“They can’t do that!”
This quickly became my mantra when I started as a juvenile defender nearly a year ago.
My colleagues heard it so often they joked about recording me and  just playing it back while I was observing court proceedings so that I  wouldn’t have to speak. Unfamiliar with the differences between how the  criminal justice system treats juvenile and adult offenders, I was  clearly unprepared for some of the things I witnessed when I first  arrived in juvenile court.
You see, juvenile courts are quasi-criminal, meaning many of the  aspects I expected to see in a criminal court are present, but the  result of juvenile delinquency proceedings is supposed to be more  rehabilitative than punitive, and “in the best interest of the child.”
What I learned this to mean is that prosecutors, judges, and a state’s department  of juvenile justice have much more latitude to make recommendations for  a child’s “best interests.”  Because of this latitude, I have actually  heard a judge say, “Don’t even think about requesting bond until you  tell us where the weapon is,” at a detention hearing.
What happened to the presumption of innocence, or the right to avoid  self-incrimination?  Decidedly, this judge believed it to be in the  child’s best interest to explain what had happened, even if doing so  would implicate the child’s own involvement.
While I was merely observing the hearing and was not this child’s  defense attorney, it was all I could do not to jump out of my chair and  yell “you can’t do that!” This is just one instance I have seen where a  child’s “best interests” obviously diverge from his or her “legal  interests,” which makes juvenile delinquency actions particularly  challenging to navigate.
While juvenile courts are arguably intended to rehabilitate and treat  juvenile offenders rather than punish them, all too often I see blatant  disregard for Constitutional rights during juvenile proceedings under  the guise of acting in the “best interest of the child.”
Why is it that courts are willing to downplay or outright bypass the  rights meant to protect alleged juvenile offenders? Is it because the  words “guilty” and “conviction” have been swapped for the words  “delinquent” and “adjudication” so that the outcome sounds less  devastating?
No child I have represented who has been sent to juvenile detention  has suffered any less disruption to his life because of this word-play.
Recently, public defender offices in Georgia that represent juveniles  have been asked to comment on the potential financial and operational  impact of the new proposed juvenile code provision providing for the  appointment of an attorney for each child prior to a detention hearing.
While I agree that a child should have access to representation when  his liberty is at stake, I can’t help but wonder why juvenile advocates  aren’t clamoring for more significant changes to juvenile procedure.
For instance, a juvenile detention hearing itself would be more  meaningful if judges were not privy to police and other evidentiary  reports prior to making detention decisions, or at the very least, if  arresting officers and complaining witnesses were required to appear, as  in adult preliminary hearings.
Guaranteeing representation for juveniles at detention hearings is  just the tip of the iceberg for increasing protections for juveniles in Georgia.  
Georgia is a state that allows for even first-time juvenile offenders  as young as 14 to be tried as adults in certain offenses, and yet I  haven’t seen so much as an email from policy-makers addressing the  effect of this law on a juvenile’s due process rights.
I guess even when we have a long way to go, we have to start somewhere.
Advocates for Abandoned Adolescents - Our Mission is to do better!
10/06/2011
Where is Due Process in Juvenile Court?
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