Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKathy Dennington Modified over 9 years ago
1
Poverty Law 2 CHIPS
2
2 Court System District Court Trial Court Some “specialty” courts including Family Court Drug Court Juvenile Court Housing Court
3
3 Juvenile Court: What Types of Cases? Delinquency, Including petty offenses Child Protection Matters Child in Need of Protection or Services (CHIPS) Including Truancy/Runaway Permanency Termination of Parental Rights Adoption Transfer of Legal Custody
4
4 Statute 260 JUVENILE COURT; CHILD PLACEMENT; COMPACTS 260A TRUANCY 260B DELINQUENCY 260C JUVENILE SAFETY AND PLACEMENT 260D CHILD IN VOLUNTARY FOSTER CARE FOR TREATMENT
5
5 Rules Rules of Juvenile Court Procedure
6
72 hour holds Peace officer can put a child on a 72 hour hold if the: Child is found in surroundings or conditions which endanger the child’s health or welfare or the peace office reasonably believes will endanger the child’s health or welfare. Minn. Stat. 260C.175 Adjunct Professor Monica Bogucki Copyright 2013
7
Order to Show Cause
8
Flow Chart
9
9 Juvenile Court CHIPS Matters Who initiates (drafts and files) a child protection proceeding? Generally, the county attorney After a report of maltreatment Investigation Determination of need for services Voluntary services won’t work Any responsible person Truancy/Runaway by citation
10
10 Fact finding Burden of Proof Clear and convincing Paramount consideration “the health, safety, and best interests of the child.”
11
Children’s Justice Initiative Judge’s Benchbook Also located on the State of Minnesota Supreme Court website Court forms www.mncourts.govwww.mncourts.gov Children’s Justice Initiative: http://www.mncourts.gov/?page=148 Adjunct Professor Monica Bogucki Copyright 2013
12
CHIPS petitions Court forms: www.mncourts.gov www.mncourts.gov Adjunct Professor Monica Bogucki Copyright 2013
13
CHIPS EXERCISES Adjunct Professor Monica Bogucki Copyright 2013
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.