School officials did nothing wrong last year when a Brooklyn special-needs student went missing under their watch last year, investigators said Wednesday.
Special Schools Investigator Richard Condon said he "did not find any misconduct" when 15-year-old Nashaly Perez vanished for three days from PS 371, and recommended no penalties against school staff.

Rodriguez was found at a 13-year-old friends house.Photo: AP
Condon concluded that staffers who saw Perez leaving acted properly by questioning her, without using physical force to stop her.
Perez, carrying her gym bag, left the school with three other students at 1 p.m. on Sept. 15.
When her mom, Sandra Rodriguez, came to pick her up, she was told Perez had left with friends because other students had threatened to "jump her," according to Condon's report.
Police found Perez at a 13-year-old friend's house three days later, after the friend's mother saw a news report about the missing teen and called the cops.
Principal Joan Antonelli was reassigned to an administrative post following Perez's disappearance, but has since returned to her old job.
City Council members cited the incident as another reason to add alarms to special-needs schools.
Queens student Avonte Oquendo wandered away from his school in October 2013 and was found dead three months later.
Department of Education spokeswoman Devora Kaye said that the investigation showed school staff "followed protocol."
The city is expected to issue its report on equipping schools with alarms on May 30.
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