1 / 31

Juvenile Justice

Chapter 15. Juvenile Justice. The History of Juvenile Justice. Juvenile justice Originally based on the parens patriae philosophy The modern practice of legally separating adult and juvenile offenders

kshawn
Download Presentation

Juvenile Justice

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 15 Juvenile Justice

  2. The History of Juvenile Justice • Juvenile justice • Originally based on the parens patriae philosophy • The modern practice of legally separating adult and juvenile offenders • Traces back to the development of Elizabethan-era poor laws and the creation of the English chancery court • Poor laws and chancery courts were brought from England to colonial America

  3. The History of Juvenile Justice • Almshouses, Poorhouses, and Workhouses • Local jurisdictions developed these to accommodate dependent youths • The child savers • Influenced state and local governments to create independent correctional institutions to house minors

  4. The History of Juvenile Justice • Reform schools • The first of opened in: • Westboro, MA in 1848 • Rochester, NY in 1849 • Charles Lorring Brace (1853) • New York philanthropist who helped develop the Children’s Aid Society • Placed neglected and delinquent youths in private homes in rural communities

  5. The History of Juvenile Justice • The child savers • Lobbied for an independent, state-supported juvenile court • Their efforts prompted the development of the first comprehensive juvenile court in Illinois in 1899

  6. The History of Juvenile Justice • The “best interests of the child” • The main concern • Not strict adherence to legal doctrine, constitutional rights, or due process of law • Youngsters found delinquent in juvenile court could spend years in a state training school

  7. The History of Juvenile Justice • Juvenile Justice 1960-1980 • The Supreme Court radically altered the juvenile justice system when it issued a series of decisions that established the right of juveniles to receive due process of law • Status offenders • Juvenile Justice 1980-2000 • Public concern • Shift to crime control and punishment

  8. Thinking Point • Juvenile Justice • Do you advocate the shift to a crime control model that occurred in the juvenile justice system after the 1980s? Why or why not? • How does this positively or negatively impact youth?

  9. The History of Juvenile Justice • Juvenile Justice Today • The juvenile justice system has jurisdiction over delinquents and status offenders • Maximum ages • Exclusion of certain types of offenders • More than 450 juvenile drug courts • The juvenile justice system is responsible for processing and treating almost 2 million cases of youthful misbehavior annually

  10. Similarities and Differences Between Juvenile and adult Justice Systems

  11. Chart of Juvenile Justice Case Flow

  12. Police Processing of the Juvenile Offender • Police officers arrest about 1.3 million juveniles each year • Most states do not have specific statutory provisions distinguishing the arrest process for children from that for adults • Police also engage in delinquency prevention efforts

  13. Police Processing of the Juvenile Offender • Use of discretion is based on: • Type and seriousness of the child’s offense • Ability of the parents to be of assistance in disciplining the child • Child’s past contacts with police • Degree of cooperation obtained from the child and parents and their demeanor, attitude, and personal characteristics • Whether the child denies the allegations in the petition and insists on a court hearing

  14. Police Processing of the Juvenile Offender • Legal Rights of Juveniles in Custody • Same Fourth Amendment rights as adults • Generally afforded more protection than adults • Legal Rights in the School Setting • School resource officers • Searching for drugs as per New Jersey v. T.L.O.

  15. The Juvenile Court Process • Juvenile found to have engaged in delinquent or incorrigible behavior: • Police agencies are charged with the decision to release or to detain the child and refer him to juvenile court • Once in custody, a juvenile has the same right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures as an adult does

  16. The Juvenile Court Process • The Intake Process • Review and screening • The Detention Process • There has been an ongoing effort to reform detention • Juvenile Justice Act of 1974 • Legal issues • The most important reform has been the successful effort to remove status offenders from lockups containing delinquents

  17. The Juvenile Court Process • Bail • Parents considered an acceptable substitute to money bail • Plea Bargaining • Before trial, prosecutors in the juvenile courts may attempt to negotiate a settlement to the case

  18. The Juvenile Court Process • A waiver • A practice in which the juvenile court waives its jurisdiction over a juvenile and transfer the case to adult criminal court for trial • In some states, a waiver hearing is held to determine jurisdiction • Waiver of Jurisdiction • Direct file waiver • Excluded offense waiver • Judicial waiver • Reverse waiver • Blended sentencing laws

  19. The Juvenile Court Process • Waiver does not seem to influence crime or recidivism rates • One reason may be that juveniles whose cases are waived to criminal court are sentenced more leniently than they would have been in juvenile court • Although some youths transferred to adult court never spend a day in an adult prison, some become enmeshed in the daily life of an adult correctional facility

  20. The Juvenile Court Process • Risks faced by juveniles in adult court include: • Sexual assault • Suicide • Damage to communities and public safety

  21. Thinking Point • Juveniles and the Adult Court • Given the potentially negative impacts of transfer to adult court of juveniles, do you advocate transfer for most juveniles? • In which circumstances would this be acceptable?

  22. The Juvenile Court Process • Should Youths be Transferred to Adult Court? • Is waiver effective? • Death penalty and life in prison

  23. Thinking Point • Death Penalty and Juveniles • Would you advocate the use of the death penalty for a juvenile under any circumstances? • What would these circumstances be? Defend your position.

  24. The Juvenile Court Process • Adjudication • Initial appearance • Similar to arraignment in the adult system • Trial • Court hears evidence on the allegations • Significance of In re Gault • Disposition and Treatment • Suspended judgment • Probation • Placement in a community treatment program • Commitment

  25. The Juvenile Court Process • There has been an ongoing effort for almost 30 years to deinstitutionalize status offenders (DSO) • Juvenile Sentencing Reform • Least intrusive measures • Remove status offenders • Standardize juvenile dispositions

  26. The Juvenile Correctional Process • Probation • Most common formal sentence • Special rules • Alternative sanctions • Intensive Supervision • Decarceration • Control • Community ties/reintegration • Mixed results

  27. The Juvenile Correctional Process • Institutionalization • State statutes vary when determining the length of the child’s commitment • The number of youths held in some form of incarceration has declined between 2000 and today • Deinstitutionalization • Status offenders

  28. The Juvenile Correctional Process • Aftercare is the final stage of the formal juvenile justice process • Supervision and support • Intensive Aftercare Program (IAP) • Preparing youths for responsibility • Facilitating youth-community interaction • Working with the offender and the community • Developing new resources/support • Monitoring

  29. The Juvenile Correctional Process • Preventing Delinquency • Intervening in young people’s lives before they engage in delinquency in the first place • YMCA, YWCA, Boys and Girls Club

  30. Thinking Point • From your perspective: • How important is a preventive approach (as opposed to a reactionary approach) in the juvenile justice system? • Why is this important? • Should it be more or less important in the juvenile system than the adult system? Defend your position.

  31. The Future of Juvenile Justice • Currently at a crossroads • Ongoing effort to modify the juvenile justice system • Public’s fear of predatory juvenile offenders • Reaction to high profile cases

More Related