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Problems continue at Tenn. teen detention center

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — At a Nashville detention center with a long history of violence, escape attempts and sexual-abuse allegations, more than two dozen teens broke out of a common area and created a large disturbance in the yard Wednesday night, roaming the area with sticks and spraying a fire extinguisher.

Officials said two staff members suffered minor injuries at Woodland Hills Youth Development Center, where just two days earlier, 32 teens escaped after finding a weak spot in the fence surrounding the yard. Six remained at large Thursday.

On Wednesday night, about 28 teens — some of whom were part of the breakout — kicked out metal panels underneath the windows in a common area to reach the yard. This time, police formed a ring around the center’s perimeter fence to try to prevent another escape.

Video shot by Nashville station WTVF showed teens chasing and assaulting a man who appeared to be a staff member. Photos in The Tennessean newspaper showed teens in the detention center yard carrying sticks. One showed someone spraying a fire extinguisher.

Ten ringleaders were identified and brought to another detention center, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services spokesman Rob Johnson said. The rest were returned to their dorms

This week’s incidents are the latest in a string of troubles for the facility, where most of the 14- to 19-year-olds have committed at least three felonies. The center saw a spike in assaults in 2012 after the state placed older teenagers there from a shuttered facility in eastern Tennessee. Between July and September that year, police had to be called at least 47 times for assistance, which surpassed total police visits for the previous two years combined.

Among the acts of violence listed in police records is a guard trapped in a headlock and repeatedly punched by a young man. Another assault involved four youths ambushing a staff member and beating him until he was rescued by colleagues.

In 2010, the U.S. Department of Justice ranked Woodland Hills as 13th in the country among juvenile facilities with reports of sexual abuse by staffers.

In a 2004 breakout attempt, more than a dozen teens armed with broom handles and hurling bricks injured 16 staffers before they were dispersed by police in riot gear.

On Monday night, teens left their rooms and kicked through the same metal panels used Wednesday before entering the yard and crawling under the fence. Officials had begun repairing and reinforcing the panels and will try to get concrete put at the bottom of the perimeter fence, Tennessee Department of Children’s Services spokesman Rob Johnson said Thursday.

The teens at the center stay in single rooms that are locked on the outside. Only those with keys can enter. But the teens can push the doors open.

The Department of Children’s Services will review that longstanding policy for all three of the state’s juvenile detention centers, Commissioner Jim Henry said. It’s difficult for staff to maintain control when the teens can open doors to enter common areas, he said.

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