98-95 GOV
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Juvenile Justice Act Reauthorization:
The Current Debate
Updated February 5, 1998
Suzanne Cavanagh and David Teasley
Specialists in American National Government
Government Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress


Juvenile Justice Act Reauthorization:
The Current Debate
Summary
Some criminologists and policymakers argue that the United States is on the
verge of a teenage crime explosion, as the children of baby boomers reach the ages
at which they are most likely to commit crimes. Others maintain that such a
prediction is overblown.
The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-415; 88
Stat. 1109), as amended, expired on September 30, 1996. Recent debate on juvenile
justice policy highlights several areas that Congress will continue to address: (1) the
desirability of a “get tough” policy, as opposed to a more rehabilitative approach to
juvenile justice; (2) whether to continue funding for states to remove juveniles from
adult lockups; and (3) the controversy regarding the detention of proportionately
more minority juveniles.
Policymakers and legislators at the federal, state, and local levels are
considering a variety of approaches to reduce youth violence and prevent juvenile
crime. First, the 105th Congress is considering legislation to amend and reauthorize
the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act. In addition, congressional
leaders and President Clinton have proposed a number of juvenile justice measures
that may be incorporated into the act or into separate juvenile justice reform
measures. For example, FY1998 appropriations for the Department of Justice (P.L.
105-119) contained increased funding for the Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention ($238.7 million) and new monies for the Juvenile
Accountability Incentive Block Grant ($250 million), based on the requirements in
H.R. 3/McCollum.
At the state and local levels, officials have proposed several approaches to
combat juvenile delinquency, such as removing violent juvenile offenders from the
juvenile justice system, new dispositions and sentencing options, and more open
juvenile proceedings and records.


Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Juvenile Violence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Predicting Trends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Policy Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Get Tough vs. Rehabilitation and Prevention . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
State Removal of Juveniles from Adult Lockups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Disproportionate Representation of Minorities in Detention
Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Other Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Selected Legislative Proposals in the 105th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
State and Local Juvenile Justice Reforms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13


Juvenile Justice Act Reauthorization:
The Current Debate
Introduction
The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-415; 88
Stat. 1109), as amended, expired on September 30, 1996.1 As enacted and
subsequently amended by five reauthorization acts, the measure contained four core
requirements or mandates for states to attain in order to be eligible for formula grant
monies. These include: sight and sound (juveniles may not be within sight or sound
of adult inmates in secure facilities); deinstitutionalization of status offenders
(juveniles confined for offenses that would not be punishable if committed by an
adult, for example, truancy); removal of juveniles from adult jails and lockups; and
reduction of the disproportionate incarceration of minority juveniles.
Last reauthorized on October 7, 1992, the Juvenile Justice Act provided federal
assistance through the Justice Department’s Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) to state and local programs aimed at the prevention
and treatment of delinquency. Under the act, OJJDP received $170 million i
2
n
FY1997 appropriations for juvenile justice.3
Although none of the major legislation introduced during the 104th Congress
to reauthorize the act was enacted, certain proposals from these bills were funded by
1 For additional information, see: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research
Service, Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention: Background and Current Issues, by
Suzanne Cavanagh and David Teasley, CRS Report 92-633 GOV (Washington: 1992); and
Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Reauthorization Act of 1992: Summary of
Major Provisions
, coordinated by Suzanne Cavanagh, CRS Report 92-821 GOV
(Washington: 1992). For a discussion of public perceptions about juvenile crime, see: U.S.
Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, Juvenile Crime and Justice: National
Public Opinion
, by Kevin Coleman, CRS Report 97-971 GOV (Washington: 1997).
2 According to a General Accounting Office study, OJJDP awarded 162 new
discretionary grants for FY1993 through FY1995. For a listing of these programs, see: U.S.
General Accounting Office, OJJDP Discretionary Grant Programs, GAO report
GAO/GGD-96-111R, Letter to the Honorable Orrin Hatch (Washington: May 7, 1996).
3The Omnibus Consolidated Appropriation Act, 1997, included an additional $4.5
million, as authorized by the Juvenile Justice Act and the Victims of Child Abuse Act of
1990.

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the Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act of 1997 (P.L. 104-208).4 During the
first session of the 105 Congress, two bills were passed, amended, in the Hous
th
e
(H.R. 3/McCollum and H.R. 1818/Riggs), and one bill (S. 10/Hatch) was reported
by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Neither H.R. 1818 nor S. 10, containing
provisions to reauthorize the act, has received final action, but FY1998
appropriations for the Department of Justice under the Commerce, Justice, and State
Appropriations Act , FY1998 (P.L. 105-119) contained increased funding for the
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention ($238.7 million) and new
monies for the Juvenile Accountability Incentive Block Grant ($250 million), based
on the requirements in H.R. 3.
This report focuses on the first of the three major activities authorized by the
act: juvenile justice and delinquency prevention. This report provides an overview
of the current debate on the appropriate response to youth violence by the criminal
justice system. The act also authorizes runaway and homeless youth services, and
missing children’s assistance.5
Juvenile Violence
On February 19, 1997, President Clinton stated in Boston, Massachusetts, that
“juvenile crime has got to become our top law enforcement priority.” In outlining
the seriousness and the extent of the problem, he warned, “we know we’ve got about
six years to turn this juvenile crime thing around or our country is going to be living
with chaos.” The President noted that although the total crime rate nationwide in
1994 was declining, the juvenile crime rate was on the rise, especially violence and
drug use among those under 18 years of age. He remarked upon the fact that in 1995,
“we began to see some hope that it [the juvenile crime rate] might be dropping off,
but we haven’t even had two years in a row [of a declining juvenile crime rate].”6
According to crime-related data released on September 28, 1997, by the
Uniform Crime Reports (UC),
! The total number of juveniles under 18 years of age arrested rose 21.5%
between 1992 and 1996. By comparison, the total number of arrests for
all ages increased 6.8% between 1992 and 1996.

! From 1992 to 1996, the number of juveniles arrested for violent crimes
rose 2.8 %, while violent crime arrests for all ages dropped 1.3%.
4 See: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, Juvenile Justice:
Funding Trends for Selected Programs, by Suzanne Cavanagh and David Teasley, CRS
Report 96-948 GOV (Washington: 1997).
5For additional information on the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program, see: U.S.
Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, by Ruth Ellen Wasem and Alice
Butler, CRS Report 96-280 EPW (Washington: 1997).
6 U.S. Executive Office of the President, White House, Press Release, Feb. 19, 1997,
p. 3. Hereafter referred to as Press Release.

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! Between 1980 and 1995, the number of juvenile arrests for drug
violations increased 132%, versus a 28% increase for adults in the same
period.7
At the same time, UCR data partly support the President’s comments on the
decline in juvenile crime since 1994. While total arrests of juveniles under the age
of 18 rose 2.8% between 1995 and 1996, and arrests of juveniles for violent crime
dropped 5.8%. Announcing the second straight annual drop in juvenile crime
8
,
Attorney General Janet Reno said that the drop was not a “blip,” but a real movement
away from the youth crime rate that rose steadily between 1987 and 1994.9
In announcing the anti-gang provisions within his larger juvenile crime
initiative, President Clinton commented on the proliferation of gangs nationwide,
almost completely composed (an estimated 90%) of juvenile members. He reported
that “95 percent of our largest cities and 88 percent of our smaller cities report that
they are plagued by gang crime.”10
Predicting Trends
Some criminologists and policymakers argue that we are on the verge of a
teenage crime explosion, as the children of the baby boomers reach the ages at which
they are most likely to commit crimes. John J. DiIulio, Jr., a Princeton University
professor of politics and public affairs, not only foresees a teenage crime wave, but
also describes some youngsters as “superpredators,” lacking in moral values and
more violent than previous generations.”
11
Others maintain that such a prediction is overblown. Norval Morris, a
University of Chicago professor of law and criminology, agrees that there will be a
slightly larger number of crime-prone youth, but he contends “it’s not going to be an
apocalyptic effect.” Most would agree, however, that the present level of juvenile
12
violent crime is too high.
Shay Bilchik, Administrator of the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention, is guardedly optimistic about the current direction of juvenile crime. In
the foreword to the latest edition of Juvenile Offenders and Victims,
13 published by
7U.S. Dept. of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Crime in the United States
1996, Uniform Crime Reports (Washington: 1997), pp. 220, 282.
8Ibid., p. 222.
“Violent
9
Offenses by Teens Plunge Again; Reno Sees Trend,” Juvenile Justice Digest,
vol. 25, Oct. 1997, p. 1.
10Press Release, p. 3.
11Quoted in Richard Lacayo, “Law and Order,” Time, vol. 147, Jan. 15, 1996, p. 52.
12Ibid., pp. 52-53.
13U.S. Dept. of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention,
(continued...)

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OJJDP, Mr. Bilchik believes that “the wave of violence by juveniles that the United
States has experienced in the last ten years may be subsiding.” But he cautions, “this
is not to say that we have solved the problem of juvenile crime. The current levels,
though below those of recent years, are not acceptable.”
14
Policy Questions
It appears that in considering reauthorization of the 1974 act and other measures
to control juvenile crime, the 105 Congress has moved toward changing the focus
th
of the federal juvenile justice system to one emphasizing accountability and
punishment, as opposed to prevention and treatment. The extent to which the
mandates of the 1974 act, as amended, will be retained, revised, or eliminated will
be one policy question debated in the second session of the 105 Congress. Othe
th
r
areas will also be addressed. These include:
! Whether to continue funding for state removal of juveniles from adult
lockups;
! The controversy regarding the detention of proportionately more minority
juveniles; and
! Other policy questions such as the deinstitutionalization of status
offenders.
Get Tough vs. Rehabilitation and Prevention
Advocates of rehabilitation and prevention argue that a punitive approach to
juvenile violent crime is neither fair nor effective. The Coalition for Juvenile Justice,
an organization comprising State Juvenile Justice Advisory Group members of all
the states and territories participating in the Juvenile Justice Act, decries the current
trend toward treating juvenile offenders more harshly. According to its 1997 Annual
Report, the coalition argues “in many states, juveniles charged with delinquency and
serious crime are today exposed to far more serious consequences than youth so
charged twenty or thirty years ago, or even a decade ago, in spite of the fact that there
has been no significant increase in the percentage of crime committed by such youth,
including the rate of serious or violent crime.”
15
Proponents of a “get tough” policy with violent juvenile offenders see the
juvenile justice system as “the first revolving door” in the American criminal justice
13(...continued)
Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 1997 Update on Violence, by Melissa Sickmund, Howard
N. Snyder, and Eileen Poe-Yamagata (Washington: 1997), p. iii.
14Ibid.
1 5 Coalition for Juvenile Justice, The News Media and Juvenile Crime, 1997 Annual
Report: False Images? (Washington: 1997), p. 6. Hereafter referred to as Coalition for
Juvenile Justice.

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system. In a January 1996 report of the Council on Crime in America, co-chaired by
former Attorney General Griffin Bell and former “Drug Czar” William Bennett, the
council maintained that “stronger law enforcement and incarceration can work to
restrain violent juvenile and adult criminals, enhance public safety, and restore public
trust in the justice system—and in representative government itself.” Among the
16
policy changes it urges are:
! Prosecuting and incarcerating violent youth offenders as adults;
! Making juvenile records available to the police and courts for prosecution,
and to schools for monitoring; and
! Swifter jailing of would-be juvenile street offenders and greater emphasis
on cracking down on recidivists.17
State Removal of Juveniles from Adult Lockups
The present trend toward trying an increasing numbers of youth in the adult
system may undermine an important goal of the 1974 act, as amended, which
required the removal of juveniles from adult lockups. Advocates of a continued
reliance on the juvenile justice system and the mandates of the act argue:
The juvenile justice system was established in recognition of the fact that
children and adolescents are quite different from adults.... Although states have
long permitted transfer or waiver to the adult court as a sort of “safety valve” for
the juvenile justice system, this alternative was to serve as a last resort for
recalcitrant juveniles, almost as a recognition of failure.18
In addition, these advocates contend the juvenile justice system is more
effective, in that juveniles serving time in adult institutions receive worse treatment
and are more likely to commit new offenses than those in juvenile facilities. O
19
n
July 9, 1997, the Justice Policy Institute (JPI) released a study condemning the
incarceration of juvenile offenders in adult prisons. Study findings reported that
young people jailed with adults were (1) eight times more likely to commit suicide;
(2) five times more likely to report being raped or sexually assaulted; (3) twice as
likely to report being beaten by prison staff; and (4) 50% more likely to report being
attacked with a weapon.20
1 6 The Council on Crime in America, The State of Violent Crime in America
(Washington: Jan. 1996), p. ii. Hereafter referred to as Council on Crime.
17For a discussion of recent studies supporting these policy initiatives, see Council on
Crime, pp. 49-54.
18Coalition for Juvenile Justice, p. 8.
19Ibid., pp. 27-28.
2 0 Jason Ziedenberg, Risks Juveniles Face When They Are Incarcerated With Adults,
Center on Criminal Justice Policy Institute (Washington: July 9, 1997), pp. 4-7.

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As a corollary to their emphasis on stiff sentences for violent offenders,
proponents of incarcerating violent youth in adult facilities argue the following:
! Recent studies support the socially beneficial and cost effective results of
such incarceration;
! While in prison, violent juvenile criminals experience the four purposes
of punishment—retribution, deterrence from committing future crimes,
rehabilitation, and incapacitation preventing them from committing
additional crimes; and
! Incarceration and restraint of these violent youth protect them from a high
probability that many may be injured or killed on the street.21
Disproportionate Representation of Minorities in Detention
Facilities

The 1988 reauthorization of the 1974 act called for a study of the
disproportionate representation of minority juveniles in detention facilities. The
1992 reauthorization provided that states failing to address this problem would lose
25% of their formula grant program allocation. As a first step, all of the participating
states have undertaken studies that report a disproportionate minority representation
among most state facilities. Policymakers may choose to continue this
disproportionate representation of minorities mandate or find other ways to respond.
Some child advocates conclude that the problem “rests with the system which
employs, unintentionally or not, a ‘selection bias’ that results in a disproportionate
number of minority youth in the [juvenile] system.”
22 They point to data indicating
a continuing overrepresentation of minorities from arrest to incarceration. For
example, in 1995, 32% of the U.S. population aged 10 through 17 years were
classified as minorities. A recent study provided data showing that minority youth
(black, Hispanic, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Native American) outnumbered non-
minority white youth in custody in public facilities as of February 15, 1995, by more
than two-to-one (68% to 32%).
23
Those who suggest that there is a selection bias within the juvenile justice
system do not necessarily attribute this bias to racism. For example, Michael Tonry,
professor of law and public policy at the University of Minnesota, and a student of
racial disparities within the criminal justice system, argues that racial bias and
stereotyping are not the major causes of this problem. Tonry finds that the recent
emphasis on drug control has led to an avalanche of arrests of street-level drug
dealers. He concludes that “drug arrests are easier to make in socially disorganized
21Council on Crime, pp. 49-54.
22A Unique Partnership for Children, National Coalition of State Juvenile Justice
Advisory Groups, 1991 Annual Report (Washington: 1992), p. 42.
23U.S. Dept. of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention,
Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 1997 Update on Violence (Washington: Aug. 1997), p. 42.

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inner-city minority areas than in working- or middle-class urban or suburban
areas....”24
On the other hand, those supporting the imposition of penalties on those who
commit crimes, regardless of their race or ethnicity, argue that the seriousness and
large number of crimes committed by minority youth are the primary concerns. The
Council on Crime, for example, concludes that “America’s violent crime problem,
especially the rage of homicidal and near-homicidal violence, is extremely
concentrated among young urban minority males who figure disproportionately as
both violent crime victims and violent crime victimizers.” The council is concerned
25
about harm to inner-city residents, and it fears that violence may spread:
... while violent crime in America is heavily concentrated in the nation’s inner-
cities, it is hardly confined to the nation’s inner-cities.... It is not unreasonable
to be concerned that, over time, the inner-city violent crime problem could spill
over into gentrified central city districts, inner-city suburbs, edge cities, and even
the rural heartland.... More and more violent crime involves strangers and
teenage “wolf packs.”26
Other Policies
Other policies are being scrutinized in the process of reauthorizing the 1974 act.
One of the mandates of the act requires the deinstitutionalization of status offenders.
These youth commit acts deemed delinquent based on age alone. Does this mandate
place an additional burden on the criminal justice system, or serve as a means of
preventing delinquency among at-risk youth? Another area of debate concerns the
release of juvenile court records of youth offenders to school officials, to law
enforcement officials, and to judges in the adult court system who may be unaware
of previous violent juvenile offenses by defendants brought before them. A related
matter involves the establishment and maintenance of juvenile fingerprint records.27
Selected Legislative Proposals in the 105th Congress
To place legislative proposals of the 105th Congress in context, it may be
helpful to note that although the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of
1974 expired on September 30, 1996, certain proposals included in major
Michael
24
Tonry, “Racial Politics, Racial Disparities, and the War on Crime,” Crime
and Delinquency, vol. 40, Oct. 1994, p. 485.
25Council on Crime, p. 11.
26Ibid., pp. 10-11.
2 7For additional information, see: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research
Service, Juvenile Justice: Opening Juvenile Records, Pro and Con, by David Teasley and
Charles Doyle, CRS Report 97-698 GOV (Washington: 1997).

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reauthorizing legislation introduced during the 104th Congress were funded under
FY1997 and FY1998 appropriations.
28
S. 10. The Congressional leadership sponsored several juvenile justice reform
bills in the 105th Congress. Senator Orrin Hatch, chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, introduced the Violent and Repeat Juvenile Offender Act of 1997 (S. 10)
on January 21, 1997. The bill was reported, amended (S.Rept. 105-108) by the
Senate Judiciary Committee on October 9, 1997.
As reported, S. 10 would replace the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention with a new Office of Crime Control and Accountability. It would amend
the four existing mandates by removing the requirement that states failing to comply
with these mandates lose 25% of Title II, Part B formula grants for each mandate not
met, excepting only the sight and sound mandate. It would modify the sight and
sound mandate with language prohibiting the state from detaining or confining
juveniles found to be delinquent in any institution in which the juvenile would have
prohibited contact with adult inmates, or in which the juvenile could engage in
sustained oral communication with an adult inmate for more than 72 hours. It would
add a provision to require any state or any local government that would receive
formula grant funds to test for any sexually transmitted disease any person convicted
of sexual activity with a juvenile. Grantees failing to comply with this provision
within a reasonable amount of time would lose 10% of their funding.
The bill would create “Juvenile Crime Control and Juvenile Offender
Accountability Incentive Block Grants” to states, funded at $500 million for each
fiscal year, FY1998 through FY2002. Block grant funds to states would be used to
(1) enhance criminal justice efforts against youth offenders, such as the use of
graduated sanctions, short-term confinement of certain juvenile offenders, and the
hiring of prosecutors, judges, and probation officers; (2) provide restitution to crime
victims; (3) provide schooling or vocational training for youth offenders and punish
truancy; (4) establish and update records systems; and (5) fund juvenile crime control
and prevention programs. To meet eligibility requirements, states would have to
comply with several conditions, including but not limited to, the prosecution of
juveniles aged 14 years and older as adults for selected violent crimes, the
establishment of a system of graduated sanctions, and the collection and
dissemination of fingerprint and photograph records of violent juvenile offenders to
law enforcement agencies, the courts, and schools.
The bill would authorize a total of $3.5 billion, $700 million for each fiscal year,
FY1998 through FY2002. Of the $700 million authorized each year, $500 million
would be provided for block grants, $50 million for new grants to prosecutors and
courts for state juvenile justice systems, and $150 million for juvenile justice Title
II programs, including the Part B formula grants.
S. 10 would repeal several provisions within the Juvenile Justice Act, Title II,
including Part E (State Challenge Activities); the first part of Part I (White House
F
28
or additional information see: U.S. Library of Congress, Juvenile Justice: Funding
Trends for Selected Programs, pp. 2-3.

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Conference on Juvenile Justice); and the second part of Part I (General and
Administrative Provisions). It would amend the federal code regarding juvenile
offenders, seizure of property in cases of violent or drug offenses, sexual abuse, hate
crimes, and other criminal justice provisions.
H.R 3. On January 7, 1997, Representative Bill McCollum, chairman of the
House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, introduced the Juvenile Crime Control Act
of 1997 (H.R. 3). On May 1, the bill was reported, amended, by the House
Committee on the Judiciary (H.Rept. 105-86).
As reported by the committee, the bill consists of three titles. Title I, Reforming
the Juvenile Justice System, would change the existing juvenile justice system to
encourage greater speed in the prosecution of serious juvenile offenders and to ensure
that their punishment will fit the seriousness of crimes they commit. Selected
provisions under Title I include a presumption in favor of adult prosecution at the
discretion of the prosecutor for juveniles aged 14 years or older who commit serious
violent felonies or drug offenses under federal law and who are not handed over to
state authorities; preservation of, and public access, to juvenile criminal records;
fingerprinting and photographing of juvenile offenders; and the loosening of the sight
and sound
mandate to provide that juveniles not be detained in any facility in which
they have regular contact with adult prisoners.
Title II, Apprehending Armed Violent Youth, would require that the Attorney
General establish an armed violent youth apprehension program. Every U.S.
Attorney’s office would have to contain at least one designated federal prosecutor for
this purpose, and every U.S. Attorney would be required to establish a task force to
coordinate law enforcement efforts under the program with state and local officials.
Title III, Accountability for Juvenile Offender and Public Protection Incentive
Grants, would authorize a new grant program funded at a total of $1.5 billion, $500
million for each year, FY1998 through FY2000. It appears that this grant program
would replace the Local Law Enforcement Block Grant Program. Also, it would
establish a two-tiered formula: (1) states are to receive a minimum of 0.25% of the
total, with the balance of funds remaining based upon the ratio of juveniles under the
age of 18 in each state compared to the juvenile population of all states; and (2) states
must pass through at least 75% of their funding to local governments based on a
formula of two-thirds ratio (average law enforcement expenditure) and one-third ratio
(average annual number of Part I violent crimes).
Grants may be used to build, expand, or operate juvenile detention and
corrections facilities; develop and administer accountability-based sanctions for
juvenile offenders; hire additional prosecutors, juvenile judges, probation officers,
and court-appointed defenders; fund efforts of prosecutors to address drug, gang and
youth violence; support technology, equipment, and training to aid prosecution of
violent juvenile offenders; and establish a variety of programs, including drug courts
for youth offenders, juvenile gun courts, interagency information-sharing programs,
and accountability-based efforts. Eligible states and localities must, within one year,
meet requirements to establish laws, policies, and programs that (1) provide greater
prosecutorial flexibility in charging serious violent juvenile offenders; (2) establish
a system of graduated sanctions for juvenile offenders, and a system of records for

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those juveniles adjudged delinquent and later found guilty of an offense that, if
committed by an adult, would be a felony; and (3) allow juvenile court judges the
freedom to penalize or impose sanctions against a parent or guardian of a juvenile
offender.
On May 8, 1997, the House passed H.R. 3, amended. It approved three
amendments to the bill, briefly summarized below:
! The McCollum Amendment would specify that the Attorney General can
certify that the interests of justice can be best served by proceeding against
a juvenile as a juvenile rather than as an adult; would clarify that the
Attorney General instead of the Director of the Bureau of Justice
Assistance is authorized to provide grants; would define serious violent
crime as murder, aggravated sexual assault, and assault with a firearm; and
would allow funding to renovate temporary or permanent juvenile
correction or detention facilities and to train correctional personnel.
! The Meehan Amendment, added as Title IV to the bill, would allow
special priority for Byrne discretionary grants to public agencies that have
strategies implemented or proposed that provide for cooperation among
law enforcement agencies to disrupt the illegal sale or transfer of firearms
to juveniles by tracing the sources of guns.
! The Dunn Amendment, added as Title V to the bill, would require that
states submit a plan describing the process by which parents will be
notified of a juvenile sex offender’s enrollment in an elementary or
secondary school, as a condition of eligibility for Byrne grant funding.
Though H.R. 3 has not received approval in the Senate, FY1998 appropriations
for the Department of Justice under the Commerce, Justice, and State Appropriations
Act, FY1998 (P.L. 105-119) contain new monies for the Juvenile Accountability
Incentive Block Grant ($250 million), based on the requirements in H.R. 3.
S. 362/H.R. 810. Administration proposals were introduced in the 105th
Congress by Senator Patrick Leahy (S. 362) and Representative Charles Schumer
(H.R. 810). Referred to the appropriate Judiciary Committees, these bills contain
provisions that would change the name of the Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention to the Office of Juvenile Crime Control and Prevention;
maintain existing mandates, but streamline or eliminate some statutory requirements
to increase flexibility; and provide $80 million for the juvenile justice formula grant
program, $75 million for a new “At-Risk Children Initiative,” and $17 million to
states for graduated sanctions for youth offenders.
Other provisions include delinquency prevention measures; the development of
Youth Violence Courts, to be funded at $50 million; the authorization of $200

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million for local prosecutors; gun control for juveniles; and the dedication of 10% of
all grant monies for research into funded initiatives.29
S. 15. On January 21, 1997, Senator Tom Daschle, Senate Minority Leader,
introduced the Youth Violence, Crime, and Drug Abuse Control Act of 1997 (S. 15),
and it was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee. The measure would establish
several new grant programs, including grants for juvenile drug courts and juvenile
gun courts, and Title IV grants to states and national organizations to protect youth
from violent crime. The bill would provide and extend funding under the Violent
Crime Reduction Trust Fund of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act
of 1994, Title 31, for these programs. For juvenile drug court grants and juvenile gun
court grants, the bill would authorize such sums as necessary from FY1998 through
FY2000, and $50 million for each fiscal year, FY2001 and FY2002, for both
programs, respectively. For Title IV grants, the bill would authorize such sums as
necessary from FY1998 through FY2000, and $125 million for each fiscal year,
FY2001 and FY2002.
Also, the bill would provide greater access to juvenile records; raise the
mandatory release age for juveniles from 21 to 26 years; enhance sentences for
criminals who arm themselves with bullet-proof body armor and laser-sighting
devices; create a new crime of interstate franchise, to stop the spread of criminal
street gangs; and increase penalties for witness intimidation.
H.R. 1818. The Juvenile Crime Control and Delinquency Prevention Act of
1997 (H.R. 1818), introduced by Representative Frank Riggs on June 5, 1997, would
change the name of the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention to the
Office of Juvenile Crime Control and Delinquency Prevention. The bill would
change the formula for Title II, Part B formula grants from an allocation among the
states on the basis of relative population of people under age 18, to an allocation of
50% on the basis of relative population of people under age 18, and the other 50%
on the annual average number of arrests for serious crimes committed in the eligible
state by juveniles during the most recent three years for which such information is
available.
The bill would amend requirements for formula grant funds, including adding
programs that assist in holding juveniles accountable for their actions; eliminating
programs for positive youth development, replacing them with community-based
programs and services to work with juveniles, their parents, and other family
members during and after incarceration in order to strengthen families so that
juveniles may be retained in their homes; and creating a new requirement for
establishing a system of records relating to any adjudication of juveniles less than 18
years of age who are adjudicated delinquent for conduct that would be a violent crime
if committed by an adult.
The bill would amend the four mandates (deinstitutionalization of status
offenders; separation of juveniles from sight and sound of adult offenders in any
29“President Releases Plan to Combat Youth Violence,” Criminal Justice Newsletter,
Mar. 4, 1997, pp. 3-5.

CRS-12
correctional institution; removal of juveniles from any jail or lockup for adults; and
reduction of the disproportionate incarceration of minority juveniles), respectively,
in the following ways: (1) retain current prohibition on detaining status offenders in
secure facilities in accordance with rules issued by the administrator, which currently
allow such juveniles to be held up to 24 hours before and 24 hours after their court
appearance; (2) modify “sight and sound” separation requirement to prohibit regular
contact, but to allow for incidental, supervised contact (such as passing in a hallway);
(3) build additional flexibility into the law by extending the period of time for which
juveniles can be held in a facility with adults, prior to an initial court appearance, to
48 hours (excluding weekends and holidays); and (4) modify this provision to require
states to address prevention efforts to reduce the disproportionate number of
minorities who come in contact with the juvenile justice system. The bill would
prohibit the establishment of numerical standards or quotas. It would require that
states failing to comply with these mandates lose 12.5% of Title II, Part B formula
grants for each mandate not met. It would allow states to receive 50% of their state
formula grant funding, whether or not they comply with the four core requirements.
H.R. 1818 would eliminate Part C (National Programs or Discretionary
Programs); Part D (Gang-Free Schools and Communities; Community-Based Gang
Intervention); Part E (State Challenge Activities); Part F (Treatment for Juvenile
Offenders Who Are Victims of Child Abuse or Neglect); Part G (Mentoring); Part
H (Boot Camps), Part I (1st part: White House Conference), and Title V (Incentive
Grants for Local Delinquency Prevention Programs).
The bill would replace Part I (2nd part: General and Administrative Provisions)
with a new Part F. H.R. 1818 would authorize such sums as needed for Title II
(excluding Parts C and E) for fiscal years 1998 through 2001. It would provide that
within a given fiscal year, no more than 5% of the total shall be available for Part A,
at least 80% for Part B, and no more than 15% for Part D. It would authorize such
funds as needed for Title II, Parts C and E, for the same fiscal years. It would create
a new Part C: Juvenile Delinquency Prevention Block Grant Program. It would
allocate funds among the states: 50% on the basis of relative population of people
under age 18, and the other 50% on the annual average number of arrests for serious
crimes committed in the eligible state by juveniles during the most recent three years
for which such information is available. Funds would be used for activities designed
to prevent and reduce juvenile crime in communities that have a comprehensive
juvenile crime prevention plan. The bill would provide that amendments under this
bill would apply only after September 30, 1997.
On June 26, H.R. 1818 was reported, amended (H.Rept. 105-155), by the House
Education and Workforce Committee. Three amendments were adopted that would
(1) clarify state participation in the proposed block grant program; elaborate
procedures on statistical work and make technical changes; (2) ensure that states
address child welfare records on those juveniles appearing in court; and (3) authorize
funds for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. The measure
passed the House, with technical and clarifying amendments, on July 15, 1997.

CRS-13
State and Local Juvenile Justice Reforms
State and local officials have proposed a number of approaches to combat
juvenile delinquency, many of which have been tested in the states. These
approaches range from tougher penalties and changes in sentencing to community
involvement with policing and prosecution and innovations in juvenile crime
prevention.
Most states have responded to the recent rise in juvenile arrests for violent crime
and public concern about this problem. Between 1992 and 1995, according to an
OJJDP report, state legislators have enacted provisions along five general themes:
! More serious and violent juvenile offenders are being removed from the
juvenile justice system in favor of criminal court prosecution.
! More state legislatures are experimenting with new disposition [and]
sentencing options [such as “blended sentencing,” which combines both
juvenile and adult sentences].
! Correctional administrators are under pressure to develop new programs
for youth offenders as a result of new transfer and sentencing laws.
! Traditional confidentiality provisions are being revised in favor of more
open proceedings and records.
! Victims of juvenile crime are being included as “active participants” in the
juvenile justice process [such as having juvenile offenders held
accountable by making reparation and restitution to their victims].30
Other approaches at the state and local level may include community
involvement with criminal justice officials and new juvenile crime prevention efforts.
For example, on February 19, 1997, President Clinton stated that he used Boston as
a prototype for effecting his plan to reduce juvenile crime and violence. Boston
police reported no firearm murders of juveniles in 1996, and an 80% decline in
juvenile homicides since 1990. Federal and Boston officials attribute a large part of
this decline to several innovative local prevention programs, including but not
limited to:
3 0 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention,
State Responses to Serious and Violent Juvenile Crime, by the National Center for Juvenile
Justice for the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (Washington: 1996),
pp. xi-xiv.
With respect to the first theme, all states provide for the trial of juveniles as adults in
criminal court under certain conditions. U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Juvenile Offenders and Victims: A Focus on Violence,
by the National Center for Juvenile Justice for the Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (Washington: 1995), p. 26. See also: U.S. Library of Congress,
Congressional Research Service, Juveniles in the Adult Criminal Justice System: An
Overview
, by Suzanne Cavanagh and David Teasley, CRS Report 95-1152 GOV
(Washington: 1995).

CRS-14
! Community Policing. Boston Police Commissioner Paul Evans praises the
improved relations between street cops and many city residents, especially
African-Americans.31
! Operation Night Light. Bill Stewart, a Boston probation officer who
founded the program in 1992, describes it as a partnership between
probation and anti-gang officers, involving verification by probation
officers riding in police cruisers that offenders are making curfew and
avoiding trouble.32
! Youth Service Program. Established in 1993 and involving an estimated
10,000 youths, Boston police officers teach drug and gang resistance in
schools and participate with juveniles in activities ranging from Red Sox
game attendance to bowling and basketball leagues to a youth choir.33
! Community-Based Juvenile Justice Program. Part of a larger “community
prosecution” effort, this program focuses on meetings between prosecutors
and school officials to identify and assist at-risk youth, stiffer prosecution
of serious juvenile offenders, and plans to place assistant district attorneys
in neighborhood police stations to encourage the coordination of their
activities with police.34
! The Boston Gun Project. Boston police and U.S. Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, and Firearms officials in the Boston office work together to
reduce the number of handguns on the street among youth, especially gang
members, while the U.S. Attorney’s office presses federal prosecution of
repeat offenders.35
Charles
31
A. Radin,, “Tough Talk on Penalties Irks Some; President Says Little About
Prevention, Groups Say,” The Boston Globe, Feb. 20, 1997, p. A12.
Indira
32
A.R. Lakshmanan,, “Team Effort Slows Tide of Youth Violence in City,” The
Boston Globe, July 22, 1996, p. A1.
33Ibid.
Catherine
34
Coles, and George L. Kelling, “Prosecutors Play Hardball—With Citizens,
Police and Courts Working Together, Crime Drops Dramatically,” The Boston Herald, Feb.
23, 1997, p. O23.
35“Boston’s Falling Murder Rate,” The Boston Globe, Jan. 3, 1997, p. A26.