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Jamari Dent, Who Tried To Commit Suicide After Merciless Bullying At School, Dies At Age 13

CHICAGO (CBS) -- Jamari Dent, a 13-year-old special needs student who tried to hang himself two years ago after he was mercilessly bullied at school, has died of the brain injury he suffered as a result of his failed suicide attempt.

Family attorney Jon Erickson told the CBS 2 Investigators Jamari, who was 11 years old when he attempted suicide in February 2019, died Thursday night from the anoxic brain injury he suffered at the time.

Thursday night his breathing became irregular. He was rushed to the hospital, but doctors could not revive him.

Now his family's federal lawsuit against Chicago Public Schools has become a wrongful death case.

Jamari was once a student at Medgar Evers Elementary and Carter Woodson Elementary schools.

"The Chicago Public Schools community is saddened to learn of the passing of Jamari Dent and our deepest condolences and sympathies are extended to his loved ones," a CPS spokesperson said in a statement.

Just last week, Jamari's family learned that despite being deaf, blind and on a ventilator, the now 13-year-old had some neurological function. Essentially he has been trapped inside his body since February 2019.

Jamari's attempted suicide two years ago, and a series of Facebook live videos from his hospital room led to an outcry. His mother, Teirra Black, sat down with CBS 2 Investigator Brad Edwards in 2019 to talk about the day everything changed.

Jamari Dent
Jamari Dent's mother says the 11-year-old boy attempted suicide, after school officials ignored repeated bullying by students and teachers. (Photo supplied to CBS)

On Feb. 18, 2019, Jamari pleaded with his mother to let him stay home from school the next day.

"He said 'Mommy, I don't want to go to school tomorrow.' He said, 'I'm tired of them messing with me at that school,'" Black said.

According to a federal lawsuit his family filed against the Chicago Public Schools, Jamari was tired of being called "stupid," "dumb," and "retarded"; of being picked on by students, and singled out by teachers at Carter G. Woodson South Elementary School in the Bronzeville neighborhood.

Attorneys for Jamari's family said classmates corroborate that one of his teachers repeatedly called Jamari "a dirty, stupid n*****," told him he'd "never amount to anything," and called him "dumb, retarded and stupid." They also said fellow students described physical abuse, including a teacher putting the then 11-year-old Jamari in "a chokehold," cutting off his oxygen supply.

Jamari's mom spoke out on several occasions to ask for help and did not get it.

"They were put on notice that this abuse was occurring, but they chose to protect themselves instead of protecting young Jamari," Erickson said.

Black said she asked to have her 4th grade son transferred to another school because of the harassment he faced at Woodson.

"I asked for help, and I didn't get it, and I'm so mad," she said in 2019.

Unbeknownst to anyone, Jamari decided he wasn't going back to school. He went up to his room, stood on a suitcase, and wrapped a red sheet around his neck.

"I started screaming. I'm like, 'Jamari!' I fell to my knees. I said, 'What did you do, Jamari?'" she said.

Black said Jamari and his sister were harassed so much at Woodson, she looked forward to weekends safe from ridicule.

"Every time Friday come, I was relieved that my children didn't have to go to school to endure what was going on at Woodson," she said. "Jamari didn't know how to read. Like, some of the basic words like dog and cat, simple words; he couldn't get it. It's not that he didn't want to learn how to get it, it's that he couldn't get it no matter how much I tried."

"He even cried to me one day," she added. "He was like, 'Mommy, I'm trying. I want to know how to read. I just can't."

Chicago Public Schools officials called the situation a "horrible tragedy."

"The thoughts and prayers of the Chicago Public Schools community are with Jamari and his loved ones. The allegations that have been made are highly concerning, and the district is conducting a full investigation," a CPS spokesperson stated in an email in 2019.

The district previously said it launched an investigation, reached out to Jamari's family to provide support, and deployed crisis assistance resources to students and staff at Woodson. The district cited its anti-bullying policy, saying it does not tolerate bullying or harassment in any form and CPS will hold any adults accountable if it is determined they violated district policy.

According to the lawsuit, Jamari's treatment is part of a larger pattern of abuse against special needs students in the district.

"I crawled into the back seat and was doing chest compressions CPR while his mother was blowing into his mouth," Erickson said. "I don't remember how, but I managed to call 911.

Erickson said with Jamari's death the urgency has escalated because the teachers who allegedly singled Jamari out are all still on the payroll.

The next hearing for the federal lawsuit was scheduled for August, but now lawyers will have to amend the complaint in light of Jamari's death.

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