neighborhoods, in
far-flung suburbs or in prison cells. They brought in street-savvy field
interviewers like Mr. McElrath-Bey to talk with subjects in their homes
instead of expecting them to show up for appointments at an office building
downtown. The researchers paid the subjects small amounts for
participating, sent them birthday cards and White Sox tickets and deposited
pocket money in their prison commissary accounts.

The interviews became an expected ritual for many in the study.

Charles Hayes, 31, who spent much of his youth and early adulthood in
prison or selling drugs, said that the experience reminded him of the
self-examination practiced by the Jehovah’s Witnesses in his family.

“They remind me of the past and what I was doing and what I’m doing now,”
he said of the researchers.

Now in its 17th year, the research has produced a rich trove of data and a
raft of published papers. Yet its findings have gone largely unnoticed by
policy makers and the public, Dr. Teplin said, perhaps in part because its
focus is on problems largely affecting blacks and Hispanics in poor
neighborhoods, both familiar and seemingly intractable.

“It’s a segment of the population that many Americans don’t think about,
don’t care about,” Dr. Teplin said. “What rivets Americans is the
unexpected — the Colorado massacre, mass school shootings. The everyday
violence is something that doesn’t concern most people.”

Based on the study’s data, more than 80 percent of juveniles who enter the
criminal justice system early in life have at some point belonged to a
gang. Seventy percent of men and 40 percent of women have used a firearm.
The average age of first gun use is 14. At any given time, 20 percent are
incarcerated.

Unemployment is rampant: 71 percent of the men and 59 percent of the women
are without jobs as adults. Of the 1,829 youths originally enrolled in the
study, 119 have died, most of them violently — a death rate three to five
times as high as the one for Cook County men in the same age group over all
and four times as high as the one for women. In all, 130 have been shot,
shot at, stabbed or otherwise violently attacked. As a group, they show
high rates of post-traumatic stress, depression and other psychiatric
disorders.

Sandro Santoyo, 33, entered the study when he was 12 and has cycled in and
out of prison repeatedly since then for crimes including aggravated battery
and attempted murder. By his count, he has been shot six times, stabbed
four times and run over by a van driven by rival gang members. That episode
injured him so badly that he can no longer do the construction work he used
to pick up between stints in prison, though he recently got a job at a
furniture warehouse.

He wants a different life. “It’s time for me to take responsibility for my
family,” he said in an interview, but he added, “It’s really hard, it’s
hard to let go of things like that.”

Jason Shaughnessy, 31, sports a teardrop tattoo next to each eye — gang
markings, he said, that make him a constant target for members of rival
gangs. He has spent 11 years and six months in prison, he said. Earlier
this year, he suffered a stroke.

Mr. Shaughnessy said that he wanted to help young men avoid the life he has
lived, but that he continued to use drugs and was currently out of jail on
bond on two charges of aggravated battery.

“A lot of people say, ‘You can do it, it’s not too late,’ and they’re
right, it’s never too late to change your life,” he said. “But it could be
too late to start training yourself to do things a different way than
you’ve done for 31 years.”

Mr. McElrath-Bey said that he sometimes entered a home to do an interview
and was overcome by “a sense of despair that surrounds me.”

Yet he also meets subjects who, like him, have found a way out. Mr. Hayes,
for example, who says, “I’ve been arrested so many times I lost count,” is
now a supervisor at the transmission company where he has worked for the
last five years. His job gives him a legal way to support his three
children A few years ago he moved to an apartment in a Chicago suburb. In
February, he married.

“I wouldn’t want my kids to grow up like I grew up,” he said.

The researchers are in the process of trying to tease out the factors that
allow youths to succeed despite considerable obstacles. But in Mr.
McElrath-Bey’s view, such transformations often have little to do with the
promises of politicians or the cyclical crackdowns by law enforcement.
Instead they are often prompted by less tangible forces: the support of a
parent, the insistence of a girlfriend, the encouragement of a priest or
pastor, the mobilization of a community, the birth of a child.

Mr. McElrath-Bey began his own move toward a different life at 18, as he
sat in a prison cell serving a sentence for helping to lure a 14-year-old
rival gang member into an abandoned building, where he was beaten to death,
and later setting the body on fire.

He fought against incarceration at first, staying involved with the gang,
earning a year in solitary confinement for assaulting a corrections
officer. But for the first time in his life, he also began to reflect.

“You can’t help but wonder how life could have been different,” he said,
“and of course, in those rare moments you start to realize all those people
that you hurt. I thought about my case, I thought about my family, I
thought about my sister, who was out there starting to get involved in
gangs, and it all started to eat away at me.”

Now when he goes back to his old neighborhood, he still feels a connection
to his old life.

“A great part of who you are is that culture,” he said, “and because of
that, you’re always going to identify with that group, you’re always going
to feel that affinity toward your community and your neighborhood.”

But he is in a different place now.

“This is what you were born into, this is the misery of your reality,” he
tells young men who remind him of himself at an earlier age. “But you
yourself have the power and strength to rise above this.”




-- 
Art Deco (Wayne A. Fox)
art.deco.studios at gmail.com
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