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National Institute of Corrections criticizes transfers of youths to the adult justice system |
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Thursday, 26 January 2012 10:24 |
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By Zach Rausnitz for Fierce Homeland Security
Youth transferred to the adult corrections system recidivate at a higher rate than those kept in the juvenile justice system, and the adult system struggles to keep youth safe and provide them appropriate services, according to a December 2011 report (.pdf) from the National Institute of Corrections.
The findings stem from a June 2010 meeting where NIC convened three dozen juvenile justice and adult corrections experts.
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'Policing Chicago Schools': Report Suggests In-School Officers Put Teens On Road To Prison |
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Thursday, 26 January 2012 10:15 |
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By Lizzie Schiffman for the Huffington Post
CHICAGO -- As Chicago Public Schools have become increasingly dependent on the police department to control student behavior on school grounds, a disproportionately high number of black juveniles are being thrust into the criminal justice system too early and too easily, according to data from a new report issued Wednesday by the Chicago youth advocacy group Project NIA.
The group analyzed Chicago Police Department arrest data and found that 20 percent of all juvenile arrests in 2010 took place on school grounds. Nearly one-third of those arrests were for simple battery charges -- offenses that in previous years would have been written off as schoolyard skirmishes and punished with suspensions or other penalties doled out by the school.
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Fight brewing over historic California plan to close last three youth prisons |
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Wednesday, 25 January 2012 11:41 |
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By Susan Ferriss for iWatchNews.org
California, often a trendsetter, could make history if it approves Gov. Jerry Brown’s bid to close all state-run youth prisons and eliminate its state Division of Juvenile Justice.
Much depends, though, on whether the state’s politically influential prison guards, probation officers and district attorneys can be convinced — or forced by legislators — to agree to Brown’s proposal. That won’t be an easy sell, due to both public-safety arguments and sure-to-surface haggling over just who pays to house juvenile offenders.
Vowing to restructure government more efficiently, Brown, a Democrat, wants to close the last three of 11 youth prisons that have long been attacked by critics as “expensive failures.” If the state phases out the last three of its aging detention centers, all future young offenders would be held, schooled and treated by California’s 58 counties.
This is the second time since taking office last year that Brown has proposed closing the state juvenile division, which is part of its corrections system. The division’s responsibility has already been slashed dramatically from 10,000 wards in the mid-1990s to about 1,100 in state custody today. Their numbers may be few, but the cost for keeping those youth in state custody runs about $200,000-a-year for every ward.
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Hundreds Turn Out to Oppose Massive LA
County Jail Expansion |
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Wednesday, 25 January 2012 11:31 |
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From Youth Justice Coalition
Los Angeles— Over two hundred community members showed an enthusiastic display of opposition to the Board of Supervisors and Sheriff Department’s move to expand LA County’s jails. After noting much community pressure, the Supervisors immediately backed down from the $1.4 billion dollar expansion
plan that Sheriff Baca proposed in October. While the supervisors did not decide to withdraw the county’s application for state AB 900 Phase 2 jail construction funding, they did slow the pace on the commissioning of a $5.7 million report on possible jail expansion.
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2012 School-to-Prison Pipeline Regional Action Camps |
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Tuesday, 24 January 2012 15:25 |
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The overuse of harsh zero-tolerance measures, police, and juvenile courts in addressing school disciplinary issues has led to the needless pushout and criminalization of countless youth across America. In response, a growing national movement has emerged to dismantle this School-to-Prison Pipeline. This grassroots-led effort has already achieved important victories, and the momentum for change is building, but there is much more to be done.
We invite you to join with youth and adult advocates from across the country at one of the 2012 School-to-Prison Pipeline Regional ActionCamps.
Western Region - Los Angeles, CA February 10-12
Southern Region - Raleigh/Durham, NC March 2-4
Midwestern Region - Chicago, IL April 13-15
Northeastern Region - New York, NY June 1-3
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Georgia eyes ways to keep teens out of lockup |
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Monday, 23 January 2012 13:16 |
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By Joy Lukachick for FreePressTimes.com
The repeated detention of teens and adolescents for breaking noncriminal rules puts Georgia at risk of losing $2 million in federal funds, local experts say.
Georgia law allows adolescents who wind up in the juvenile court system for infractions such as skipping school or missing curfew to be treated similar to juveniles who commit crimes and are locked in detention centers, said Dr. Sandra Stone, vice president of academic affairs at Dalton State and a researcher on juvenile justice reform.
But federal law says juveniles who obey court orders shouldn't be locked up but dealt with through other means.
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Illinois official urges juvenile justice reform |
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Friday, 20 January 2012 10:41 |
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By Frank Boyett for theGleaner.com
George Timberlake retired five years ago as an Illinois judge, and now he's convinced he was doing it all wrong.
"I put kids in jail at a higher rate than almost anybody," he told the Henderson Rotary Club on Thursday. "I thought that was the right way to do things."
But when he "turned around and looked at what I had been doing," he said, he came to the conclusion that "we were just greasing the skids" for youngsters' path downhill to adult prison.
When it comes to kids, he said, "jail doesn't help. There is no evidence that ... incarceration changes behavior. None." The key instead, he said, is to evaluate the kid's risk of fleeing the jurisdiction or not appearing in court when sentencing jail time.
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Anti-gang grant bill has wide support |
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Friday, 20 January 2012 10:22 |
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By Mike Faulk for Tricity-Herald.com
YAKIMA, WA -- A Democratic proposal for a statewide, anti-gang grant program is enjoying bipartisan support heading into a public hearing in the House next week.
House Bill 2432 would have the state Partnership Council on Juvenile Justice award grants locally to fund projects focused on criminal street gang prevention and intervention. The bill calls for $5 million from the general fund and up to $1 million generated by the Attorney General's office from settlements, civil penalties and recoveries from lawsuits.
The Partnership Council is a public/private effort under the state Department of Social and Health Services.
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County sets aside $600K for juvenile-justice system |
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Friday, 20 January 2012 10:20 |
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By Beth Brastos for The Daily Iowan
Johnson County officials said they're worried minority youth are running into legal issues at a higher rate than their white peers.
The county has set aside $600,000 for the Juvenile Justice and Youth Development Program. The county is now accepting applications for projects to use that money.
Supervisor Terrence Neuzil — who is assigned to a county committee in charge of the Juvenile Justice and Youth Development Program — said he wants the committee to focus this year on addressing the disproportionate number of minority children in contact with law enforcement.
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