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Adjudication: Judicial
determination (judgment) that a juvenile is responsible for the delinquency
or status offense that is charged in a petition.
Age: Age at the time
of referral to juvenile court.
Case rate: Number of
cases disposed per 1,000 juveniles in the population. The population
base used to calculate the case rate varies. For example, the population
base for the male case rate is the total number of male youth age 10
or older who are under the jurisdiction of the juvenile courts. (See
"juvenile population.")
Delinquency: Acts or
conduct in violation of criminal law. (See "reason for
referral.")
Delinquent act: An
act committed by a juvenile which, if committed by an adult, would be
a criminal act. The juvenile court has jurisdiction over delinquent
acts. Delinquent acts include crimes against persons, crimes against
property, drug offenses, and crimes against public order.
Dependency case: Those
cases covering neglect or inadequate care on the part of parents or
guardians, such as abandonment or desertion; abuse or cruel treatment;
improper or inadequate conditions in the home; and insufficient care
or support resulting from death, absence, or physical or mental incapacity
of parents.
Detention: The placement
of a youth in a secure facility under court authority at some point
between the time of referral to court intake and case disposition. This
Report does not include detention decisions made by law enforcement
officials prior to court referral or those occurring after the disposition
of a case.
Disposition:
Sanction ordered or treatment plan decided upon or initiated in a particular
case. Case dispositions are coded into the following categories:
- Waived to criminal courtCases
that were transferred to criminal court as the result of a judicial
waiver hearing in juvenile court.
- PlacementCases in
which youth were placed in a residential facility for delinquents
or status offenders, or cases in which youth were otherwise removed
from their homes and placed elsewhere.
- ProbationCases in
which youth were placed on informal/voluntary or formal/court- ordered
supervision.
- Dismissed/releasedCases
dismissed or otherwise released (including those warned and counseled)
with no further sanction or consequence anticipated. Among cases handled
informally (see "manner of handling"), some cases
may be dismissed by the juvenile court because the matter is being
handled in another court or agency.
- OtherMiscellaneous
dispositions not included above. These dispositions include fines,
restitution, community service, referrals outside the court for services
with minimal or no further court involvement anticipated, and dispositions
coded as "other" in a jurisdiction's original data.
Formal handling: See
"manner of handling."
Informal handling:
See "manner of handling."
Intake decision: The
decision made by juvenile court intake that results in the case either
being handled informally at the intake level or being petitioned and
scheduled for an adjudicatory or transfer hearing.
Judicial decision:
The decision made in response to a petition that asks the court to adjudicate
or transfer the youth. This decision is generally made by a juvenile
court judge or referee.
Judicial disposition:
The disposition rendered in a case after the judicial decision has been
made.
Juvenile: Youth at
or below the upper age of original juvenile court jurisdiction. (See
"juvenile population" and "upper age of jurisdiction.")
Juvenile court: Any
court that has jurisdiction over matters involving juveniles.
Juvenile
population: For delinquency and status offense matters, the juvenile
population is defined as the number of children between the age of 10
and the upper age of jurisdiction. For dependency matters, it is defined
as the number of children at or below the upper age of jurisdiction.
In all States, the upper age of jurisdiction is defined by statute.
Thus, when the upper age of jurisdiction is 17, the delinquency and
status offense juvenile population is equal to the number of children
ages 10 through 17 living within the geographical area serviced by the
court. (See "upper age of jurisdiction.")
Manner
of handling: A general classification of case processing within
the court system. Petitioned (formally handled) cases are those that
appear on the official court calendar in response to the filing of a
petition, complaint, or other legal instrument requesting the court
to adjudicate a youth as a delinquent, status offender, or dependent
child or to waive jurisdiction and transfer a youth to criminal court
for processing as a criminal offender. In nonpetitioned (informally
handled) cases, duly authorized court personnel, having screened the
case, decide not to file a formal petition. Such personnel include judges,
referees, probation officers, other officers of the court, and/or agencies
statutorily designated to conduct petition screening for the juvenile
court.
Nonpetitioned case:
See "manner of handling."
Petition: A document
filed in juvenile court alleging that a juvenile is a delinquent or
a status offender and asking that the court assume jurisdiction over
the juvenile or that an alleged delinquent be transferred to criminal
court for prosecution as an adult.
Petitioned case: See
"manner of handling."
Race: The race of the
youth referred, as determined by the youth or by court personnel.
- WhiteA person having
origins in any of the indigenous peoples of Europe, North Africa,
or the Middle East. (In both the population and court data, nearly
all youth of Hispanic ethnicity were included in the white racial
category.)
- BlackA person having
origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
- OtherA person having
origins in any of the indigenous peoples of North America, the Far
East, Southeast Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, or the Pacific Islands.
Reason
for referral: The most serious offense for which the youth was referred
to court intake. Attempts to commit an offense were included under that
offense, except attempted murder, which was included in the aggravated
assault category.
- Crimes against personsIncludes
criminal homicide, forcible rape, robbery, aggravated assault, simple
assault, and other person offenses as defined below.
- Criminal homicideCausing
the death of another person without legal justification or excuse.
Criminal homicide is a summary category, not a single codified offense.
In law, the term embraces all homicides in which the perpetrator
intentionally kills someone without legal justification or accidentally
kills someone as a consequence of reckless or grossly negligent
conduct. It includes all conduct encompassed by the terms murder,
nonnegligent (voluntary) manslaughter, negligent (involuntary) manslaughter,
and vehicular manslaughter. The term is broader than the Crime Index
category used in the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI's) Uniform
Crime Reports (UCR), in which murder/nonnegligent manslaughter
does not include negligent manslaughter or vehicular manslaughter.
- Forcible rapeSexual
intercourse or attempted sexual intercourse with a female against
her will by force or threat of force. The term is used in the same
sense as in the UCR Crime Index. Some States have enacted
gender-neutral rape or sexual assault statutes that prohibit forced
sexual penetration of either sex. Data reported by such States do
not distinguish between forcible rape of females as defined above
and other sexual assaults. (Other violent sex offenses are classified
as "other offenses against persons.")
- RobberyUnlawful
taking or attempted taking of property that is in the immediate
possession of another by force or threat of force. The term is used
in the same sense as in the UCR Crime Index and includes
forcible purse snatching.
- AssaultUnlawful
intentional infliction, or attempted or threatened infliction, of
injury upon the person of another.
- Aggravated assaultUnlawful
intentional infliction of serious bodily injury or unlawful
threat or attempt to inflict bodily injury or death by means
of a deadly or dangerous weapon with or without actual infliction
of any injury. The term is used in the same sense as in the
UCR Crime Index. It includes conduct encompassed under
the statutory names aggravated assault and battery, aggravated
battery, assault with intent to kill, assault with intent to
commit murder or manslaughter, atrocious assault, attempted
murder, felonious assault, and assault with a deadly weapon.
- Simple assaultUnlawful
intentional infliction or attempted or threatened infliction
of less than serious bodily injury without a deadly or dangerous
weapon. The term is used in the same sense as in UCR
reporting. Simple assault is not often distinctly named in statutes
because it encompasses all assaults not explicitly named and
defined as serious. Unspecified assaults are classified as "other
offenses against persons."
- Other offenses against
personsIncludes kidnaping, violent sex acts other than forcible
rape (e.g., incest, sodomy), custody interference, unlawful restraint,
false imprisonment, reckless endangerment, harassment, and attempts
to commit any such acts.
- Crimes against propertyIncludes
burglary, larceny, motor vehicle theft, arson, vandalism, stolen property
offenses, trespassing, and other property offenses as defined below.
- BurglaryUnlawful
entry or attempted entry of any fixed structure, vehicle, or vessel
used for regular residence, industry, or business, with or without
force, with intent to commit a felony or larceny. The term is
used in the same sense as in the UCR Crime Index.
- LarcenyUnlawful
taking or attempted taking of property (other than a motor vehicle)
from the possession of another by stealth, without force and without
deceit, with intent to permanently deprive the owner of the property.
This term is used in the same sense as in the UCR Crime
Index. It includes shoplifting and purse snatching without force.
- Motor vehicle theftUnlawful
taking or attempted taking of a self-propelled road vehicle owned
by another with the intent to deprive the owner of it permanently
or temporarily. The term is used in the same sense as in the UCR
Crime Index. It includes joyriding or unauthorized use of a motor
vehicle as well as grand theft auto.
- ArsonIntentional
damage or destruction by means of fire or explosion of the property
of another without the owner's consent or of any property with
intent to defraud, or attempting the above acts. The term is used
in the same sense as in the UCR Crime Index.
- VandalismDestroying,
damaging, or attempting to destroy or damage public property or
the property of another without the owner's consent, except by
burning.
- Stolen property offensesUnlawfully
and knowingly receiving, buying, or possessing stolen property
or attempting any of the above. The term is used in the same sense
as the UCR category "stolen property: buying, receiving,
possessing."
- TrespassingUnlawful
entry or attempted entry of the property of another with the intent
to commit a misdemeanor other than larceny or without intent to
commit a crime.
- Other property offensesIncludes
extortion and all fraud offenses, such as forgery, counterfeiting,
embezzlement, check or credit card fraud, and attempts to commit
any such offenses.
- Drug law violationsIncludes
unlawful sale, purchase, distribution, manufacture, cultivation, transport,
possession, or use of a controlled or prohibited substance or drug
or drug paraphernalia, or attempt to commit these acts. Sniffing of
glue, paint, gasoline, and other inhalants is also included. Hence,
the term is broader than the UCR category "drug abuse violations."
- Offenses against public
orderIncludes weapons offenses; nonviolent sex offenses; liquor
law violations, not status; disorderly conduct; obstruction of justice;
and other offenses against public order as defined below.
- Weapons offensesUnlawful
sale, distribution, manufacture, alteration, transportation, possession,
or use of a deadly or dangerous weapon or accessory, or attempt
to commit any of these acts. The term is used in the same sense
as the UCR category "weapons: carrying, possessing, etc."
- Sex offensesAll
offenses having a sexual element not involving violence. The term
combines the meaning of the UCR categories "prostitution
and commercialized vice" and "sex offenses." It includes offenses
such as statutory rape, indecent exposure, prostitution, solicitation,
pimping, lewdness, fornication, and adultery.
- Liquor law violations,
not statusBeing in a public place while intoxicated through
consumption of alcohol or intake of a controlled substance or
drug. It includes public intoxication, drunkenness, and other
liquor law violations. It does not include driving under the influence.
The term is used in the same sense as the UCR category
of the same name. Some States treat public drunkenness of juveniles
as a status offense rather than delinquency. Hence, some of these
offenses may appear under the status offense code "status liquor
law violations." (When a person who is publicly intoxicated performs
acts that cause a disturbance, he or she may be charged with disorderly
conduct.)
- Disorderly conductUnlawful
interruption of the peace, quiet, or order of a community, including
offenses called disturbing the peace, vagrancy, loitering, unlawful
assembly, and riot.
- Obstruction of justiceIntentionally
obstructing court or law enforcement efforts in the administration
of justice, acting in a way calculated to lessen the authority
or dignity of the court, failing to obey the lawful order of a
court, escape from confinement, and violating probation or parole.
This term includes contempt, perjury, obstruction of justice,
bribery of witnesses, failure to report a crime, and nonviolent
resistance of arrest.
- Other offenses against
public orderOther offenses against government administration
or regulation, such as bribery; violations of laws pertaining
to fish and game, gambling, health, hitchhiking, and immigration;
and false fire alarms.
- Status offensesIncludes
acts or types of conduct that are offenses only when committed or
engaged in by a juvenile and that can be adjudicated only by a juvenile
court. Although State statutes defining status offenses vary and some
States may classify cases involving these offenses as dependency cases,
for the purposes of this Report the following types of offenses were
classified as status offenses.
- RunawayLeaving
the custody and home of parents, guardians, or custodians without
permission and failing to return within a reasonable length of
time, in violation of a statute regulating the conduct of youth.
- TruancyViolation
of a compulsory school attendance law.
- UngovernabilityBeing
beyond the control of parents, guardians, or custodians or being
disobedient of parental authority. This classification is referred
to in various juvenile codes as unruly, unmanageable, and incorrigible.
- Status liquor law violationsViolation
of laws regulating the possession, purchase, or consumption of
liquor by minors. Some States treat consumption of alcohol and
public drunkenness of juveniles as status offenses rather than
delinquency. Hence, some of these offenses may appear under this
status offense code.
- Miscellaneous status
offensesNumerous status offenses not included above (e.g.,
tobacco violation, curfew violation, and violation of a court
order in a status offense proceeding) and those offenses coded
as "other" in a jurisdiction's original data.
- Dependency offensesIncludes
actions that come to the attention of a juvenile court involving neglect
or inadequate care of minors on the part of the parents or guardians,
such as abandonment or desertion; abuse or cruel treatment; improper
or inadequate conditions in the home; and insufficient care or support
resulting from death, absence, or physical or mental incapacity of
the parents.
Offenses may also be grouped
into categories commonly used in the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports.
These groupings are:
- Crime IndexIncludes
all offenses contained within the violent crime and property crime
categories defined below.
- Violent Crime IndexIncludes
the offenses of murder/nonnegligent manslaughter, forcible rape,
robbery, and aggravated assault.
- Property Crime IndexIncludes
the offenses of burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft,
and arson.
Source of referral:
The agency or individual filing a complaint with intake that initiates
court processing.
- Law enforcement agencyIncludes
metropolitan police, State police, park police, sheriffs, constables,
police assigned to the juvenile court for special duty, and all others
performing a police function, with the exception of probation officers
and officers of the court.
- OtherIncludes the
youth's own parents, foster parents, adoptive parents, stepparents,
grandparents, aunts, uncles, other legal guardians, counselors, teachers,
principals, attendance officers, social agencies, district attorneys,
probation officers, victims, other private citizens, and miscellaneous
sources of referral that are often only defined by the code other
in the original data.
Status offense: Behavior
that is considered an offense only when committed by a juvenile (e.g.,
running away from home). (See "reason for referral.")
Unit of count: A case
disposed by a court with juvenile jurisdiction during the calendar year.
Each case represents a youth referred to the juvenile court for a new
referral for one or more offenses. (See "reason for referral.")
The term disposed means that during the year some definite action was
taken or some treatment plan was decided on or initiated. (See "disposition.")
Under this definition, a youth could be involved in more than one case
during a calendar year.
Upper
age of jurisdiction: The oldest age at which a juvenile court has
original jurisdiction over an individual for law-violating behavior.
For the time period covered by this Report, the upper age of jurisdiction
was 15 in 3 States (Connecticut, New York, and North Carolina), and
16 in 10 States (Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan,
Missouri, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Texas, and Wisconsin). In the
remaining 37 States and the District of Columbia, the upper age of jurisdiction
was 17. It must be noted that within most States, there are exceptions
in which youth at or below the State's upper age of jurisdiction can
be placed under the original jurisdiction of the adult criminal court.
For example, in most States, if a youth of a certain age is charged
with an offense from a defined list of "excluded offenses," the case
must originate in the adult criminal court. In addition, in a number
of States, the district attorney is given the discretion of filing certain
cases in either the juvenile court or the criminal court. Therefore,
while the upper age of jurisdiction is commonly recognized in all States,
there are numerous exceptions to this age criterion.
| Juvenile
Court Statistics 1997 |
May
2000 |
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