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Jailing Juveniles: The Dangers of Incarcerating Youth in Adult Jails in America

 

A new report, “Jailing Juveniles: The Dangers of Incarcerating Youth in Adult Jails in America,” released by the Campaign for Youth Justice provides a summary of the risks that youth face when incarcerated in adult jails, facts and figures about how many youth are incarcerated in jails nationwide, and a review of the limited federal and state laws protecting youth in jails.
 
Every day in America, an average of 7,500 youth are incarcerated in adult jails.  The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA) has protected children in the justice system for more than three decades.  The original intent of the JJDPA was to protect children from the dangers of adult jails by separating them from adults and ultimately removing them from adult jails altogether.  Under the “Jail Removal” core protection, youth cannot be detained in adult jails except in limited exceptions and in those narrow circumstances the “Sight and Sound Separation” core protection prohibits contact with adults.  However these protections do not apply to youth being tried in the adult criminal system.
 
The report “Jailing Juveniles” shows how difficult is it to keep children safe in adult jails.  In fact, youth have the highest suicide rates of all inmates in jails.  Youth are 36 times more likely to commit suicide in an adult jail than in a juvenile detention facility, and 19 times more likely to commit suicide in an adult jail than youth in the general population.  Youth in adult jails are also at great risk of physical and sexual assault.  Findings in the report document that 21% and 13% of all substantiated victims of inmate-on-inmate sexual violence in jails in 2005 and 2006 respectively, were youth under the age of 18 (surprisingly high since only 1% of jail inmates are juveniles).
 
Despite the long-standing federal protections and documented dangers of placing children in adult jails, tens of thousands of youth incarcerated every year in adult jails are not protected by the JJDPA’s protections.   Congress could easily fix this problem by extending the protections of the Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA) that disallow the placement of children in adult jails to protect all children, no matter what court they are in – juvenile or adult.
 

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"Jailing Juveniles" Report (PDF 10.5 MB)
 
To find out what you can do, download a "Jailing Juveniles" National Take Action! Packet (PDF 396 KB)
 
Press Release - 7,500 Youth in Adult Jails (PDF 180 KB)

 

 

A Capital Offense: Youth in DC's Adult Criminal Justice System and Strategies for Reform.

 

Recently, The Campaign for Youth Justice undertook a study of the status of children prosecuted in the adult criminal justice system in the District of Columbia. The report highlights several key findings, such as:

 

  • Children as young as 15 can be prosecuted as adults, many without review by a judge or a court hearing.
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  • Youth cannot be returned to the juvenile justice system even if a judge determines that a child could benefit from the rehabilitative services in the juvenile justice system because the law does not provide a “reverse” waiver mechanism.
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  • Youth prosecuted in the adult criminal justice system are held in the DC Jail, an adult facility run by the Department of Corrections where there is a dearth of youth appropriate activities and programs. Only a third of the youth attend school, and some youth can spend up to 23 ½ hours a day locked in their cells.
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  • Those youth who are sentenced to incarceration come under the custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) and are typically placed in facilities hundreds of miles from home, including states as far as Tennessee, North Dakota, and Wisconsin.  
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  • Youth are not eligible for the expanded rehabilitative services provided by the Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services’ (DYRS) under new comprehensive reform legislation, the Omnibus Juvenile Justice Amendment Act of 2004 (D.C. Law 15-261), approved by the DC Council.

 
The report calls for the end of pre-trial placement of youth in the DC Jail.  The report urges policy makers to consider key recommendations that include; Requiring that all transfer cases be decided by a judge; Provide a “reverse” waiver mechanism for youth in adult court; Encourage the Federal Bureau of Prisons to contract with the Department of Youth Rehabilitative Services and; to collect and analyze data on youth tried and sentenced as adults on an on-going basis.  Click below to download the full report.

 

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A Capital Offense (PDF 416 KB)

 

The Consequences Aren’t Minor: The Impact of Trying Youth as Adults and Strategies for Reform.
 
This study examines the laws and data in seven key states: California, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, North Carolina, Virginia, andWisconsin. An estimated 200,000 youth end up in the adult system each year, and 40 states allow or require the jailing of these youth in adult facilities before they ever go to trial.
 
Youth prosecuted as adults are often held in adult jails for months or years, even though, as the report demonstrates, most are charged with nonviolent offenses. For example, in Chicago, a 17-year-old boy was arrested for “armed robbery” after he took a schoolmate’s gym clothes, and was detained at the Cook County jail for several weeks. 
Of the 8,000 young people who enter Connecticut’s adult court system, the vast majority are arrested for non-violent offenses.
 
Research—including studies funded by the U.S. Justice Department—show that sending youth to the adult criminal justice system doesn't work to reduce crime. Jails are not designed to safely hold youth, who are either incarcerated in cells with adults, or separated in forms of isolation that can lead to depression or even suicide. Studies show that youth who are incarcerated in adult facilities are more likely to suffer abuse, become mentally ill, and may be rearrested and commit more serious offenses than youth who benefit from the treatment, counseling and services available through the juvenile justice system. A recent Zogby poll conducted for the National Council on Crime and Delinquency finds that 7 in 10 respondents felt that putting youth under age 18 in adult correctional facilities makes them more likely to commit future crime.
 
The laws are not evenly applied, with youth of color and those without access to adequate legal counsel more likely to end up in adult correctional facilities. Nationwide, three out of four young people admitted to adult prison in 2002 were youth of color. In Florida,Wisconsin, California, Connecticut, Illinois and North Carolina, youth of color represented nearly or more than 7 out of 10 youth in the adult justice system.
 
The report notes that juvenile judges are frequently excluded from the decision to prosecute youth as adults. Instead, prosecutors and state laws determine which youth end up in the adult system, no matter how minor the nature of the offense. In 15 states, prosecutors rather than judges have the discretion to send youth to the adult system. In other states, laws are allowing for the automatic transfer of youth based on the nature of the charge or a lowered statutory age limit.
 
The report urges policy makers to take advantage of the shift in public opinion and the new adolescent brain development research that inspired the Supreme Court to end the death penalty for minors. The report calls for a ban on the incarceration of youth in adult jails or prisons, and in the rare cases where the seriousness of a crime warrants consideration of prosecution in the adult system, a juvenile court judge should make the decision rather than prosecutors or state law. Click below to download the full report.

 

 

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National Report (PDF 3.7 MB)

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Executive Summary of National Report
(PDF 907 KB)



The Campaign for Youth Justice is committed to providing you with the most recent, reliable and relevant research on the issue of transfer/waiver of youth to the adult criminal court, the adultification of youth, and alternative approaches to youth justice that are fair and effective.

Looking for a local parent group to get connected with? Please see our list of organizations that may have a chapter in your community.

The following resources may be helpful to you:
Childhood on Trial: The Failure of Trying and Sentencing Youth in Adult Criminal Court. Wolfson, J., Washington, DC: Coalition for Juvenile Justice, 2005.
Full Report
Childhood on Trial (PDF 448 KB)

 

A study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention task force has found that teens that are transferred to the adult justice system are 34 percent more likely to be arrested again. Click below to view

Medicial Review finds laws allowing youth tried as adults ineffective at imporoving publica safety, and associated with increased violence (72 KB)

 

Effects on Violence of Laws and Policies Facilitating the Transfer of Juveniles from the Juvenile Justice System to the Adult Justice System (PDF 588 KB)

 

Recommendation Against Policies Facilitating the Transfer of Juveniles from Juvenile to Adult Justice Systems for the Purpose of Reducing Violence (PDF 40 KB)