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NY Times Editorial: Back Where They Belong
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http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/05/opinion/05thu2.html
New York Times Editorial
Back Where They Belong
Gov. M. Jodi Rell vaulted Connecticut
to the forefront of the juvenile justice reform movement when she
signed a bill that removes 16- and 17-year-old offenders from the adult
courts and puts them back into the juvenile justice system where they
clearly belong. This new law comes in response to studies showing that
children who do time in adult jails are more likely to become hardened
criminals — and to commit more violent crime — than youthful offenders
who are handled by the juvenile system. The rush to try
children as adults began in the early 1990s, after high-profile crimes
like the Central Park jogger case, in which a young woman was badly
beaten and raped in New York’s Central Park. Extreme violence and
sexual assault clearly merit severe punishment. But today, in too many
states, young people are routinely tried as adults, even those who
commit nonviolent offenses. In adult jails, these youthful
offenders have little protection from being battered or sexually
assaulted. Even those who leave jail determined not to go back, find
that a conviction in adult courts closes off their chances for finding
decent jobs. After Connecticut’s law takes effect, New York and
North Carolina will be the only two remaining states that automatically
transfer 16-year-olds who commit crimes to adult courts. Unfortunately,
nearly every state has laws that encourage prosecutors to try children
as adults. The country needs to abandon these failed, destructive
policies.
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