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Pretrial Procedures

Pretrial Procedures. Transfer hearings Detention Intake Diversion Petition and pretrial release Bail and preventive detention Plea bargaining (adjustment). Transfer to adult court. Transfer, waiver, bindover, removal Concurrent jurisdiction Excluded offenses (traffic, serious)

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Pretrial Procedures

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  1. Pretrial Procedures • Transfer hearings • Detention • Intake • Diversion • Petition and pretrial release • Bail and preventive detention • Plea bargaining (adjustment)

  2. Transfer to adult court • Transfer, waiver, bindover, removal • Concurrent jurisdiction • Excluded offenses (traffic, serious) • Number of excluded offenses has increased • Judicial waiver to adult court

  3. Kent v. U.S. • Waived to adult court, despite requests for a psychiatric evaluation, access to social service file, motions for a hearing • Found guilty in adult court for housebreaking and robbery, not guilty by reason of insanity for rape

  4. Kent v U.S. (1966) • Court ruled that cases of waiver required: • A hearing • Access to counsel and access by counsel to social service records • Reason for the decision

  5. Criteria to be considered • Seriousness of offense • Aggressive or violent • Maturity of juvenile • Record of the juvenile • Public protection • Potential for rehabilitation

  6. Breed v. Jones • Petition filed and he was adjudicated • Found unfit for juvenile court at disposition hearing • Transferred to adult court • Found guilty • U.S. Supreme Court determined that this was double jeopardy (5th amendment

  7. Transfer hearings • Full hearing • Notice • Right to counsel • Statement for reasons

  8. Debate over transfer • Get tough vs. rehabilitation • 1% now transferred (drugs most common) • Cases waived increased in early 1990s, number has now been decreasing

  9. Debate • Waivers do not necessarily increase public protection; result may be the same in both juvenile and adult court • In one study., only 3% of juveniles tried in adult court received longer sentences than they would have received in juvenile court (1996)

  10. Debate • However, in another study those waived to adult court received significantly greater sentences than those retained in juvenile court (1986) • Another problem is that transfers might be motivated by political considerations rather than the case

  11. Debate • One study found that juveniles transferred to adult court no more dangerous than those retained • Transfer decisions not consistent: appears to be racial disparity • Problem of prosecutorial discretion: in some jurisdictions prosecutor makes the decision

  12. Debate • Need for transfer for very serious cases: juvenile justice system not set up to deal with such cases • Juveniles transferred have greater security risks, less swift punishment, lower conviction rates, shorter incarceration, higher recidivism

  13. Detention • Temporary care of youths by the state in a physically restricted facility pending court disposition or transfer to another placement • Shelter care: temporary care in physically unrestricting facilities

  14. Detention • Movement to remove status offenders and dependent/neglected to less secure facilities, such as temporary foster care • 60% of detainees are delinquent • Many status offenders are runaways • Increasing number of drug offenses

  15. Detention • Increase in the use of detention • Majority are detained briefly and released to parents, screened by intake probation officers • No uniform criteria for detention decisions • Race, class and # of parents might have an influence

  16. Detention decision • NCCD recommends that the standards should be: likelihood of new offense, a danger to themselves or community, or likelihood of running away • Most jurisdictions require a detention hearing to extend the period of detention beyond 24 hours

  17. Detention hearing • This hearing should be: • Without delay • Right to notice and counsel • Provision of services

  18. Detaining juveniles in adult jails • More common in rural areas • Risk of victimization • Few services • Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Act amended in 1989 to require states to remove juveniles from adult jails • Not clear how often this happens—most common estimate 100,000/year

  19. Intake • Screening of cases by the juvenile justice system • Decisions: send the youth home, diversion, file a petition, file a petition and detain • Consent decrees and informal probation or informal adjustment

  20. Intake • Considerations: age, offense, prior record, cooperativeness of child and parents, whether the youth can get appropriate services elsewhere • Legal rights? • Intake traditionally handled by juvenile probation • Increased role of the prosecutor

  21. Diversion • Screening out children from the juvenile court without judicial decision • Roots: labeling theory • Common criteria for diversion: nonviolent or status offender, or alcohol or drug problem, age, no serious priors

  22. Diversion • Variety of mechanisms through probation, the court, the prosecutor. Successful participation necessary to avoid court action • In some jurisdictions, 50% of youths are diverted • Net widening

  23. Petition • Filing a petition—can be filed by police, parents, probation, or other social service agency • If the child admits to the allegations, a hearing might be scheduled and a treatment plan developed • Otherwise, adjudication hearing set

  24. Pretrial • Probation does an assessment • Right to notice (youth, counsel and parents) • Continued detention? • No right to bail, because it is a civil proceeding, can be released to parents, detention is supposed to be rehabilitative, not punitive

  25. Bail • Some states do allow for bail for youths • All the problems of the bail system then apply • Without bail, youths have few rights

  26. Preventive detention • Detaining a person because of his/her suspected danger to the community and because he/she might commit more crimes • Can a person be detained for acts he/she has not yet committed? • Supreme Court eventually upheld preventive detention for adults, but it is seldom explicitly applied

  27. Preventive detention • All states do allow for the preventive detention of juveniles, because although adults have a right to liberty, juveniles have a right to custody, and can be detained for their own protection

  28. Schall v. Martin • Detention based on prediction of future behavior not a violation of due process • Must be procedural safeguards, such as notice, a hearing and a statement of facts, before placement in detention

  29. Plea bargaining • Not a part of the juvenile court originally, not seen as necessary because the court was there to help • Increasing role of the prosecutor • Most states have now addressed and regulate the practice, but the amount of regulation varies widely • More formal in urban areas

  30. Plea Bargaining • Considerable debate over whether it should be used in the juvenile system • It appears to be much less common in the JJS as compared to the adult system, but on the increase • Less common because some of the incentives to plea bargain are less important in the juvenile system (I.e. dropping a felony to a misdemeanor)

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