http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08273/915905-85.stm
Acording To the gazette in 2008 there were nearly 500 kids in PA serving life in prison
for crimes committed as juveniles and some convicted by the felony murder rule.
Which is that even though they were not personally responcable for the murder
they were convicted also.
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Action Alert! Urge Obama to Appoint an OJJDP Administrator
Action Alert! Urge Obama to Appoint an OJJDP Administrator
It’s been more than two years since President Obama was inaugurated. Yet, no permanent Administrator for the Office of Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) has been appointed. OJJDP is the federal agency responsible for juvenile justice and delinquency prevention issues. It is tasked with assisting State and local governments in addressing juvenile delinquency.
YOU can make a difference: Urge the Appointment of an Administrator.
1. If you have only 30 seconds...
· Sign a petition calling for the Administration to appoint a well qualified OJJDP Administrator:
· Sign-on to a letter to the President from your local, state or national organization urging that he make juvenile justice a priority by appointing a permanent Administrator to lead the Office of Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention. by emailing organizer@cfyj.org
2. If you can spare a few minutes...
· Email, send or fax a letter
Go To The Site For Directions To The Sample Letter (PLEASE)
http://www.burnsinstitute.org/article.php?id=282
It’s been more than two years since President Obama was inaugurated. Yet, no permanent Administrator for the Office of Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) has been appointed. OJJDP is the federal agency responsible for juvenile justice and delinquency prevention issues. It is tasked with assisting State and local governments in addressing juvenile delinquency.
YOU can make a difference: Urge the Appointment of an Administrator.
1. If you have only 30 seconds...
· Sign a petition calling for the Administration to appoint a well qualified OJJDP Administrator:
· Sign-on to a letter to the President from your local, state or national organization urging that he make juvenile justice a priority by appointing a permanent Administrator to lead the Office of Juvenile Justice & Delinquency Prevention. by emailing organizer@cfyj.org
2. If you can spare a few minutes...
· Email, send or fax a letter
Go To The Site For Directions To The Sample Letter (PLEASE)
http://www.burnsinstitute.org/article.php?id=282
Judge refuses to free 3 in DNA murder case
Judge refuses to free 3 in DNA murder case
A Cook County judge today refused to vacate the convictions of 3 men imprisoned 20 years for the rape and murder of a suburban girl.
( The 3 men were all juveniles at the time of the crime)
Markham District Judge Michele Simmons said she would give prosecutors additional time to complete their investigation of a convicted rapist whose DNA was found on the girl, 14-year-old Cateresa Matthews.
Prosecutors this week said they had reopened their investigation into Matthews’ slaying after defense attorneys said DNA testing done last month linked the convicted rapist to the crime.
Five teenagers were convicted in the slaying and rape, and three of them are still serving long prison sentences. DNA does not connect any of the five to the rape and murder, according to their lawyers.
The convicted rapist linked to the case by DNA was taken into custody this week on unrelated drug charges, but he has not been charged in connection with Matthews' murder and rape, according to sources.
Prosecutors said they are not yet prepared to throw out the convictions of the five men, who were teens when they were charged with Matthews' rape and murder.
In a recent interview, Robert Taylor, one of the three men still in prison for Matthews' murder and rape, said he was cautiously optimistic that he would be cleared of wrongdoing and released from state prison. James Harden and Jonathan Barr also hope to be freed.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chibrknews-judge-keeps-3-in-prison-in-1991-murder-case-20110415,0,2306404.story>>
Robert Taylor, Jonathan Barr, and James Harden Awaiting Justice
DNA evidence has proven that CWCY client Robert Taylor, and four other teenagers, are entirely innocent of a 1991 rape-murder. Taylor, and two other co-defendants, await a circuit court judge's ruling on their motion to vacate their convictions and release. The CWCY was shocked to learn that the Cook County State's Attorney's office is objecting to their motion despite the extraordinary DNA evidence. All five defendants were teenagers, aged 15-17, when charged.
A Cook County judge today refused to vacate the convictions of 3 men imprisoned 20 years for the rape and murder of a suburban girl.
( The 3 men were all juveniles at the time of the crime)
Markham District Judge Michele Simmons said she would give prosecutors additional time to complete their investigation of a convicted rapist whose DNA was found on the girl, 14-year-old Cateresa Matthews.
Prosecutors this week said they had reopened their investigation into Matthews’ slaying after defense attorneys said DNA testing done last month linked the convicted rapist to the crime.
Five teenagers were convicted in the slaying and rape, and three of them are still serving long prison sentences. DNA does not connect any of the five to the rape and murder, according to their lawyers.
The convicted rapist linked to the case by DNA was taken into custody this week on unrelated drug charges, but he has not been charged in connection with Matthews' murder and rape, according to sources.
Prosecutors said they are not yet prepared to throw out the convictions of the five men, who were teens when they were charged with Matthews' rape and murder.
In a recent interview, Robert Taylor, one of the three men still in prison for Matthews' murder and rape, said he was cautiously optimistic that he would be cleared of wrongdoing and released from state prison. James Harden and Jonathan Barr also hope to be freed.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chibrknews-judge-keeps-3-in-prison-in-1991-murder-case-20110415,0,2306404.story>>
Robert Taylor, Jonathan Barr, and James Harden Awaiting Justice
DNA evidence has proven that CWCY client Robert Taylor, and four other teenagers, are entirely innocent of a 1991 rape-murder. Taylor, and two other co-defendants, await a circuit court judge's ruling on their motion to vacate their convictions and release. The CWCY was shocked to learn that the Cook County State's Attorney's office is objecting to their motion despite the extraordinary DNA evidence. All five defendants were teenagers, aged 15-17, when charged.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Juveniles In The Adult Criminal System In Texas
is is from the news release announcing the report:
LBJ School Senior Lecturer Michele Deitch has published a new report titled Juveniles in the
Adult Criminal Justice System in Texas (LBJ School of Public Affairs, 2011). The report provides
a comprehensive look at Texas’s methods for dealing with the state’s most serious juvenile
offenders. It gathers all available Texas data with respect to certified juveniles—those youth who
are transferred to adult criminal court—and compares them to the population of determined
sentence juveniles who are retained in the juvenile justice system. The report also compares the
significant differences in programming and services for the two populations of juvenile
offenders—those who get sent to adult jails and prisons, and those who receive placements in
the Texas Youth Commission (TYC).
The report and its findings are especially timely during the Texas Legislature’s ongoing effort to
reform and restructure the state’s juvenile justice system.
Among the report’s most significant findings about juveniles transferred to the adult system are
these:
Minimal differences exist between certified juveniles in the adult criminal justice system and
determinate sentence juveniles in TYC, except for county of conviction.
Certified juveniles do not represent the “worst of the worst”—they are neither more violent nor
more persistent in their criminal behavior than those retained in juvenile court and sent to TYC.
While the large majority of certified juveniles have committed violent offenses, only 17% have
committed homicide.
About 15% of juveniles transferred to adult court are charged with non-violent felonies, including
state jail offenses.
72% of certified juveniles do not have a prior violent criminal history,
29% of certified juveniles are first-time offenders.
89% of certified juveniles have never been committed to TYC, indicating that most certified
youth have never had the opportunity to benefit from effective rehabilitative programs in the
juvenile justice system, such as TYC’s highly regarded Capital and Serious Violent Offenders
Program, which has a 95% success rate.
The report also examines what happens when juveniles are housed in adult prisons and jails in
Texas. National research shows that housing juveniles in adult prisons and jails compromises both
public safety and the personal safety of the youth. Juveniles housed in adult prisons and jails
face vastly higher risks of suicide, sexual assault, physical assault, and mental illness, and they
have been shown to have a 100% higher risk of violent recidivism.
In Texas, juveniles as young as 14 who are certified as adults and awaiting trial are sent to adult
county jails, where they can languish in isolation for periods of a year or more.
Brandi Grissom writes, "Report: Hundreds of Youths in Adult Prisons," for the Texas Tribune,
today.
Texas judges, particularly in Harris County, are sending hundreds of adolescent, first-time violent
offenders to state prison, a punishment lawmakers intended for youths considered the worst of
the worst, according to a report set for release today.
“Adult jails and adult prisons are simply the wrong place to hold these kids,” says Michele
Deitch, a professor at the University of Texas LBJ School of Public Affairs and author of the
report "Juveniles in the Adult Criminal Justice System in Texas."
And:
From fiscal year 2005 to fiscal year 2010, Texas courts certified nearly 1,300 youths as adults.
During that same time, about 860 youths received determinate sentences. According to the
report, though, there was little difference in the criminality among youths sentenced to the adult
system and those who were sent to youth facilities. In both cases, the majority committed a
violent crime like aggravated robbery or sexual assault, and had one or no previous juvenile
court cases.
In most cases, the obvious difference was where the offender was tried. Harris County courts
certified twice as many juvenile offenders as adults as any other county over the four-year time
period studied. Judges in Harris County certified 301 youths as adults. Dallas County, by
comparison, certified 141 offenders as adults during the same time period.
The problem with sending so many youths to adult facilities, particularly those who are not
repeat violent offenders, is that they are not designed to rehabilitate and educate adolescents,
Deitch said. Youths who are sent to adult prisons, she said, have a 100 percent greater risk of
committing future violent offenses, according to the Centers for Disease Control. They are also
more likely to develop mental health problems in prison, to be physically and sexually assaulted
and to commit suicide.
http://standdown.typepad.com/weblog/2011/03/juveniles-in-the-adult-criminal-justice-system-in-texas.html
LBJ School Senior Lecturer Michele Deitch has published a new report titled Juveniles in the
Adult Criminal Justice System in Texas (LBJ School of Public Affairs, 2011). The report provides
a comprehensive look at Texas’s methods for dealing with the state’s most serious juvenile
offenders. It gathers all available Texas data with respect to certified juveniles—those youth who
are transferred to adult criminal court—and compares them to the population of determined
sentence juveniles who are retained in the juvenile justice system. The report also compares the
significant differences in programming and services for the two populations of juvenile
offenders—those who get sent to adult jails and prisons, and those who receive placements in
the Texas Youth Commission (TYC).
The report and its findings are especially timely during the Texas Legislature’s ongoing effort to
reform and restructure the state’s juvenile justice system.
Among the report’s most significant findings about juveniles transferred to the adult system are
these:
Minimal differences exist between certified juveniles in the adult criminal justice system and
determinate sentence juveniles in TYC, except for county of conviction.
Certified juveniles do not represent the “worst of the worst”—they are neither more violent nor
more persistent in their criminal behavior than those retained in juvenile court and sent to TYC.
While the large majority of certified juveniles have committed violent offenses, only 17% have
committed homicide.
About 15% of juveniles transferred to adult court are charged with non-violent felonies, including
state jail offenses.
72% of certified juveniles do not have a prior violent criminal history,
29% of certified juveniles are first-time offenders.
89% of certified juveniles have never been committed to TYC, indicating that most certified
youth have never had the opportunity to benefit from effective rehabilitative programs in the
juvenile justice system, such as TYC’s highly regarded Capital and Serious Violent Offenders
Program, which has a 95% success rate.
The report also examines what happens when juveniles are housed in adult prisons and jails in
Texas. National research shows that housing juveniles in adult prisons and jails compromises both
public safety and the personal safety of the youth. Juveniles housed in adult prisons and jails
face vastly higher risks of suicide, sexual assault, physical assault, and mental illness, and they
have been shown to have a 100% higher risk of violent recidivism.
In Texas, juveniles as young as 14 who are certified as adults and awaiting trial are sent to adult
county jails, where they can languish in isolation for periods of a year or more.
Brandi Grissom writes, "Report: Hundreds of Youths in Adult Prisons," for the Texas Tribune,
today.
Texas judges, particularly in Harris County, are sending hundreds of adolescent, first-time violent
offenders to state prison, a punishment lawmakers intended for youths considered the worst of
the worst, according to a report set for release today.
“Adult jails and adult prisons are simply the wrong place to hold these kids,” says Michele
Deitch, a professor at the University of Texas LBJ School of Public Affairs and author of the
report "Juveniles in the Adult Criminal Justice System in Texas."
And:
From fiscal year 2005 to fiscal year 2010, Texas courts certified nearly 1,300 youths as adults.
During that same time, about 860 youths received determinate sentences. According to the
report, though, there was little difference in the criminality among youths sentenced to the adult
system and those who were sent to youth facilities. In both cases, the majority committed a
violent crime like aggravated robbery or sexual assault, and had one or no previous juvenile
court cases.
In most cases, the obvious difference was where the offender was tried. Harris County courts
certified twice as many juvenile offenders as adults as any other county over the four-year time
period studied. Judges in Harris County certified 301 youths as adults. Dallas County, by
comparison, certified 141 offenders as adults during the same time period.
The problem with sending so many youths to adult facilities, particularly those who are not
repeat violent offenders, is that they are not designed to rehabilitate and educate adolescents,
Deitch said. Youths who are sent to adult prisons, she said, have a 100 percent greater risk of
committing future violent offenses, according to the Centers for Disease Control. They are also
more likely to develop mental health problems in prison, to be physically and sexually assaulted
and to commit suicide.
http://standdown.typepad.com/weblog/2011/03/juveniles-in-the-adult-criminal-justice-system-in-texas.html
Teen To Be Charged As An Adult: For School Break In
Teen to be tried as adult for break-in at Morgan County High School
Submitted by editor on Mon, 03/21/2011 - 16:59. More News & Features
By Patrick Yost
Editor
Mentavious Jackson, 16, Madison, will be tried as an adult following his arrest for the January 10, 2011 break-in at the Morgan County High School.
A Morgan County Grand Jury has indicted Jackson for two counts of burglary, one count interference of government property and one count participating in criminal gang activity. Jackson was arrested on January 20 after Sgt. Mike Ghioto, Morgan County Sheriff’s Office, consulted with a Madison police officer who had responded to a domestic argument incident involving Jackson. During that incident the officer noted that Jackson was in possession of a large bag of Gatorade, M&M candies and Skittles, all items that were allegedly taken from the high school during the break–in.
Ghioto said following the arrest Jackson confessed to participating in the burglary.
School video captured five males entering the high school in the middle of a snow and ice storm. The men vandalized several offices and class rooms in the school and spray painted a six pointed star and “MOE” on walls at the school. Capt. Chris Bish, Morgan County Sheriff’s Office, said “MOE” is an acronym for a popular rap song entitled “Money Over Everything.”
Authorities are contending that the star and “MOE” constitute gang–related activity.
On February 23 an order to transfer Jackson’s case to Superior Court, effectively considering him an adult, was signed.
By charging Jackson with participating in criminal gang activity authorities will seek severe penalties. According to Alison Burleson, assistant district attorney, Ocmulgee Judicial District, if convicted of the charge Jackson could face, in addition to any other sentencing, imprisonment of not less than five years nor more than 15 years or a fine of not less than $10,000 nor more than $15,000 or both.
Burleson said Jackson will be tried as an adult, in part, because of the extent of damage at the school which costs thousands of dollars to repair and because of the “obvious nexus to gang activity.”
“It is our desire to send a clear message that this kind of activity will not be tolerated in Morgan County,” Burleson said.
Printed in the March 17, 2011 edition
http://morgancountycitizen.com/?q=node%2f16960
Submitted by editor on Mon, 03/21/2011 - 16:59. More News & Features
By Patrick Yost
Editor
Mentavious Jackson, 16, Madison, will be tried as an adult following his arrest for the January 10, 2011 break-in at the Morgan County High School.
A Morgan County Grand Jury has indicted Jackson for two counts of burglary, one count interference of government property and one count participating in criminal gang activity. Jackson was arrested on January 20 after Sgt. Mike Ghioto, Morgan County Sheriff’s Office, consulted with a Madison police officer who had responded to a domestic argument incident involving Jackson. During that incident the officer noted that Jackson was in possession of a large bag of Gatorade, M&M candies and Skittles, all items that were allegedly taken from the high school during the break–in.
Ghioto said following the arrest Jackson confessed to participating in the burglary.
School video captured five males entering the high school in the middle of a snow and ice storm. The men vandalized several offices and class rooms in the school and spray painted a six pointed star and “MOE” on walls at the school. Capt. Chris Bish, Morgan County Sheriff’s Office, said “MOE” is an acronym for a popular rap song entitled “Money Over Everything.”
Authorities are contending that the star and “MOE” constitute gang–related activity.
On February 23 an order to transfer Jackson’s case to Superior Court, effectively considering him an adult, was signed.
By charging Jackson with participating in criminal gang activity authorities will seek severe penalties. According to Alison Burleson, assistant district attorney, Ocmulgee Judicial District, if convicted of the charge Jackson could face, in addition to any other sentencing, imprisonment of not less than five years nor more than 15 years or a fine of not less than $10,000 nor more than $15,000 or both.
Burleson said Jackson will be tried as an adult, in part, because of the extent of damage at the school which costs thousands of dollars to repair and because of the “obvious nexus to gang activity.”
“It is our desire to send a clear message that this kind of activity will not be tolerated in Morgan County,” Burleson said.
Printed in the March 17, 2011 edition
http://morgancountycitizen.com/?q=node%2f16960
Teen Found Dead In Alantia Ga Jail
Teen Found Dead In GA> Jail
Pelham, GA - By Wainwright Jeffers - bio | email
ALBANY, GA (WALB) - A Fulton County teen serving time in a south Georgia jail was found dead and authorities aren't sure how he died.
A jailer at Pelham Jail discovered the 17-year-old's Fabian Avery unresponsive during a routine walk-through Friday morning.
He was in an isolation cell at the facility which is contracted to house inmates from metro Atlanta cities and counties.
The Fulton County inmate was removed from the general inmate population to be monitored.
"At the request of the medical staff he had been having some medical issues and they wanted to monitor his food intake," said Inv. Rod Williams, Pelham Police Dept.
Investigators say Avery had no known medical problems and there was no sign of foul play.
An autopsy will be done Monday to determine the exact cause of death.
Avery was in Pelham awaiting transfer to state prison to serve a 13-year sentence on armed robbery and aggravated assault charges.
http://www.walb.com/story/14284184/atlanta-teen-dies-in-pelham-jail?redirected=true
Pelham, GA - By Wainwright Jeffers - bio | email
ALBANY, GA (WALB) - A Fulton County teen serving time in a south Georgia jail was found dead and authorities aren't sure how he died.
A jailer at Pelham Jail discovered the 17-year-old's Fabian Avery unresponsive during a routine walk-through Friday morning.
He was in an isolation cell at the facility which is contracted to house inmates from metro Atlanta cities and counties.
The Fulton County inmate was removed from the general inmate population to be monitored.
"At the request of the medical staff he had been having some medical issues and they wanted to monitor his food intake," said Inv. Rod Williams, Pelham Police Dept.
Investigators say Avery had no known medical problems and there was no sign of foul play.
An autopsy will be done Monday to determine the exact cause of death.
Avery was in Pelham awaiting transfer to state prison to serve a 13-year sentence on armed robbery and aggravated assault charges.
http://www.walb.com/story/14284184/atlanta-teen-dies-in-pelham-jail?redirected=true
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Death Sentences and Executions for Juvenile Crimes
The following excerpts are from "The Juvenile Death Penalty Today: Death Sentences and Executions for Juvenile Crimes January 1973 - December 31, 2004" by Professor Victor L. Strieb, former Dean and Professor of law at Ohio Northern University, now at Elon University Law School. The report is a comprehensive quarterly review of juveniles on death row in the United States, and the modern history of the death penalty in the United States as it relates to juvenile defendants. These excerpts are reprinted with permission.
OVERVIEW OF THOSE WHO WERE UNDER JUVENILE DEATH SENTENCES
-----------------------------------------------------
As of December 31, 2004, 71 persons were on death row for juvenile crimes. These 71 condemned juveniles constituted about 2% of the total death row population of 3,487. Although all were ages 16 or 17 at the time of their crimes, their current ages range from 18 to 43. They were under death sentences in 12 different states and had been on death row from 4 months to 24 years. Texas had by far the largest death row for juvenile offenders, holding 29 (40%) of the national total of 72 juvenile offenders.
All of the juvenile offenders who were on death row are male and had been convicted and sentenced to death for murder. w.
Over three-quarters of these cases involved 17 year old offenders, and two-thirds of them were offenders of color.
*States:That Have Executed Juveniles*
1}VIRGINIA (1)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: January 19, 2000)
2}TEXAS (29)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: August 28, 2002)
3}SOUTH CAROLINA (3)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: January 10, 1986)
4}PENNSYLVANIA (2)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: December 4, 1916)
5}NORTH CAROLINA (4)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: October 30, 1942)
6}MISSISSIPPI (5)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: May 25, 1950)
7}LOUISIANA (4)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: May 18, 1990)
8}GEORGIA (2)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: December 7, 1993)
9}FLORIDA (3)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: November 8, 1954)
10}ARIZONA (4)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: July 6, 1934)
11}ALABAMA (13)
(Last Juvenile Execution: November 24, 1961)
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/juvenile-offenders-who-were-death-row
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
There are currently 72 juveniles on death row throughout the United States -- a third of them in Texas. Since 1985, 22 children who were under the age of 18
http://crime.about.com/od/juvenile/a/juvenile040722.htm
OVERVIEW OF THOSE WHO WERE UNDER JUVENILE DEATH SENTENCES
-----------------------------------------------------
As of December 31, 2004, 71 persons were on death row for juvenile crimes. These 71 condemned juveniles constituted about 2% of the total death row population of 3,487. Although all were ages 16 or 17 at the time of their crimes, their current ages range from 18 to 43. They were under death sentences in 12 different states and had been on death row from 4 months to 24 years. Texas had by far the largest death row for juvenile offenders, holding 29 (40%) of the national total of 72 juvenile offenders.
All of the juvenile offenders who were on death row are male and had been convicted and sentenced to death for murder. w.
Over three-quarters of these cases involved 17 year old offenders, and two-thirds of them were offenders of color.
*States:That Have Executed Juveniles*
1}VIRGINIA (1)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: January 19, 2000)
2}TEXAS (29)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: August 28, 2002)
3}SOUTH CAROLINA (3)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: January 10, 1986)
4}PENNSYLVANIA (2)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: December 4, 1916)
5}NORTH CAROLINA (4)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: October 30, 1942)
6}MISSISSIPPI (5)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: May 25, 1950)
7}LOUISIANA (4)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: May 18, 1990)
8}GEORGIA (2)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: December 7, 1993)
9}FLORIDA (3)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: November 8, 1954)
10}ARIZONA (4)
(Last Execution of a Juvenile: July 6, 1934)
11}ALABAMA (13)
(Last Juvenile Execution: November 24, 1961)
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/juvenile-offenders-who-were-death-row
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
There are currently 72 juveniles on death row throughout the United States -- a third of them in Texas. Since 1985, 22 children who were under the age of 18
http://crime.about.com/od/juvenile/a/juvenile040722.htm
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