Overcrowding at juvenile
detention centers is a persistent problem in New Jersey. The root of that problem lies, in large part, with
the fact that juveniles continue to be locked up inappropriately.
Some juveniles are locked
up for minor offenses because of a severe shortage of treatment alternatives
for youth with mental health or family problems. These troubled kids are
placed in crowded jails with violent offenders and their problems often get
worse. Many of the youth involved with the Juvenile Justice Commission (JJC)
have also been involved with the Division of Youth and Family Services
(DYFS). Both agencies lack enough treatment programs for troubled youth, who
have often suffered abuse and neglect.
Some juveniles are detained
pre-adjudication, meaning before a judge determines whether the youth is
guilty or innocent. The law permits youth awaiting adjudication to be
detained only if they are a danger to the public or themselves,
or when there is a good chance they will fail to appear at the next court
hearing.
Several key reforms are
underway in New
Jersey to
solve the overcrowding problem. Under a grant from the Annie E. Casey
Foundation, the state has launched a pilot aimed at creating ways to better
treat these young offenders, while also ensuring public safety. Called the
Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative (JDAI), the pilot is unfolding in Atlantic, Camden, Essex, Hudson and MonmouthCounties.
The state’s child welfare reform
plan envisions a system that assesses the needs of youth in all systems --
juvenile justice, child welfare and mental health. The Office of Behavioral
Health (formerly the Partnership for Children) is working to find appropriate
placements for youth in lockup who really need
treatment, not punishment. A core goal is to reduce New Jersey’s reliance on institutional care for all youth.
These efforts are
promising, but will take time to produce results. For reforms to be more immediate,
systemic and lasting, changes to the rules for locking up minors must be
incorporated into law. New Jersey’s juvenile code was written in 1984. The statute’s intent is to
punish serious juvenile offenders, and treat, rather than punish, youth who
need help and whose offenses are minor. The statute, however, is vague on
certain issues, leaving it subject to interpretation and leading to the
inappropriate detention of certain juveniles.
Overcrowded Juvenile Jails Long-Documented Problem
In February 1987, the
statewide average daily population of juveniles in detention centers exceeded
capacity for the first time. A Juvenile Delinquency Commission study of 1986
cases revealed that counties used different criteria for detaining juveniles.
“In 13 counties, a disorderly or petty disorderly offense was the most
serious charge in more than 20% of the detained cases.”[1]
Furthermore, 30 percent of
the disposed cases in which a juvenile was detained resulted in all charges
eventually being dismissed. In an additional 2 percent, the juvenile was
diverted from formal court processing. In only 20 percent of all the cases
were detained juveniles adjudicated delinquent and committed to state
institutions as their disposition. That disposition occurred in less than 3
percent of the cases where the most serious charge was a 4th
degree disorderly or petty disorderly persons
offense.[2]
The Juvenile Delinquency
Commission compared provisions of the New Jersey Code to four sets of
national standards.[3] The review showed that nearly one
in every four juveniles detained statewide had committed a 4th
degree or less serious crime and would not have been detained under the
national models, unless they had previously failed to appear in court.[4] The model standards specifically
prohibited incarceration for 4th degree offenses, disorderly persons offenses and petty disorderly persons offenses.
The Commission’s report caused amendments to be made to the juvenile code
which limited the instances of when a youth charged with a disorderly persons offense could be detained.
In 1995, ACNJ conducted a
one-day survey of New
Jersey’s
juvenile detention centers to determine conditions for troubled youth.[5] The survey found that many of the
detention centers were overcrowded – some double the approved capacity.
Almost 30 percent of juveniles in detention were adjudicated and awaiting
placement in another program. Some of these juveniles waited up to six months
before DYFS found a treatment alternative. The lack of appropriate treatment
programs was cited most often as the reason for delay.
While some progress has
been made, overcrowding continues today. According to a report issued by the
Office of the Child Advocate in November 2004,[6] five counties reported average
daily populations for 2003 that exceeded capacity. This same report also
documented the prevalence of serious mental health disorders among the youth
in detention.
What is the Solution?
There is no one answer. A
multi-tiered approached is needed to solve the overcrowding problems and to
institutionalize those solutions. As mentioned, two promising reforms are
underway, but will take time to produce results.
To build upon the reform
efforts and systemically minimize the inappropriate incarceration of
juveniles, legislative changes are needed to clarify the statutory criteria
for detention admission and can complement the other reforms already
underway.
This approach has
worked elsewhere. Data from Florida, for example, supports the finding that a
restriction on admission criteria can work to lessen the population of
detention facilities. After Florida enacted the Juvenile Justice Reform Act of 1990,
which established new criteria prohibiting certain uses of detention for
juveniles, detentions populations immediately decreased. Further, a 10-year
longitudinal study found that subsequent amendments to the statute allowing
more detainable offenses significantly increased the number of youths
admitted to regional detention centers.[7]
In New Jersey, however, we continue to imprison youth who are
charged with minor crimes.
Risk of Flight
A common reason for
detention of juveniles with minor offenses is that they failed to show up for
a previous hearing or they ran away from a treatment program. The law
requires a demonstrable record of a juvenile’s recent willful failure
to appear at juvenile court proceedings or to remain where the court or court
intake placed the
juvenile. But it fails to define recent.
A
good first step would be to clarify the term “recent” to mean within the
past 12 months. The youth should not be “punished” for behavior that
occurred long ago in the context of her life, especially while awaiting
adjudication of alleged criminal activity. Punishing a juvenile with
detention for failure to appear at a court appearance more than 12 months
prior is unwarranted punishment.
It
is also possible to argue that routinely locking up non-violent young
offenders for a previous failure to appear runs contrary to the normal
behavior of teenagers. Experts in the field of childhood and adolescent
behavior[8] write about the differences in
brain activity between adolescents and adults. The region of the brain that
controls impulses, foresees consequences and tempers emotion are
physiologically underdeveloped in adolescents, even at the age of 16 or 17,
making them prone to bad judgment. Teenagers underestimate risks and
overvalue short-term benefits. They are more susceptible to stress, more
emotionally volatile and less capable of controlling their emotions than
adults.[9]
The research also shows
that a person’s brain does not become fully matured until their early 20s, at
which time, they as an adult, should be held accountable for their actions.
The impulsive decision not to appear in court should not automatically land a
juvenile in jail, especially if the underlying charge is the equivalent to a
disorderly persons offense.
Juveniles charged with acts
that are the equivalent of disorderly persons offenses should not be detained
pre-hearing, except in the most extreme cases. To do otherwise defeats the
meaning of the statute and the purpose of the juvenile code.
The stated purpose of
the Juvenile Code, as amended in 1988 and 1991 reads as follows:
a) To preserve the unity of the family whenever
possible and to provide for the care, protection, and wholesome mental and
physical development of juveniles coming within the provisions of this act;
b) Consistent with the protection of the public
interest, to remove from children committing delinquent acts certain
statutory consequences of criminal behavior, and to substitute thereof an
adequate program of supervision, care and rehabilitation, an a range of
sanctions designed to promote accountability and protect the public;
c) to separate juveniles from the family environment
only when necessary for their health, safety or welfare or in the interests
of public safety;
d) to secure for each child coming under the
jurisdiction of the court such care, guidance and control, preferably in his
own home, as will conduce to the child’s welfare and the best interests of
the State; and where such child is removed from his own family, to secure for
him custody, care and discipline as nearly as possible equivalent to thatwhich should have been given by his
parents;
e) to insure that children under the jurisdiction of
the court are wards of the State, subject to the discipline and entitled to the
protection of the State, which may intervene to safeguard them from neglect
or injury and to enforce the legal obligations due to them and from them; and
f) consistent with the protection of the public
interest, to insure that any services and sanctions for juveniles provide
balanced attention to the protection of the community, the imposition of
accountability for offenses committee, fostering interaction and dialogue
between the offender, victim and community and the development of
competencies to enable children to become responsible and productive members
of the community. NJSA 2A:4A-21
A
juvenile charged with a 4th degree offense is highly unlikely to
seriously threaten the “physical safety of persons or property of the
community.” It makes little sense to send juveniles who do not belong
in jail to secure detention. The statute should prohibit incarceration of
juveniles when the most serious charge is a 4th degree offense.
In
2004, the Appellate Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey held that a
juvenile who comes before the court on a family crisis petition as a runaway
may not be adjudicated delinquent for violating a court order (a
4th degree offense) to obey the rules of home and school. No crime had
been committed. The court found that this adjudication is in contravention to
the meaning of the statute.[10] Such juveniles should not be
institutionalized with delinquents, many of whom have committed acts of
violence and brutality.[11]
To address concerns that a
child with serious mental health issues who is charged with a 4th
degree offense may need immediate treatment and/or a parent cannot be
located, the code can be amended to direct the Office of Behavioral Health to
assume care and custody of juveniles with mental health issues and DYFS to
provide foster care for juveniles when a parent or guardian cannot be
located.
Reforming the statute as
outlined above will help ensure that a juvenile will not be inappropriately
detained. Simultaneously, these changes will further encourage ongoing
efforts by state and county entities to develop an array of appropriate
alternatives to incarceration for judges to use for juveniles who do not
belong in jail, but need state intervention to protect their health and
safety. Together, with the help of the JDAI Initiative, the juvenile justice
system will be well on its way to serving the children of New Jersey in a more appropriate manner.
[1]
“Juvenile Justice – Toward Completing the Unfinished Agenda,” The Annual Report
of the Juvenile Delinquency Commission, (1988) at page 34 (hereinafter referred
to as the JDC Report).
[3]
JDC Report at page 34. National standards included: Advisory Committee on
Standards for the Administration of Juvenile Justice by the US Department of
Justice (1976); Institute for Judicial Administration and American Bar
Association’s Joint Commission on Juvenile Justice Standards (1979); National
Advisory Committee for Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (1980); and
National Council on Crime and Delinquency (1980).
[5]
“Juvenile Detention Centers: Holding Kids Ordered to Other Placements,”
Association for Children of New Jersey
(April 1995).
[6]
“JuvenileDetentionCenter Investigation: An
Examination of Conditions of Care for Youth with Mental Health Needs,” Office
of the Child Advocate (November 2004). Copy of report can be found at www.childadvocate.nj.gov.
[8]
Brief of Amicus Curiae filed by the American Medical Association,
American Psychiatric Association, American Society For Adolescent Psychiatry,
American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of
Psychiatry & the Law, National Association of Social Workers, Missouri
Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers, And National Mental
Health Association in In the Matter of
Roper v. Simmons decided by the US Supreme Court on March 1st,
2005 overturning the juvenile death penalty (543 U.S. ____ (2005).