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Published byLoren Powers Modified over 8 years ago
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Chapter 16: Part 2
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Procedures in Juvenile Court Custody: Juveniles can be taken into custody for criminal and status offenses ○ Running away, truancy, promiscuity, disobeying parents Police can detain or release Intake Informal process by which court officials or social workers decide if a complaint should be referred to juvenile court 1/3 of all juvenile complaints are disposed at intake Diverted Juveniles can receive educational services or treatment without going through juvenile court
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Initial Hearing Preliminary examination of the validity of a youth’s arrest and detention Must prove that an offense was committed and the youth did it Decisions must be made about further detention, legal representation, and a date for a hearing
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Preventive Detention Holding a juvenile against his or her will without bail until trial because of the likelihood that the youth will commit another crime Supreme Court has held that juveniles do not have a constitutional right to bail
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Adjudicatory Hearing Procedure used to determine the facts in a juvenile case Closed to the public Names of the accused and details of the offense are held from the press Few states provide juries for juvenile trial ○ Pennsylvania does not ○ Kansas does
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Adjudicatory cont’d Juvenile can have representation by an attorney Attorney can examine and cross- examine witnesses Judge can find the juvenile: Nondelinquent (not guilty) Delinquent (guilty)
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Dispositional Hearing Judge decides what sentence the offender should receive Based primarily on a predisposition report prepared by the probation department ○ Social, psychological, family, and school background Courts are supposed to provide for the individualized treatment geared toward rehabilitating the offender Balance the needs of the offender against the obligation to protect the community Probation, community service, fines, restitution, placement in a treatment program or institution
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Probation Most common disposition Attend school regularly Hold a steady job Attend counseling Take drug tests Curfew (home by 8pm) Stay away from certain people Meet with a probation officer regularly
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Serious juvenile offenders Juvenile institution Indeterminate length of time One to three years is usual maximum Problems: Overcrowding Lack of mental health, substance abuse services, safety and security issues, due process, health care, and abuse of children Females 30% in custody and 15% institutionalized
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Postdisposition Aftercare Equivalent of parole in adult system Supervision by an adult officer who counsels the juvenile on education, jobs, vocational training etc… Transition back to school ○ Many juveniles have had academic difficulty and when no program is available, likelihood of re-offending is very high ○ Alternative education
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Affects of Juvenile Record A juvenile can say they have not been convicted of crime However, information can become public record later Juvenile record is available if arrested later as an adult Expunged Juvenile records are sealed or destroyed when a juvenile reaches 18 or 21 Usually have to officially request it Mush have years of a clean record and go before a judge (5 years depending on crime) No further crimes have been committed
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