Juveniles Essay

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    Juvenile Justice Answers

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    can reduce previous juvenile offenders in taking drugs or alcohol. Angry management training can help juveniles control their angry, and give them better ways of communication, examples would be writing or use poetry to express their feelings. Curfews can make sure juveniles cannot be influence by their peers for long period of time after school, or work. Probation can make sure juveniles attend school, work, treatment, and attend their community service. 8. Why can juveniles be detained prior to

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    Juvenile Age Criteria

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    old boy was arrested as a suspect in a fatal shooting (“Juvenile Crime”, 2015). Headlines like these are becoming more frequent in today’s news media. In 2010, juvenile courts disposed of more than 1.3 million delinquency cases. In addition, juveniles were involved in 8% of all homicides committed that year (Sickmund and Puzzanchera, 2014.). With the juvenile population projected with steady growth throughout the 21st century, increasing juvenile crime continues to challenge the criminal justice system

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    I. What qualifies a juvenile for transfer? According to the Office of Juvenile Justice Delinquency and Prevention (OJJDP) (n.d.), there are three ways juveniles are transferred to the adult criminal court; judicial waiver (which is most common), statutory exclusion, and direct file. Through judicial waver a juvenile court judge transfers the juvenile to the adult court and at that time the juvenile is denied the protection that juvenile jurisdictions provide. The crime committed must be egregious

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    To release or detain a juvenile is one of the most critical stages in the juvenile court process. The impact of release or detention can have a lasting effect not only on the juvenile delinquent’s life, but also the victim, the criminal justice system and the community at large. The release or detain stage is the gateway into the juvenile court process that could easily motivate or deter further delinquency. “Most children taken into custody by the police are released to their parents or guardians”

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    Juvenile Delinquency When looking into the history of United States and elsewhere juvenile delinquency is a problem and has been one for over a century. Like other systems in place, the system involving juvenile delinquents has gone through many stages. In the case of the juvenile delinquency, it has gone through four stages, with us presently in the fourth. The causes behind juvenile delinquency are still unknown even today. Some blame it on the current culture, the over-exposure to violence

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    Juveniles Commit Crimes

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    misunderstanding or that brain disorder excuse the cause of violent crimes such as murder,shoplifting,and selling drugs. Juveniles should be convicted as adults for violent crimes because they chose to commit these crimes also teens should know what is right from wrong. When juveniles commit crimes juveniles don't think about the consequences that juveniles can suffer from when juveniles commit this adult acts. Massive loss of brain tissue occurs in the teen years,according to Paul Thompson he explains

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    Essay Juvenile Delinquency

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    Main Post: Juvenile delinquency is a problem that affects society as a whole. Understanding Juvenile delinquency is important because it is part of trying to figure out how people in American society should react to it; specifically, in terms of law enforcement officers, their agencies, and State legislators. When deviant behavior becomes "continuous, chronic and widespread it gets perceived as a significant part of the population as threatening to the general well-being of society" (Thompson

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    Charging Juveniles as Adults (Peer Review) In the United States, “an estimated 7,100 juvenile defendants were charged with felonies in adult criminal court in 1998” ("Juvenile Defendants"). These numbers portray how there were a lot of juveniles being charged. In addition to a large increase in the amount of crime, there was a change in the severity of the crimes that were committed, “the number of violent crimes committed by young people declined substantially from the 1990s to 2003, but then surged

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    Being A Juvenile Officer

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    return to jail and live a better life. Juvenile officers are officers that deals with young adult below 18 and some other state 20 or 19 years of age state various. Juvenile officer’s duty is to focus on young adult rehabilitation more than the adult prisoners. What this means is the officers is mentoring the young adults that commit whatever crime that they commit and got arrested for. While there are mentoring

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    Essay on Juvenile Justice

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    Portfolio on Juvenile Status Offenders A juvenile status offender is a youth charged with an offense that is not consider a crime if committed by an adult; this would include but not limited to running away from home, curfew violations, underage drinking, skipping school, or beyond a parents control. Status offenders are usually not incarcerated on their first offense, but violating a court order can find them as delinquent who can result in being place in a correction or detention facility.

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