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Juvenile Status Offenders / Educational Video PSA

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Uploaded by on Jul 11, 2008

Juvenile Status Offenders. Addressing the Needs of Juvenile Status Offenders and Their Families (2007); Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention; Department of Justice; Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention; Producer: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention; Keywords: usdoj.gov; The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), in conjunction with the American Bar Association's Commission on Youth at Risk and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Family and Youth Services Bureau, present "Addressing the Needs of Juvenile Status Offenders and Their Families." OJJDP has released this video that features the programs, practices, and policies that have shown promise in intervening with status offenders to prevent further offending, support their families, and guide them towards a positive future. The purpose of this video is to raise awareness about the issue of juvenile status offenders and the risks they face in becoming more deeply involved in serious risk behavior, offending and the juvenile justice system; and to highlight legislative reforms, policies, programs, and practices around the country that have shown promise in effectively intervening with status offenders and their families, to reduce further offending and steer them toward a positive future. Status offenses are nondelinquent / noncriminal offenses that are considered illegal for underage persons, but not for adults. In 2004, police made 403,800 arrests of persons under the age of 18 for status offenses (about 18% of juvenile arrests made in 2004). On any given day in 2003, approximately 4,800 status offenders were in custody in a juvenile justice facility, accounting for 5% of juvenile offenders in residential placement. Research on the pathways, causes and correlates of delinquency have clearly linked status offending behavior with later delinquency, highlighting the importance of an early, appropriate intervention with these youth. One definition of a juvenile status offense is conduct "illegal only for children." A second is noncriminal misbehavior. Juvenile status offenders are youths of juvenile court age who violate laws that define how young people should behave. These misbehaviors are unlawful for children, but not unlawful for adults. It is the status of childhood that allows children to be the subject of a status offense. Status offenders are habitual truants from school, runaways, or those considered incorrigible or beyond the control of their parents. They can be brought before a juvenile or family court judicial officer since state laws have proscribed these misbehaviors. Adults who drop out of college, drop out of society, or regularly flout their parents' rules or desires cannot be brought before a court. Laws do not ban such adult activities or allow for court sanctioning. Juvenile status offenses also include the violation of a curfew hour that applies only to young people under a certain age. Their presence in a public setting after a certain hour, except when the activity is expressly permitted by a curfew law, subjects them to sanctioning. Another status offense is tobacco use or possession. Adults may smoke, juveniles may not. Alcohol possession or use is a status offense, as well, though this offense requires a partial redefinition. This ban applies to youths above juvenile court age and who are under twenty-one years of age. Adults may drink alcohol; young people under twenty-one may not. Juvenile status offenders are distinguished from juvenile delinquent offenders. Status offenders have not committed an act that would be a crime if committed by an adult; delinquent youths have committed such an act. A theft or robbery by a juvenile is a violation of a criminal statute that applies to juveniles and adults. A juvenile violator is classified as a juvenile delinquent offender. An adult violator is classified as a criminal offender. A theft or robbery is a law violation, not a status offense. A final status offense is gun possession by a minor. Adults may generally possess guns; juveniles may not. However, the use of a gun in the commission of a crime is an offense that applies to juveniles and adults. Juvenile status offenses are distinguished from the child abuse, neglect, and dependency jurisdiction of a juvenile or family court. This type of matter requires judicial system protection for children receiving harmful care. In 1997, status offenses constituted 13 percent of juvenile court case filings nationally, compared with 68 percent for delinquency filings, 15 percent for child-victim filings, and 4 percent for other filings. Creative Commons license: Public Domain

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Uploader Comments (rosaryfilms)

  • good video, thanks for the info

  • CognitiveConsistency, you are welcome!

  • it was great, very informative. Thank you

  • locolobo7778, thank you very much!

  • me and alot of my friends are juvenile offenders its horrible ive been to juvy 4 times for stupid stuff like minor in possession of alcohol which is legal ther is somthng wrong with the system and i like your videos except the ones disinforming people on pot sorry i got so angry

  • nugz540, thank you for sharing your comments.

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All Comments (9)

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  • support sudbury and democratic schools. end compulsory education

  • Why is he in jail??

  • please will someone send me some help for my son.. please

  • This video is good as positive analysis, but as a Youth Rights advocate, I cannot condone the existence of "status offenses", it is a legal double standard and age discrimination. All "status offenses" should be abolished...

  • im going to court for truancy because i missed 45 days out of a 90 day period

    yeah im that lazy

  • your very welcome kind person you

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