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Contact: Tommy McDonald, Communication Works, 415/255-1946
The report was commissioned by Building Blocks for Youth, a national initiative addressing racial disparities in the justice system and promoting rational and effective juvenile justice policies. Prepared by the Pretrial Services Resource Center, an independent non-profit research and training organization that has worked on pretrial issues for more than 20 years, Youth Crime/Adult Time is based on extensive data from 18 of the largest jurisdictions in the country.
Key findings of the report reveal disturbing aspects in the transfer of youth, especially minority youth, to the adult criminal court. The findings show over-representation and disparate treatment of minority youth, and raise serious questions about the fairness and appropriateness of prosecuting youth in the adult criminal system. Among the major findings from Youth Crime/Adult Time:
This is the third major report issued this year by the Building Blocks for Youth initiative. The first, issued in February and titled The Color of Justice, found that in California youth of color are more likely than white youth to be transferred to adult criminal court, and to be sentenced to prison, even when charged with similar offenses. In April, the initiative released a comprehensive national report, And Justice for Some, which found that minority youth receive more severe treatment than white youth at every decision point throughout the justice system, even when charge with the same offenses.
Youth Crime/Adult Time shows that the system is herding young people into the adult system where they don't belong. Most youth sent to adult criminal court could be adequately handled in the juvenile justice system, where they have opportunities for treatment and rehabilitation.
Along with the report, the Building Blocks initiative is issuing "Calls for Action" for federal, state, and local officials to address this problem. At the federal level, the next Administration and the Congress should pledge to support and strengthen the Disproportionate Minority Confinement provisions in the federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, and should appropriate $100 million for the Department of Justice to address this issue throughout the country. State and local officials should investigate the disparate racial impact of their state laws and policies, particularly those providing for prosecution of juveniles in adult criminal court. They should immediately stop incarcerating young people with adult inmates in jails and prisons. And they should declare a moratorium on building new juvenile detention and corrections facilities until they have addressed the differential impact of the system on young people of color.
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Mark Soler is President of the Youth Law Center and directs the Building Blocks for Youth initiative. The Youth Law Center is a national public interest law firm based in San Francisco and Washington, DC which works on behalf of children in juvenile justice and child welfare systems across the country.To view each of the Building Blocks for Youth reports, including Youth Crime/Adult Time, visit the initiative's website at http://www.buildingblocksforyouth.org