The brains of adolescents are still maturing and lack decision-making abilities, thought processing and the ability to understand the consequences of their actions.…
The article “Kids Are Kids Until They Commit Crimes” by Marjie Lundstrom talks about how you see kids as sweet and nice but until they commit crimes you see the dark side of them. In paragraph Five it says that “ … The bigger the crime , the more eager we are to call them adults”(“ Kids are Kids..”paragraph 5). Kids As Twelve years old can go to jail for Life for doing a crime that they didn’t think it was going to be. Here's an example in paragraph 11 it states “ On March 9, Lionel Tate who was 12 when he savagely beat to death a six year old girl”(“Kids are Kids..…
Prosecuting Juveniles Intro: It was a frigid morning in February 2009 in Wampum, Pennsylvania when cops found Kenzie Houk dead with a single gunshot wound to through her brain. She was nearly nine months pregnant. In a shocking twist the murderer turned out to be the eleven year old Jordan Brown, her fiance’s son.…
Your paper contains a lot of information that I was not aware of about the justice system for juvenile offenders. I was surprised at how information was available from your three sources. The main area that I was not sure about was your thesis statement. By standards, it should be the last sentence or couple of sentences to your first paragraph.…
The Development of Juvenile Justice is a response to youth who committed crimes is split between two desires, the focus on rehabilitation and intervention and on the other side of the extreme is punishment, the want to care for the public good rather than the delinquent with a more punitive hand. In Rethinking Juvenile Justice, Elizabeth S. Scott and Laurence Steinberg have wrote about this issue. The two authors start at the legal framework for youth justice in the United States and how it developed with foresight and clear evidence. Making policies on moment emotion rather with logic and analyzed information.…
Juvenile crime has been an increasing point of debate in recent years. Many people argued whether they should be sentenced as adults or not when convicted of a serious crime, such as murder. Some argue that juveniles deserve to be treated as such despite the crime they have committed, while others believe they are to be treated as adults. This resulted in many juveniles receiving adult sentences like life in prison without parole. Some juveniles commit crimes without a thought of the risks, while some carefully plan out their crimes and get a serious thrill out of it.…
Adolescence are in a unique time in their lives. They have characteristics of children and characteristics of adults. So, when evaluating whether or not an adolescent should remain in juvenile court or move to adult court, it can be a very difficult decision. Look at adolescents and crime, we know that adolescents are still developing. They have weaker impulse control and are less likely to think ahead than adults.…
Paul Thompson wrote article “Startling Finds on Teenage Brains,” and he provides scientific evidence that judges should see when sentencing juveniles, “A massive loss of brain tissue that occurs in the teenage years, the loss was like a wildfire... Gary Matter, which brain researchers believe supports all our thinking and emotions, is purged at a rate of 1 percent to 2…
The House of Refuge in New York, which opened in 1824, was the first adolescent place of change in the United States. This was the first endeavor to house adolescent guilty parties in a different office and different States, as Maryland, would soon go with the same pattern. In 1899, Cook County in the State of Illinois built up the first adolescent court. Inside of 30 years, basically the greater part of the states had set up adolescent courts.…
Ethics is a branch of philosophy that questions the wrong and right behavior. We judge people based on ethics. Ethics help us make a judgment in a situation with moral issues. The juvenile system was developed in the industrial revolution period when the children started entering the workplace. The juvenile justice system has been dealing with ethical issues since so many years.…
The United States juvenile court system has come a long way throughout the years. There has been many significant cases in the juvenile system that set the standard for what the system is now. Cases such as Kent vs. United States, In re Gault, and In re Winship are examples of major cases that challenged state rulings and later changed the technicalities of future, similar cases because they called upon the Supreme Court to change or state the rules. These three cases built some of the framework on what the juvenile justice system is today.…
“And I see the- you know, when I go to the juvenile detention centers and prisons, I see people who can’t read now. And I know when they leave those prisons and those detention centers, they’re not going to be able to make it in our society. ”-Walter Dean Myers. If we do not take a stand to youth spending 15 to life in jail we’re not benefiting our society but instead we’re tearing it down. Not only are kids as young as 6 being sent to jail but also most of them are being charged with felony murder in which they aren 't even the ones committing the crimes.…
Looking back over what has been covered it east to now see the broad range of issues that are faced by juveniles and the juvenile justice system. In the early 1900s children were treated like smaller adults or even second class citizens. There were none to little rights held by the under eighteen youths of America. This lack of rights and protection allowed them to be taken advantage of. Many times children were treated as adults in the eyes of the law.…
The justice system that we adhere by today dates back to colonial times when Americans was answering to British authorities. By the end of the 17th century William Penn implemented many reforms to the justice system, which are still in place today. Once the U.S. Constitution was put into place the freedoms and rights of Americans were put in place to protect Americans from unjust criminal charges. This was the blueprint to structuring the criminal justice system that protects adults and juveniles. Protecting and rehabilitation for reintegration back into society is the main focus of such systems.…
The juvenile justice population has a high rate of inmates with mental disorders. In the last few decades, mental illness diagnoses have greatly increased. Many ill youths enter the criminal justice system and are put into juvenile detention centers, the juvenile justice system’s version of jail, due to their disruptive behavior (Holman & Ziedenberg, 2006). Many troubled youth and their families do not have access to local mental facilities, or proper medication to aid them. Poor access to resources can greatly increase tensions, puts strains on families, and even can be physically threatening.…