Juvenile Justice System Essay

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    Juvenile Rehabilitation

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    The United States has been sentences more juveniles to unsafe and violent prisons over the years. Juveniles are being sentenced as young as ten-year-old. Juveniles are being tried as adults in courts and something must change, and it needs to change fast. The younger generation is supposed to be our future leaders. A juvenile being tried as an adult is a harsh sentence. Over 5,000 juveniles are being tried and sentence to prison every year. The United States need to step in and change the way how

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    Raven Leal Ms. Huber AP Lang/Comp 6 6 March 2015 Juveniles Should Be Tried in Adult Court Kenzie Houk had everything going for her. She was twenty-six, engaged to the love of her life, and was eight-and-a-half months pregnant. In the late winter of 2009, her four-year-old daughter waddled in her bedroom, hoping to surprise her mommy with a good morning smile. Instead, she found her mother with a bullet through her head. Eleven-year-old Jordan Brown, the soon-to-be stepson of Kenzie Houk, was arrested

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    school-to-prison pipeline as well as the zero-tolerance policy in respects to one another. The Zero-tolerance policy reflects that the school system is tough on crime. This increases the rates in which youth become criminalized at alarming rates than needed. “More minor offenses (or no offenses at all) are now processed formally by the police and the juvenile court.” (Sheldon, 2006) Examples include: (1) A five-year prison sentence for a 17-year old Texas high school basketball player who “threw an

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    punishment has been argued and the Juvenile Justice System is being blamed. Children who deserve real punishment are receiving rehab and children who deserve rehab are receiving harsh punishment. Many children’s lives are getting ruined because of unnecessary harsh punishment. Some juvenile offenders are not learning their lesson. The article “Sentences Show Acknowledge Juveniles’ Maturity, and Immaturity,” by Laurence Steinburg and the article, “Remember the Victims of Juvenile Offenders,” by Jenifer Bishop-Jenkins

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    Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention found that high numbers of detention orders were being issued for status youth statewide. The main issue of concern was the valid court order exception to the DSO core requirement was used 2,000 times. This allowed judges to order non-delinquent youth in locked detention facility whose most serious violations involved repeat offenses of running away, skipping school or being rebelling against authority figures. The disturbing thing about this

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    Juvenile justice is the area of criminal law applicable to persons not old enough to be held responsible for criminal acts (US Legal, 2015). Until the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in 1967 in In re Gault. The juvenile court system did now have legal constitutional rights. During the late 1980’s and early 1990’s there were more serious crimes starting to happen, and this is where the traditional emphasis on rehabilitation began to fade away and the justice system began to move more in the direction

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    disproportionately represented throughout juvenile justice systems in nearly every state in the nation. Disproportionate minority contact (DMC) in juvenile justice occurs when minority youth come into contact with the system at a higher rate than their white counterparts. African-Americans, Hispanics, Asians, Pacific Islanders and Native Americans comprise a combined one-third of the nation's youth population. Yet they account for over two-thirds of the youth in secure juvenile facilities (Armour & Hammond,

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    A juvenile or “youthful inmate” as defined by the Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003 (PREA) is any person under the age of eighteen who is under adult-court supervision and incarcerated or detained in a prison or jail. While PREA defines a juvenile as under the age of eighteen the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 (JJDPA) allows the states to set their own definition of a juvenile (Lahey). This discrepancy in the definition of a juvenile has caused problems and slow progress

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    Juvenile Justice Centers are secure prisons or jails for minors under the age of 18. Many say they do not help and potentially lead to a more damaged teen who was better before getting in there, but is this really the case? Some of these facilities have great programs that can teach these minors how to act and have a good character when they get out. Juvenile Justice Centers are beneficial to the inmates because they can teach important character traits and sets the inmates up for a future most thought

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    The Juvenile System has been around for a long time. The primary reason behind separating Juvenile from adult criminals is quite simple; the judicial system believes that the children are less culpable for their irresponsive behavior and they could easily be reformed as compared to adult offenders. The crucial role of the judicial system is to critically investigate, diagnose, and recommend treatments for the Juveniles rather than accrediting them. However, because of the increasing number of juvenile

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