Minutes later, the sound of shattered glass rang out in the hallway. The same staff members rushed back in to restrain the boy, who was “exhibiting aggressive behavior.” As one staff member held his legs, another began punching him in the ribs, reports say.

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“Get off me, I can’t breathe,” the boy said through gasps.

Then he stopped moving.

At 9:51 p.m., a little more than an hour after the initial confrontation, medics pronounced him dead in his room.

Details of the Oct. 13 incident were revealed Wednesday in documents from the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services, as reported by the Philadelphia Inquirer. State inspectors alleged in several violation reports that the staff members unreasonably searched the boy’s room before beating and abusing him.

Now, as a result of the investigation, the department has revoked Wordsworth’s license and ordered it to close its residential treatment program. A letter from the department this week says Wordsworth failed to comply with regulations and exhibited “gross incompetence, negligence and misconduct,” according to NBC10.

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Wordsworth officials said they were cooperating with police and inspectors.

“We are saddened by the death of our resident in our facility and are devastated by the allegations brought against us,” Wordsworth said in a statement Wednesday. “We remain committed to our mission.”

Founded in 1952, Wordsworth operates three facilities in northeast Pennsylvania, treating youths and young adults who have behavioral, emotional and academic problems. The west Philadelphia facility housed 82 residents before it was ordered to close, all of whom were described by inspectors as having mental illnesses. The majority of them, 62 residents, are between 14 and 17 years old, reports show.

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Accounts vary about what happened at the facility the night of Oct. 13. At the time, police said the 17-year-old barricaded his door after staff members came searching for the stolen iPod. When they tried to stop him, the boy started striking them, leading one staff member to put him in a headlock, WPVI reported.

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The documents posted by the Inquirer on Wednesday tell a slightly different story.

After searching his room, staff members heard glass breaking and found the boy — referred to only as “Child #1″ — behaving aggressively, according to the main violation report from the Department of Human Services. As they tried to restrain him, one staff member held his legs while another “was observed throwing punches at the ribs of Child #1,” the report says.

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Some children stood in the hallway and listened to the altercation, inspectors said.

“I can take this, that’s the only thing you got, give me more. I eat those and I can take those,” the boy yelled, according to the report.

At some point, the report says, the boy began gasping for breath, yelling “get off me” and “I can’t breathe” before he stopped moving.

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“Then everything went silent,” the report says.

The report does not name any of the staff members. Police have not charged anyone in the boy’s death and a medical examiner has not determined a cause, according to the Inquirer.

The reports also cited the facility for numerous other violations, including unsanitary flooring, broken heat and air conditioners, exposed electrical wires and holes in the walls.

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All of the residents must now be relocated, NBC10 reported.

Gwen Timmons, who identified herself as the mother of a 10-year-old boy at the facility, told CBS that the 17-year-old’s death left her rattled.

“I think this may have been a fluke accident,” Timmons said, “but this is still unacceptable.”