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Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

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Page 1: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior

Presented by: Zak Morton

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Page 2: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Clarify what to count as a Juvenile Arrest

Review the process of compiling the monthly Juvenile ASR report

Clarify the difference between Race and Ethnic Origin

Review Police Dispositions of Juveniles Under 16 Years of Age

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Page 3: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

“For UCR purposes a juvenile arrest iscounted when the circumstances are suchthat if the individual was an adult, an arrestwould have been made.”

- Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Handbook

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Page 4: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Statistics are being gathered to measurecriminal activity, not court activity or formalarrests

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Page 5: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Total number of persons “arrested”, cited, or summoned for all Part I and Part II crimes during a specified month

Demographic characteristics of persons arrested (age, sex, race, ethnic origin)

The number of persons arrested, not the number of charges lodged

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Page 6: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

probable cause

“taken into custody”, or issued an appearance ticket

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Page 7: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

“Taken into custody” means that the juvenile isno longer free to leave regardless of whether heor she is

1. handcuffed2. placed in a police vehicle3. brought to a police station4. taken directly to Family Court or secure

detention5. given an appearance ticket

OR6. warned and released without further

action

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Page 8: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Juvenile male is taken into police custodyafter he is observed shoplifting

After questioning, the juvenile is warned by the police and released to his parents

No formal charges are brought against the juvenile

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Page 9: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Juvenile is pulled over for speeding

Vehicle search uncovers drug paraphernalia and a small quantity of marijuana

Juvenile is detained by police until her legalguardian arrives at the scene

Juvenile is released to legal guardian with no formal charges are lodged

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Page 10: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

If there is no probable cause, an arrestshould NOT be counted on the ASR report.

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Page 11: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Teenagers in the town park after closing are instructed by police to leave.

A juvenile taken into custody for his or her own protection, e.g., neglect cases.

Follow-up contact with young offenders by officers for the purpose of determining the offender’s progress.

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Page 12: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

In New York State, “juvenile arrest” data from

the ASR Report is the ONLY indicator ofjuvenile crime.

Used to inform policy and funding decisions.

Measure Disproportionate Minority Contact (DMC)

Part of national data set

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Page 13: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Arrests of Juveniles Under 18 years of age

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Page 14: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

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Page 15: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

The ASR Report counts the number of people

arrested, not the number of charges lodged.

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Page 16: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

“If a person is arrested for multiple offensesthat were committed simultaneously, only

theoffense highest in the hierarchy of UCRCrimes is counted.”

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Page 17: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Two women are arrested for breaking into a car

dealership after closing hours (Burglary).

They stole cash from the dealership’s officesafe (Larceny-theft) and two new automobilesfrom the garage (Motor Vehicle Theft).

What offense should be reported?

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Page 18: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

A person may be arrested multiple timesduring a month for similar or differentviolations within a jurisdiction.

When there is a separation of time betweenarrests, the agency must score each arrestseparately.

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Page 19: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Man and woman parked in secluded location

Gunman shoots and kills man, abducts woman, drives her across town and rapes her

Two separate crimes – Homicide and Rape

Hierarchy rule is not used due to separation of time and place

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Page 20: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

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Page 21: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Races: Black, White, American Indian or Alaskan Native, Asian or Pacific Islander

Ethnic Origin: Hispanic, Non-Hispanic

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Page 22: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

White: having origins in any of the originalpeople of Europe, North Africa, or the MiddleEast.

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Page 23: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Black: having origins in any of the black racial

groups of Africa.

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Page 24: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

American Indian or Alaskan Native: Having

origins in any of the original peoples of NorthAmerica and who maintains culturalidentification through tribal affiliation orcommunity recognition.

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Page 25: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Asian or Pacific Islander: Having origins in any

of the original peoples of the Far East,Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, orPacific Islands.

This includes, China, India, Japan, Korea, thePhilippine Islands, and Samoa.

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Page 26: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Hispanic: A person of Mexican, Puerto Rican,

Cuban, South or Central American, or otherSpanish speaking culture, regardlessof race.

Non-Hispanic: All other people.

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Page 27: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Use “best judgment” to determine the race AND ethnic origin of the person arrested.

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Page 28: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

A 15 year old male is arrested after leaving a

gas station without paying for the gas hepumped into his car. When police arresthim, he identifies himself as Puerto Rican.

How should the arrestee be classified withregard to Race AND Ethnic Origin?

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Page 29: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

ALWAYS indicate the race and ethnic origin of

the person arrested!

Please do NOT leave either race and ethnicorigin blank!

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Page 30: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Persons Under 16 Years of Age

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Page 31: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

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Page 32: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

New York State Definition – Under 16 Years of Age

National Definition - Under 18 Years of Age

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Page 33: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Only report the disposition of juveniles under 16 that were reported on the ASR

Do NOT include juveniles that did not commit a UCR offense

Total dispositions = total # of reported arrests of persons under 16 on the ASR

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Page 34: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

1. Handled Within Department and Released2. Referred to Juvenile Court or Probation3. Referred to Welfare Agency4. Referred to Other Police Agency5. Referred to Criminal or Adult Court

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Page 35: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Juvenile Under 16 years of age

Arrested, but not referred to family court

No formal charge filed against the juvenile

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Page 36: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Include all Under-16 Juveniles referred to

probation department

person, agency, or group within jurisdiction of Family Court

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Page 37: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Include juveniles referred to welfare agenciesrather than family court or probation.

Welfare agencies can be public or private.

Examples: Local Boys and Girls Club, PoliceAthletic League, or local Dept. of Social Services.

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Page 38: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Include Juveniles who

1. Are arrested at request of another law enforcement agency

2. Committed crime in one jurisdiction but reside in another and turned over to home jurisdiction for handling

These arrests should NOT be counted on the ASR

report.

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Page 39: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

Include any Under-16 Juveniles referred toadult court for the juvenile offender process

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Page 40: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

DCJS has discontinued collecting data on Runaways.

Unnecessary to report data for juveniles taken into custody as runaways, truants, or curfew and loitering law violators.

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Page 41: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

DCJS will call your agency to verify the accuracy

of data that deviates from reported norms.

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Page 43: Measuring Juvenile Criminal Behavior Presented by: Zak Morton 1

NYS Division of Criminal Justice ServicesCrime Reporting Unit

1-800-262-3257

Email: [email protected]

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