SUBCHAPTER I—GENERALLY
§11101. Findings
(a) The Congress finds the following:
(1) Although the juvenile violent crime arrest rate in 1999 was the lowest in the decade, there remains a consensus that the number of crimes and the rate of offending by juveniles nationwide is still too high.
(2) According to the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, allowing 1 youth to leave school for a life of crime and of drug abuse costs society $1,700,000 to $2,300,000 annually.
(3) One in every 6 individuals (16.2 percent) arrested for committing violent crime in 1999 was less than 18 years of age. In 1999, juveniles accounted for 9 percent of murder arrests, 17 percent of forcible rape arrests, 25 percent of robbery arrest, 14 percent of aggravated assault arrests, and 24 percent of weapons arrests.
(4) More than ½ of juvenile murder victims are killed with firearms. Of the nearly 1,800 murder victims less than 18 years of age, 17 percent of the victims less than 13 years of age were murdered with a firearm, and 81 percent of the victims 13 years of age or older were killed with a firearm.
(5) Juveniles accounted for 13 percent of all drug abuse violation arrests in 1999. Between 1990 and 1999, juvenile arrests for drug abuse violations rose 132 percent.
(6) Over the last 3 decades, youth gang problems have increased nationwide. In the 1970's, 19 States reported youth gang problems. By the late 1990's, all 50 States and the District of Columbia reported gang problems. For the same period, the number of cities reporting youth gang problems grew 843 percent, and the number of counties reporting gang problems increased more than 1,000 percent.
(7) According to a national crime survey of individuals 12 years of age or older during 1999, those 12 to 19 years old are victims of violent crime at higher rates than individuals in all other age groups. Only 30.8 percent of these violent victimizations were reported by youth to police in 1999.
(8) One-fifth of juveniles 16 years of age who had been arrested were first arrested before attaining 12 years of age. Juveniles who are known to the juvenile justice system before attaining 13 years of age are responsible for a disproportionate share of serious crimes and violence.
(9) The increase in the arrest rates for girls and young juvenile offenders has changed the composition of violent offenders entering the juvenile justice system.
(10) These problems should be addressed through a 2-track common sense approach that addresses the needs of individual juveniles and society at large by promoting—
(A) quality prevention programs that—
(i) work with juveniles, their families, local public agencies, and community-based organizations, and take into consideration such factors as whether or not juveniles have been the victims of family violence (including child abuse and neglect); and
(ii) are designed to reduce risks and develop competencies in at-risk juveniles that will prevent, and reduce the rate of, violent delinquent behavior; and
(B) programs that assist in holding juveniles accountable for their actions and in developing the competencies necessary to become responsible and productive members of their communities, including a system of graduated sanctions to respond to each delinquent act, requiring juveniles to make restitution, or perform community service, for the damage caused by their delinquent acts, and methods for increasing victim satisfaction with respect to the penalties imposed on juveniles for their acts.
(11) Coordinated juvenile justice and delinquency prevention projects that meet the needs of juveniles through the collaboration of the many local service systems juveniles encounter can help prevent juveniles from becoming delinquent and help delinquent youth return to a productive life.
(b) Congress must act now to reform this program by focusing on juvenile delinquency prevention programs, as well as programs that hold juveniles accountable for their acts and which provide opportunities for competency development. Without true reform, the juvenile justice system will not be able to overcome the challenges it will face in the coming years when the number of juveniles is expected to increase by 18 percent between 2000 and 2030.
(
Editorial Notes
Codification
Section was formerly classified to
Amendments
2002—
"(a) The Congress hereby finds that—
"(1) juveniles accounted for almost half the arrests for serious crimes in the United States in 1974 and for less than one-third of such arrests in 1983;
"(2) recent trends show an upsurge in arrests of adolescents for murder, assault, and weapon use;
"(3) the small number of youth who commit the most serious and violent offenses are becoming more violent;
"(4) understaffed, overcrowded juvenile courts, prosecutorial and public defender offices, probation services, and correctional facilities and inadequately trained staff in such courts, services, and facilities are not able to provide individualized justice or effective help;
"(5) present juvenile courts, foster and protective care programs, and shelter facilities are inadequate to meet the needs of children, who, because of this failure to provide effective services, may become delinquents;
"(6) existing programs have not adequately responded to the particular problems of the increasing numbers of young people who are addicted to or who abuse alcohol and other drugs, particularly nonopiate or polydrug abusers;
"(7) juvenile delinquency can be reduced through programs designed to keep students in elementary and secondary schools through the prevention of unwarranted and arbitrary suspensions and expulsions;
"(8) States and local communities which experience directly the devastating failures of the juvenile justice system do not presently have sufficient technical expertise or adequate resources to deal comprehensively with the problems of juvenile delinquency;
"(9) existing Federal programs have not provided the direction, coordination, resources, and leadership required to meet the crisis of delinquency;
"(10) the juvenile justice system should give additional attention to the problem of juveniles who commit serious crimes, with particular attention given to the areas of sentencing, providing resources necessary for informed dispositions, and rehabilitation;
"(11) emphasis should be placed on preventing youth from entering the juvenile justice system to begin with; and
"(12) the incidence of juvenile delinquency can be reduced through public recreation programs and activities designed to provide youth with social skills, enhance self esteem, and encourage the constructive use of discretionary time.
"(b) Congress finds further that the high incidence of delinquency in the United States today results in enormous annual cost and immeasurable loss of human life, personal security, and wasted human resources and that juvenile delinquency constitutes a growing threat to the national welfare requiring immediate and comprehensive action by the Federal Government to reduce and prevent delinquency."
1992—Subsec. (a)(2), (3).
Subsec. (a)(4).
Subsec. (a)(5) to (10).
Subsec. (a)(11), (12).
1984—Subsec. (a)(1).
Subsec. (a)(2).
Subsec. (a)(3).
Subsec. (a)(5).
1980—Subsec. (a)(4).
Subsec. (a)(8).
Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries
Effective Date of 2002 Amendment
"(a)
"(b)
Effective Date of 1988 Amendment
"(a)
"(b)
"(2) The amendments made by section 7253(b)(1) [amending
"(3) Notwithstanding the 180-day period provided in—
"(A) section 207 of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 (
"(B) section 361 of the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act (
"(C) section 404(a)(5) [now 404(a)(6)] of the Missing Children's Assistance Act (
the reports required by such sections to be submitted with respect to fiscal year 1988 shall be submitted not later than August 1, 1989."
Effective Date of 1984 Amendment
"(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), this division [division II (§§610–670) of chapter VI of title II of
"(b) Paragraph (2) of section 331(c) of the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act [
Effective Date of 1977 Amendment
Effective Date
§11102. Purposes
The purposes of this subchapter and subchapter II are—
(1) to support State, tribal, and local programs that prevent juvenile involvement in delinquent behavior;
(2) to assist State, tribal, and local governments in promoting public safety by encouraging accountability for acts of juvenile delinquency;
(3) to assist State, tribal, and local governments in addressing juvenile crime through the provision of technical assistance, research, training, evaluation, and the dissemination of current and relevant information on effective and evidence-based programs and practices for combating juvenile delinquency; and
(4) to support a continuum of evidence-based or promising programs (including delinquency prevention, intervention, mental health, behavioral health and substance abuse treatment, family services, and services for children exposed to violence) that are trauma informed, reflect the science of adolescent development, and are designed to meet the needs of at-risk youth and youth who come into contact with the justice system.
(
Editorial Notes
Codification
Section was formerly classified to
Amendments
2018—Par. (1).
Par. (2).
Par. (3).
Par. (4).
2002—
"(a) It is the purpose of this chapter—
"(1) to provide for the thorough and ongoing evaluation of all federally assisted juvenile justice and delinquency prevention programs;
"(2) to provide technical assistance to public and private nonprofit juvenile justice and delinquency prevention programs;
"(3) to establish training programs for persons, including professionals, paraprofessionals, and volunteers, who work with delinquents or potential delinquents or whose work or activities relate to juvenile delinquency programs;
"(4) to establish a centralized research effort on the problems of juvenile delinquency, including the dissemination of the findings of such research and all data related to juvenile delinquency;
"(5) to develop and encourage the implementation of national standards for the administration of juvenile justice, including recommendations for administrative, budgetary, and legislative action at the Federal, State, and local level to facilitate the adoption of such standards;
"(6) to assist States and local communities with resources to develop and implement programs to keep students in elementary and secondary schools and to prevent unwarranted and arbitrary suspensions and expulsions;
"(7) to establish a Federal assistance program to deal with the problems of runaway and homeless youth;
"(8) to strengthen families in which juvenile delinquency has been a problem;
"(9) to assist State and local governments in removing juveniles from jails and lockups for adults;
"(10) to assist State and local governments in improving the administration of justice and services for juveniles who enter the system; and
"(11) to assist States and local communities to prevent youth from entering the justice system to begin with.
"(b) It is therefore the further declared policy of Congress to provide the necessary resources, leadership, and coordination (1) to develop and implement effective methods of preventing and reducing juvenile delinquency, including methods with a special focus on preserving and strengthening families so that juveniles may be retained in their homes; (2) to develop and conduct effective programs to prevent delinquency, to divert juveniles from the traditional juvenile justice system and to provide critically needed alternatives to institutionalization; (3) to improve the quality of juvenile justice in the United States; (4) to increase the capacity of State and local governments and public and private agencies to conduct effective juvenile justice and delinquency prevention and rehabilitation programs and to provide research, evaluation, and training services in the field of juvenile delinquency prevention; (5) to encourage parental involvement in treatment and alternative disposition programs; and (6) to provide for coordination of services between State, local, and community-based agencies and to promote interagency cooperation in providing such services."
1992—Subsec. (a)(1).
Subsec. (a)(2).
Subsec. (a)(8), (9).
Subsec. (a)(10), (11).
Subsec. (b)(1).
Subsec. (b)(5), (6).
1984—Subsec. (a)(1).
Subsec. (a)(4).
Subsec. (a)(7).
1980—Subsec. (a)(8).
Subsec. (b)(1).
Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries
Effective Date of 2018 Amendment
Effective Date of 2002 Amendment
Amendment by
Effective Date of 1984 Amendment
Amendment by
§11103. Definitions
For purposes of this chapter—
(1) the term "community based" facility, program, or service means a small, open group home or other suitable place located near the juvenile's home or family and programs of community supervision and service which maintain community and consumer participation in the planning operation, and evaluation of their programs which may include, but are not limited to, medical, educational, vocational, social, and psychological guidance, training, special education, counseling, alcoholism treatment, drug treatment, and other rehabilitative services;
(2) the term "Federal juvenile delinquency program" means any juvenile delinquency program which is conducted, directly, or indirectly, or is assisted by any Federal department or agency, including any program funded under this chapter;
(3) the term "juvenile delinquency program" means any program or activity related to juvenile delinquency prevention, control, diversion, treatment, rehabilitation, planning, education, training, and research, including drug and alcohol abuse programs; the improvement of the juvenile justice system; and any program or activity designed to reduce known risk factors for juvenile delinquent behavior, provides 1 activities that build on protective factors for, and develop competencies in, juveniles to prevent, and reduce the rate of, delinquent juvenile behavior;
(4)(A) the term "Bureau of Justice Assistance" means the bureau established by
(B) the term "Office of Justice Programs" means the office established by
(C) the term "National Institute of Justice" means the institute established by
(D) the term "Bureau of Justice Statistics" means the bureau established by
(5) the term "Administrator" means the agency head designated by
(6) the term "law enforcement and criminal justice" means any activity pertaining to crime prevention, control, or reduction or the enforcement of the criminal law, including, but not limited to police efforts to prevent, control, or reduce crime or to apprehend criminals, activities of courts having criminal jurisdiction and related agencies (including prosecutorial and defender services), activities of corrections, probation, or parole authorities, and programs relating to the prevention, control, or reduction of juvenile delinquency or narcotic addiction;
(7) the term "State" means any State of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands;
(8) the term "unit of local government" means—
(A) any city, county, township, town, borough, parish, village, or other general purpose political subdivision of a State;
(B) any law enforcement district or judicial enforcement district that—
(i) is established under applicable State law; and
(ii) has the authority to, in a manner independent of other State entities, establish a budget and raise revenues; or
(C) for the purposes of assistance eligibility, any agency of the government of the District of Columbia or the Federal Government that performs law enforcement functions in and for—
(i) the District of Columbia; or
(ii) any Trust Territory of the United States;
(9) the term "combination" as applied to States or units of local government means any grouping or joining together of such States or units for the purpose of preparing, developing, or implementing a juvenile justice and delinquency prevention plan;
(10) the term "construction" means acquisition, expansion, remodeling, and alteration of existing buildings, and initial equipment of any such buildings, or any combination of such activities (including architects' fees but not the cost of acquisition of land for buildings);
(11) the term "public agency" means any State, unit of local government, combination of such States or units, or any department, agency, or instrumentality of any of the foregoing;
(12) the term "secure detention facility" means any public or private residential facility which—
(A) includes construction fixtures designed to physically restrict the movements and activities of juveniles or other individuals held in lawful custody in such facility; and
(B) is used for the temporary placement of any juvenile who is accused of having committed an offense or of any other individual accused of having committed a criminal offense;
(13) the term "secure correctional facility" means any public or private residential facility which—
(A) includes construction fixtures designed to physically restrict the movements and activities of juveniles or other individuals held in lawful custody in such facility; and
(B) is used for the placement, after adjudication and disposition, of any juvenile who has been adjudicated as having committed an offense or any other individual convicted of a criminal offense;
(14) the term "serious crime" means criminal homicide, forcible rape or other sex offenses punishable as a felony, mayhem, kidnapping, aggravated assault, drug trafficking, robbery, larceny or theft punishable as a felony, motor vehicle theft, burglary or breaking and entering, extortion accompanied by threats of violence, and arson punishable as a felony;
(15) the term "treatment" includes but is not limited to medical, educational, special education, social, psychological, and vocational services, corrective and preventive guidance and training, and other rehabilitative services designed to protect the public, including services designed to benefit addicts and other users by eliminating their dependence on alcohol or other addictive or nonaddictive drugs or by controlling their dependence and susceptibility to addiction or use;
(16) the term "valid court order" means a court order given by a juvenile court judge to a juvenile—
(A) who was brought before the court and made subject to such order; and
(B) who received, before the issuance of such order, the full due process rights guaranteed to such juvenile by the Constitution of the United States;
(17) the term "Council" means the Coordinating Council on Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention established in
(18) for purposes of subchapter II, the term "Indian tribe" means—
(A) a federally recognized Indian tribe; or
(B) an Alaskan Native organization;
that has a law enforcement function, as determined by the Secretary of the Interior in consultation with the Attorney General;
(19) the term "comprehensive and coordinated system of services" means a system that—
(A) ensures that services and funding for the prevention and treatment of juvenile delinquency are consistent with policy goals of preserving families and providing appropriate services in the least restrictive environment so as to simultaneously protect juveniles and maintain public safety;
(B) identifies, and intervenes early for the benefit of, young children who are at risk of developing emotional or behavioral problems because of physical or mental stress or abuse, and for the benefit of their families;
(C) increases interagency collaboration and family involvement in the prevention and treatment of juvenile delinquency; and
(D) encourages private and public partnerships in the delivery of services for the prevention and treatment of juvenile delinquency;
(20) the term "gender-specific services" means services designed to address needs unique to the gender of the individual to whom such services are provided;
(21) the term "home-based alternative services" means services provided to a juvenile in the home of the juvenile as an alternative to incarcerating the juvenile, and includes home detention;
(22) the term "jail or lockup for adults" means a secure facility that is used by a State, unit of local government, or law enforcement authority to detain or confine adult inmates;
(23) the term "nonprofit organization" means an organization described in
(24) the term "graduated sanctions" means an accountability-based, graduated series of sanctions (including incentives, treatment, and services) applicable to juveniles within the juvenile justice system to hold such juveniles accountable for their actions and to protect communities from the effects of juvenile delinquency by providing appropriate sanctions for every act for which a juvenile is adjudicated delinquent, by inducing their law-abiding behavior, and by preventing their subsequent involvement with the juvenile justice system;
(25) the term "sight or sound contact" means any physical, clear visual, or verbal contact that is not brief and inadvertent;
(26) the term "adult inmate"—
(A) means an individual who—
(i) has reached the age of full criminal responsibility under applicable State law; and
(ii) has been arrested and is in custody for or awaiting trial on a criminal charge, or is convicted of a criminal offense; and
(B) does not include an individual who—
(i) at the time of the offense, was younger than the maximum age at which a youth can be held in a juvenile facility under applicable State law; and
(ii) was committed to the care and custody or supervision, including post-placement or parole supervision, of a juvenile correctional agency by a court of competent jurisdiction or by operation of applicable State law;
(27) the term "violent crime" means—
(A) murder or nonnegligent manslaughter, forcible rape, or robbery, or
(B) aggravated assault committed with the use of a firearm;
(28) the term "collocated facilities" means facilities that are located in the same building, or are part of a related complex of buildings located on the same grounds;
(29) the term "related complex of buildings" means 2 or more buildings that share—
(A) physical features, such as walls and fences, or services beyond mechanical services (heating, air conditioning, water and sewer); or
(B) the specialized services that are allowable under section 31.303(e)(3)(i)(C)(3) of title 28 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as in effect on December 10, 1996;
(30) the term "core requirements"—
(A) means the requirements described in paragraphs (11), (12), (13), and (15) of
(B) does not include the data collection requirements described in subparagraphs (A) through (K) of
(31) the term "chemical agent" means a spray or injection used to temporarily incapacitate a person, including oleoresin capsicum spray, tear gas, and 2-chlorobenzalmalononitrile gas;
(32) the term "isolation"—
(A) means any instance in which a youth is confined alone for more than 15 minutes in a room or cell; and
(B) does not include—
(i) confinement during regularly scheduled sleeping hours;
(ii) separation based on a treatment program approved by a licensed medical or mental health professional;
(iii) confinement or separation that is requested by the youth; or
(iv) the separation of the youth from a group in a nonlocked setting for the limited purpose of calming;
(33) the term "restraints" has the meaning given that term in
(34) the term "evidence-based" means a program or practice that—
(A) is demonstrated to be effective when implemented with fidelity;
(B) is based on a clearly articulated and empirically supported theory;
(C) has measurable outcomes relevant to juvenile justice, including a detailed description of the outcomes produced in a particular population, whether urban or rural; and
(D) has been scientifically tested and proven effective through randomized control studies or comparison group studies and with the ability to replicate and scale;
(35) the term "promising" means a program or practice that—
(A) is demonstrated to be effective based on positive outcomes relevant to juvenile justice from one or more objective, independent, and scientifically valid evaluations, as documented in writing to the Administrator; and
(B) will be evaluated through a well-designed and rigorous study, as described in paragraph (34)(D);
(36) the term "dangerous practice" means an act, procedure, or program that creates an unreasonable risk of physical injury, pain, or psychological harm to a juvenile subjected to the act, procedure, or program;
(37) the term "screening" means a brief process—
(A) designed to identify youth who may have mental health, behavioral health, substance abuse, or other needs requiring immediate attention, intervention, and further evaluation; and
(B) the purpose of which is to quickly identify a youth with possible mental health, behavioral health, substance abuse, or other needs in need of further assessment;
(38) the term "assessment" includes, at a minimum, an interview and review of available records and other pertinent information—
(A) by an appropriately trained professional who is licensed or certified by the applicable State in the mental health, behavioral health, or substance abuse fields; and
(B) which is designed to identify significant mental health, behavioral health, or substance abuse treatment needs to be addressed during a youth's confinement;
(39) for purposes of
(40) the term "trauma-informed" means—
(A) understanding the impact that exposure to violence and trauma have on a youth's physical, psychological, and psychosocial development;
(B) recognizing when a youth has been exposed to violence and trauma and is in need of help to recover from the adverse impacts of trauma; and
(C) responding in ways that resist retraumatization;
(41) the term "racial and ethnic disparity" means minority youth populations are involved at a decision point in the juvenile justice system at disproportionately higher rates than non-minority youth at that decision point;
(42) the term "status offender" means a juvenile who is charged with or who has committed an offense that would not be criminal if committed by an adult;
(43) the term "rural" means an area that is not located in a metropolitan statistical area, as defined by the Office of Management and Budget;
(44) the term "internal controls" means a process implemented to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of objectives in—
(A) effectiveness and efficiency of operations, such as grant management practices;
(B) reliability of reporting for internal and external use; and
(C) compliance with applicable laws and regulations, as well as recommendations of the Office of Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office; and
(45) the term "tribal government" means the governing body of an Indian Tribe.
(
Editorial Notes
References in Text
This chapter, referred to in text, was in the original "this Act", meaning
Codification
Section was formerly classified to
Amendments
2018—Par. (8)(C), (D).
Par. (18).
Par. (22).
"(A) pending the filing of a charge of violating a criminal law;
"(B) awaiting trial on a criminal charge; or
"(C) convicted of violating a criminal law;".
Par. (25).
Par. (26).
"(A) has reached the age of full criminal responsibility under applicable State law; and
"(B) has been arrested and is in custody for or awaiting trial on a criminal charge, or is convicted of a criminal offense;".
Pars. (30) to (45).
2002—Par. (3).
Par. (4).
Par. (7).
Par. (12)(B).
Par. (13)(B).
Par. (14).
Par. (16)(C).
"(i) reviewed the behavior of such juvenile and the circumstances under which such juvenile was brought before the court and made subject to such order;
"(ii) determined the reasons for the behavior that caused such juvenile to be brought before the court and made subject to such order;
"(iii) determined that all dispositions (including treatment), other than placement in a secure detention facility or a secure correctional facility, have been exhausted or are clearly inappropriate; and
"(iv) submitted to the court a written report stating the results of the review conducted under clause (i) and the determinations made under clauses (ii) and (iii);".
Par. (22).
Pars. (24) to (29).
1998—Par. (8).
Par. (9).
1992—Par. (16).
Pars. (19) to (23).
1988—Par. (5).
Pars. (17), (18).
1984—Par. (3).
Par. (4)(A).
Par. (4)(B).
Par. (6).
Par. (14).
Par. (16).
1980—Par. (1).
Par. (4).
Par. (5).
Par. (7).
Par. (9).
Par. (12).
Pars. (13), (14).
Par. (15).
1977—Par. (3).
Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries
Effective Date of 2018 Amendment
Amendment by
Effective Date of 2002 Amendment
Amendment by
Effective Date of 1988 Amendment
Amendment by
Effective Date of 1984 Amendment
Amendment by
Effective Date of 1977 Amendment
Amendment by
Executive Documents
Termination of Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands
For termination of Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, see note set out preceding