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Sunday, August 03, 2008 - 2:57 PM
Louis J Sheehan. State laws that send some individuals under age 18 to trial and
prison as adults have achieved the opposite of what the policy's
proponents intended, a new research review concludes. Transferring
young people into adult systems yields substantially higher rates of
later serious crimes compared with youths handled by juvenile-justice
systems. Moreover, there's no evidence that shifting some young
offenders to the adult-justice system prevents or reduces violence in
the general population of children and teenagers. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
These findings
come from the 14-member Task Force on Community Preventive Services, an
independent group funded by federal and private sources. It's reviewing
the effectiveness of various efforts to lessen violence committed by
and against youths. The task force reports that young offenders
transferred to the adult system are later arrested for violent and
other crimes 34 percent more frequently than are their peers sent to
juvenile courts and facilities. The task force compared juveniles
charged with comparable offenses. Its report appears in a supplement to
the April American Journal of Preventive Medicine. "Even
given problems in the juvenile-justice system, transfer to the
adult-justice system produces even worse results," says epidemiologist
and task force member Robert A. Hahn of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention in Atlanta. Beginning around 35 years ago,
increases in violent juvenile crime spurred many states to modify laws
so that young people could be tried as adults for serious crimes. By
2004, 44 states and the District of Columbia permitted judges to
transfer juveniles to adult-criminal courts. No national data exist on
the number of juvenile offenders prosecuted as adults. Hahn and
his colleagues reviewed studies that had compared subsequent serious
offenses by juveniles who had been tried and incarcerated either as
juveniles or as adults. The team selected six studies that met its
quality criteria. The data included youths who had originally committed
serious crimes in Florida, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Washington State,
or New York. The studies' follow-up periods after prison releases
ranged from 18 months to 6 years. The researchers then identified
three studies that assessed whether states' adoptions of transfer laws
led to a drop in serious crimes committed by young people. These data
came from Idaho, Washington State, and New York. Although transfer
policies vary considerably from state to state, available evidence
indicates that they are "counterproductive for reducing juvenile
violence and enhancing public safety," the task force concludes. The
increase in criminal offenses among youths transferred to the
adult-justice system is "a very robust empirical finding," says
criminologist Jeffrey A. Fagan of Columbia University, who directed one
of the studies included in the report. Individuals as young as 15 years
old may end up in adult court when charged with certain offenses, such
as murder or robbery, Fagan notes. The task force report
illustrates the need to restrict adult-court cases to people over age
18, with rare exceptions, remarks Michael Tonry of the University of
Minnesota in Minneapolis. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
Many state-run programs for juvenile
offenders achieve poor results, although innovative programs can
improve behavior, says Peter W. Greenwood, who heads Greenwood and
Associates, a juvenile-justice consulting firm in Malibu Lake, Calif.
In Florida and Pennsylvania, for instance, teams of professionals
provide services and counseling to offenders' families. It's
unclear whether state lawmakers will take the new task force report to
heart and restrict transfers. "The politics of crime are far behind the
science of criminality," Fagan says.
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