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A comprehensive guide to the structure and processes of the Juvenile Justice system, covering positive and negative aspects, referees vs. judges, petitions, custody orders, detention procedures, and more. Get insights into the legal framework and court proceedings.
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Today’s Agenda Begin unit on Juvenile Justice - We will first seek to understand the structure of the Juvenile justice system - This will lead us to exploring various aspects of the system – positive and negative. Take a vocab sheet. We will have a lecture that covers parts of it, you are responsible for the rest.
Referee vs. Judge • No referee’s in the adult system Ref’s: • Not required to be an attorney • No robe but still is formal • Signs a written report of testimony of the dispositional hearing • Sends recommendations to the judge • Judge then makes a determination, signs making it an order
Referee Review of Findings • May review findings of the referee if; • Judge would have reached a different result if they had heard the case • A clear error of law that would have affected the outcome
Petitions • Complaint or written accusation that the juvenile has committed an offense • Must be verified by oath or affirmation or knowledge of facts stated • Signed and dated declaration • DOB & name are most important items on the petition • Identifies whether or not the judge is overseeing another case with the same juvenile or the family (must be reassigned to another judge)
Tickets • Looks like a traffic ticket (signed by officers) • Can be used like a petition • Cannot be detained with just a ticket • Only the prosecuting attorney can file a petition for a juvenile committing a criminal offense • Exceptions • Status offenses (run away, incorrigible child, truant)
Custody without a Court Order • To acquire physical control of a juvenile • Issue a ticket to appear in court • Accept written promise from parent they will appear • Take juvenile into custody & submit a petition if they are a danger to themselves or others • Parent cannot be located or refuses to take custody of juvenile
Custody with a Court Order • Petition presented to the court and probable cause established • Order to apprehend • Enter premises specified • Detain juvenile until Preliminary Hearing
Physical Custody by Police • Take into custody= arrest • Intake= informal process by which a court determines if a complaint against a juvenile should be referred to juvenile court (referee) • Decision usually made by interviewing the child, seriousness of the charge, criminal record, family situation • Minor= given warning, released to parents, referred to social services • Major= referred to juvenile court • Half of all cases are disposed of at this point
Detention • Detention= court approved removal of juvenile from parental custody • Status offenses (truancy) • Belligerent & open disobedience, defiance wayward minor • Criminal statute offenders • Civil infractions • Delinquent child (juvenile criminal)
Detention cont. • Juvenile under 17 taken into custody • Not be confined in jail, lockup, police station, prison, transport, or mingle with adult criminals • 15 or older & a menace to children • May be placed in jail or other detention facility for adults • By court order, sex crimes, assault or violence • 30 days only • Or as long as it takes to process case • Under 16 while under arrest juvenile must not be • Confined with an adult • No courtroom presence with an adult • Transported with an adult charged with a crime
What If the Courts are not Open? • Temporarily detained w/o a court order • Endangers public safety • Juvenile will most likely commit another crime • Another petition is pending • Violation of probation • Juvenile will not show up to court • Authorized by law • Parents cannot be located • Designated court person (contact person) • Judge, referee, or others when court not open • Counties must provide a facility to detain juvenile • Presumption that every child should go home with parent • Child should not be separated from families unless • Endangers public safety
Statutory Conditions for Removal from Parents • Home conditions • Unexcused failure to appear in court • Runaway • Placed in detention or non-secure facility (drug treatment facility) • Endangerment to public safety
Preliminary Inquiries • Informal review by the court to determine the appropriate action on the petition • Juvenile does not have to be present • Inquiries make up 25% of the cases
Preliminary Hearing • Makes up 75% of cases • State must prove • An offense was committed • Probable cause that the juvenile committed the crime • Attorney assigned • Most likely released into the custody of the parents/guardian • No bail for juveniles • Advise juvenile of rights • Read allegations in petition
Pretrial Hearings • “Let’s Make a Deal” • Guilty pleas go straight to disposition hearing • Motions are filed • No pleading out for assault cases • Choice of judge or jury must be made in writing
Adjudicatory Hearing • Adjudicatory hearing = trial • Determine the facts in the case • Determine if juvenile is delinquent or found to be involved (guilty) or non-delinquent found not to be involved (not guilty) • Names are withheld and closed to the press
Dispositional Hearing • Dispositional hearing=sentencing • What is in the best interest of the state and the welfare of the juvenile • Removal from home must be placed in care=to care received at home • Dispositional options • Group home Community Treatment • State institution Center • Probation restitution • Community service garnishment of wages • Attend school curfew
Post Disposition • Post disposition= release • Victims may appeal • Placed in aftercare=parole • Do not lose civil rights • Juvenile records are sealed
Aftercare • Parole officer • Violation of parole results in another petition and an order to finish sentence • Must report to officer regularly • Drug tests • School grades/attendance • Obeying the orders of the court
Expungement • Obliterate or destroy juvenile records • Generally courts expunge in good faith • MSP must be notified by order of the court • Juvenile must petition court to set aside offenses • Five years after disposition • Five years following release from detention • Individual is at least 24 years old