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Juvenile Justice

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Juvenile Justice

Historical Development of

Juvenile Justice

From a historical perspective, juvenile

delinquency and a separate justice process for

juveniles are recent concepts.

juvenile delinquency

A special category of offense created for youths—

that is, in most U.S. jurisdictions, persons between

the ages of 7 and 18.

The Development of

Institutions for Youth

In the beginning of the 19th century, American

cities were seeing tremendous growth,

particularly because of immigration and, in later

years, industrialization.

The Houses of Refuge

Houses of refuge were designed to be

institutions where children could be reformed

and turned into hard-working members of the

community.



A child could be committed to a house of

refuge by a constable, by a parent, or on the

order of a city alderman.

The Houses of Refuge

Children in houses of refuge engaged in a daily

regimen of hard work, military drills, and

enforced silence, as well as religious and

academic training.

After “reformation,” boys were frequently

indentured to masters on farms or to tradesmen,

and girls were placed in domestic service.

Probation

Boston shoemaker John Augustus, the “father

of probation,” volunteered in 1841 to provide

bail for and to supervise minor offenders.

The Development of the

Juvenile Court

During the late 1800s, a new groups of

reformers, the child savers, began to advocate

a new institution to deal with youth problems:



The juvenile court.

The Legal Context of the

Juvenile Court

By the late 1800s, legal mechanisms for

treating children differently and separately

from adults were being put in place.

The first juvenile court was established in

1899 in Cook County Illinois

The Legal Context of the

Juvenile Court

• The doctrine of parens patriae served as

the foundation for the juvenile court

parens patriae

The legal philosophy justifying state intervention in

the lives of children when their parents are unable or

unwilling to protect them.

The Legal Reform Years:

In re Gault

In the landmark case, In re Gault (1967), the

U.S. Supreme Court gave juveniles a number

of due process protections:

• The right against self-incrimination

• A right to adequate notice of charges against them

• A right to confront and to cross-examine their

accusers

continued…

The Legal Reform Years:

In re Gault



• The right to assistance of counsel

• The right to sworn testimony and appeal

The Legal Reform Years:

The Juvenile Court After Gault

The court’s ruling in Gault and other cases not

only increased procedural formality in

juvenile court cases, but also shifted the

traditional focus from the “whole child” to the

child’s act.

From there, it was a short step to offense-

based sentencing and punitive orientation.

The Legal Reform Years:

The Juvenile Court After Gault

Juvenile court procedures are still

characterized by an informality that most

people would find unacceptable if it were

applied to adults in criminal court.

The Formal Juvenile Justice

Process

The police represent the primary gatekeepers

to the formal juvenile justice process.

• 85 percent of delinquency cases referred to

the juvenile courts come from police

agencies.

• Status offenses are often referred by others.

status offenses

Acts that are not crimes when committed by adults

but are illegal for children (for example, truancy or

running away from home).

The Police Response to Juveniles

Typical responses that police officers employ

in handling juvenile cases are:

• Warn and release

• Refer to parents

• Refer to a diversionary program operated by

the police or another community agency

• Refer to court

Trends in Police Processing of

Juveniles

In recent years, there has been a trend toward

more formal processing of juveniles taken into

police custody, particularly:

• Referring more youths to juvenile court

• Handling fewer cases within police

departments

• Referring more cases to criminal courts

Diversion

The goal of juvenile diversion programs is to

respond to youths in ways that avoid formal

juvenile justice processing.



Diversion usually occurs before adjudication.

Diversion

Diversion programs are based on the

understanding that formal responses to youths

who violate the law do not always protect the

best interests of children or the community.

Detention

Sometimes a youth is held in secure detention

facility during processing. There are three

primary reasons for this practice:

1. To protect the community from the

juveniles

2. To ensure that the juvenile appears at a

subsequent stage of processing

3. To secure the juvenile’s own safety

Intake Screening

When the decision to arrest a youth is made,

or a social agency such as a school alleges

that an offense has occurred, the next step in

the juvenile justice process is intake

screening.

intake screening

The process by which decisions are made about the

continued processing of juvenile cases. Decisions

might include dismissing the case, referring the youth

to a diversion program, or filing a petition.

Transfer, Waiver, or

Certification to Criminal Court

Since the early days of the juvenile court,

state legislatures have given juvenile court

judges statutory authority to transfer certain

juvenile offenders to criminal court.

transfer

The act or process by which juveniles who meet

specific age, offense, and (in some jurisdictions)

prior-record criteria are transferred to criminal court

for trial; sometimes called waiver or certification.

The Adjudication Hearing

When a petition is filed at intake and the case

is not transferred to criminal court, the next

step is adjudication. Preliminary steps include:

• Filing a petition

• Setting a hearing date

• Notifying the necessary parties—the youth,

the parents, and witnesses

The Adjudication Hearing

When charges specified in the petition are

contested by a juvenile and the juvenile is

represented by an attorney, another critical

event often takes place before adjudication:



• a plea bargain

The Adjudication Hearing

There are two types of adjudications:

Contested Uncontested

Similar to a trial. A brief hearing in

Usually a bench which the youth

adjudication, not a admits the charges.

jury trial

Disposition

Disposition is the juvenile court equivalent of

sentencing in criminal court.

Disposition

An order of the court specifying what is to be done

with a juvenile who has been adjudicated delinquent.

A disposition hearing is similar to a sentencing

hearing in criminal court.

Disposition

Some of the options available are:

• Probation

• Placement in a diversion program

• Restitution

• Community service

• Detention

• Placement in foster care

continued…

Disposition

• Placement in a long-term or short-term

residential treatment program

• Placement with a relative

• Placement with the state for commitment to

a state facility

• Or a combination of the above

Disposition

Because of recent heightened concerns about

violent juvenile offenders, many states have

legislatively redefined the juvenile court’s

mission by deemphasizing the goal of

rehabilitation and stressing the need for public

safety, punishment, and accountability.

Disposition

The philosophical focus has also changed

from offender-based dispositions to offense-

based dispositions, including:

• Blended sentences—both juvenile and adult

sanctions

• Mandatory minimum sentences for specific types

of offenders

• Extension of juvenile court dispositions beyond

the offender’s age of majority

1) Probation

Probation is the most frequently used

correctional response for youths who are

adjudicated delinquent in juvenile courts.

Probation

Probation officers usually perform four

important roles in the juvenile justice process:

• Performing the intake screening

• Conducting presentence investigations

• Supervising offenders

• Providing assistance to youths placed on

probation

Probation

A recent trend in juvenile probation is the

development of intensive-supervision

(probation) programs, which in some

jurisdictions involve home confinement.

2) Restitution

In practice, there are three types of restitution:

• Monetary restitution—The youth pays cash

to the victim for harm done.

• Victim-service restitution—The youth

provides some service to the victim.

• Community-service restitution—The youth

provides assistance to a community

organization.

2) Wilderness Probation

Programs

Wilderness probation programs involve

youths in a physically and sometimes

emotionally challenging outdoor experience

intended to help them:

• Develop confidence in themselves

• Learn to accept responsibility for themselves and others

• Develop a relationship of trust with program staff

3) Day Treatment Programs

Day treatment programs provide treatment or

services during the day and allow youths to

return home at night.

It is believed that they are:

• Cost-effective

• Effective at protecting the community

• Can provide a range of services

4) Foster Homes

Foster homes are out-of-home placements

intended to resemble, as much as possible, a

family setting. It is usually used by a court when

a youth’s home life has been particularly chaotic

or harmful.

5 )Group Homes

Group homes are open, nonsecure

community-based facilities used either as an

alternative to incarceration or to help youths

transition to home.

Group homes are generally larger than foster

homes, less impersonal than institutions, and

less expensive than institutional placements.

6) Juvenile Correctional

Institutions

Institutional programs are the most restrictive

placements available to juvenile courts.

However, juvenile institutions vary in the

extent to which they focus on custody and

control.

Juvenile Correctional Institutions

Secure facilities employ: Open facilities:

• perimeter fencing • have no perimeter

• barbed wire fencing

• surveillance devices • Leave entrances and

• monitoring of residents’ exits unlocked

movements • rely heavily on staff

• restricting residents’

access to the community

Juvenile Correctional Institutions

Juvenile correctional institutions vary:

• Some are public, some are private

• Many are small—40 residents—some house as

many as 800 residents

• Some are co-ed

• Detention centers and diagnostic centers are

designed for short-term stays



continued…

Juvenile Correctional Institutions

• Farms, ranches, forestry camps, and trainings

schools are for long-term placements

• Types of programming and quality of care



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