Judicial Decision and
Disposition
Delinquency
cases involving males in 1997 were five times more likely to be judicially
waived to criminal court than were cases involving females. Overall,
1.0% of formally processed cases involving males were waived to criminal
court, compared with 0.2% of cases involving females (table 36). The
proportion of cases waived to criminal court was smaller for both males
and females in 1997 than in 1988. For males, judicial waivers for formally
processed cases involving drug offenses showed a substantial increase
between 1988 and 1991 (from 1.6% to 4.3%) and then declined considerably
through 1997 (1.3%). Drug cases involving females followed the same
pattern, increasing from 1.1% in 1988 to 2.1% in 1991 and then declining
to 0.2% in 1997.
Once
petitioned, cases involving male juveniles were more likely to be adjudicated
than were those involving females (59% compared with 53% in 1997) (table
37). This pattern was found in all four offense categories. For males,
the probability of adjudication was greatest in cases involving property
and public order offenses (60%); for females, the probability was greatest
in cases involving public order offenses (57%). The probability of adjudication
decreased between 1988 and 1997 for formally handled cases involving
males (from 61% to 59%) and females (from 56% to 53%).
Adjudicated cases involving
male delinquents were more likely than those involving females to result
in residential placement. In 1997, residential placement was the most
restrictive disposition in 30% of adjudicated cases involving males
and 22% of those involving females (table 38). For both sexes, higher
proportions of person and public order cases resulted in residential
placement than did property or drug cases. Overall, the use of out-of-home
placement declined between 1988 and 1997 for both sexes.
Formal probation was ordered
in 54% of adjudicated delinquency cases involving males and 60% of those
involving females in 1997 (table 39). The likelihood of probation decreased
slightly between 1988 and 1997 for cases involving males (from 55% to
54%) and increased slightly for females (from 58% to 60%).
| Juvenile
Court Statistics 1997 |
May
2000 |
|