Laborers-LIUNA Frank Caruso Jr. Transferred To Halfway House, Victim Suffers Brain Damage
The Associated Press State & Local Wire
April 21, 2000
One Of Attackers Of Black Teen Transferred To Halfway House
DATELINE: CHICAGO
Three years after beating a black teen-ager into a coma, a white Chicago man has
been transferred from prison into an Urbana halfway house where there are no
fences or armed guards.
Frank Caruso Jr., 21, who was sentenced to eight years in prison for the
racially motivated attack of Leonard Clark, was transferred April 5 from the
Sheridan Correctional Center in LaSalle County to the Adult Transitional Center.
Caruso, who is eligible for parole in 2002 if he behaves, qualified for the
transfer because he has less than two years remaining in his sentence, prison
officials said. Also, the crimes for which he was convicted - aggravated battery
and a hate crime - do not disqualify him from living in a halfway house,
according to prison regulations.
"The bottom line is that we treat this kid just like everybody else," said Nick
Howell, a spokesman for the Illinois Department of Corrections. Like others at
the facility, Caruso can leave for work or school. Howell said Caruso is looking
for a job.
Clark was attacked in 1997 by a group of white teen-agers, including Caruso, as
Clark rode his bicycle through a predominantly white neighborhood on the city's
South Side. The attack focused attention on the city's lingering racial
tensions, made national headlines and was condemned by President Clinton in a
national radio address.
Caruso was convicted by a jury and sentenced to prison in 1998. Two other white
teen-agers pleaded guilty and received probation.
Clark, who was 13 at the time of the attack, regained consciousness. But he
continues to suffer brain damage as a result of the beating.
In January, Clark visited Caruso in prison, and even posed for a photograph with
him.