Comparative juvenile criminal law

Juvenile law is law pertaining to those who are deemed to be below the age of majority. The age varies by country and culture. Usually minors are treated differently under the law. However, even when someone is considered to be a minor they may be prosecuted as an adult.

Bases of the juvenile criminal law

United States

In the U.S.A., the juvenile’s definition varies from state to state. The system applies to anyone between the age of 6-10 depending on the state and 18;[1] except for eleven states (including Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, South Carolina, and Texas) where a juvenile is a person under 17 and New York and North Carolina where it is under 15.[2] So the criminal majority begins at 16, 17 or 18 years old. In France, the criminal irresponsibility of children under 13 is defined by the article 122-8 of the criminal code. Young aged between 13 and 18 are assumed irresponsible, but they can be involved in a criminal sentence if circumstances and juvenile delinquent personality justify it.[3]

The Federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Act of 1974 settled up four key requirements[4] for American minors:

All the states participate, except South Dakota and Wyoming.

France

France has three stages of criminal minor:[5]

In both countries, some actions are prohibited to minor such as the underage consumption of alcohol or tobacco, truancy, running away from home, ungovernability. So if they don’t respect this prohibition, they become status offender.

Functioning of juvenile criminal justice

According to Jean Pierre Rosenczveig (children's judge in a Paris suburb), French juvenile criminal law has six key requirements:[6]

  1. The specialization of the magistrate. Indeed, juvenile criminal system has its own intervener: the children judge, the court of assizes of minors, the court of appeal minors’ chamber…
  2. Criminal relative responsibility begins at the age of 13.
  3. Educative priority, educate rather than punish. Article 2 of the Order of February 2, 1945 imposes an educative placing proposal to minors to whom a detention placing measure was envisaged.
  4. Association of the parents. Parents have to be informed of their child’s police custody. Moreover, Article 13 of the same order imposes an examination of the parents before the tribunal’s decision. Moreover, before the juvenile’s police custody, the service of legal protection of youth must be called.
  5. Compulsory of the attorney. Juvenile has to receive the aid and be represented by an attorney. If he doesn’t contact one, the jurisdiction has to do it for him.

In the U.S.A., the presence of an attorney is recommended, not compulsory.

In most States, special courts are settled up to trial juveniles,[7] others such as Colorado don’t; but certain crimes allow juvenile delinquents to be tried by superior court (for first degree murderer or gang murderer).[8]

Juveniles also have special protections, in addition of juvenile courts.[9] Those courts are closed to the public, whereas in France, the “huit-clos” is an option. Just like in France, parents or guardians have to be informed and must be present during the police questioning. At least, juveniles’ names are kept confidential when they are accused of a crime. Juveniles’ cases are not heard by a jury trial, but a judge.[10]

At least, American criminal law system has a particular vocabulary for juveniles’ cases. Indeed, juvenile offender doesn’t commit a crime, he commits a delinquent act. And courts use the term delinquent or not delinquent instead of guilty or not guilty, just to show that a minor is different from a criminal.[11]

Juveniles evidently have the same common right as adults’ criminals (12). They are assumed innocent; they are noticed of charges given in advance of any adjudication of delinquency, the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses, and for American juveniles, the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

After its arrest, in both countries, minor can be placed in provisory detention (for the French case, that’s a European Convention on Human Rights’ injunction), if the parents are prejudiced and informed. Provisory detention will be done in a juvenile hall, separated of adults’ center.[12]

By the way, in the U.S.A., parents might be liable for the acts of their child if they failed to their parent’s authority, if the minor is involved in a gang offense for example. In the U.S.A., juveniles don’t have the right to bail.

As we can see, American and French procedures are not so different, just because they have a common goal, protect as much as possible minor offender’s interest. Nevertheless, except the detention part (separation with adult and parents awareness), priorities are different. When Americans prefer the confidentiality of the minors, French people put the stress on an accommodated juvenile criminal system.

Both systems are protectful, but not on the same way. In France, an attorney is compulsory; in the U.S.A., there’s no jury.

As aforesaid, the goal of the juvenile justice in France and in the U.S.A is clearly to educate child offenders, rather than punish them, even if some measures can be tough.

Sanctions incurred by minors

The order of February 2, 1945 relative to the childhood delinquency contains the measures provided for the minor offender. French system has three punishment measures:[13]

Punishment depends of minor’s age. As aforesaid, if he is under 7 or 8, he can’t have any punishment. If he is between 8 and 13, the sentence will be nothing more than an educational punishment. If he is over 13, he can have an educational and a criminal punishment, but the tribunal has to explain its decision according to the minor personality and offence circumstances.

The U.S. punishment system isn’t as compartmentalized as the French one. Penalty is equal for each juvenile offender over 10, and there’s no stage differentiation between measures. Measures[14] are quite the same as French ones:

Since 1988, the death penalty for children who committed crimes has been outlawed. And of March 2005, the death penalty was abolished for killers who committed their crimes before the age of 18. There were 72 peoples in death row concerned by this court ruling.

As we can see, American and French systems don’t protect juvenile in the same way. But this protection is effective. There are also a lot of efforts put on the prevention of delinquency. Unfortunately, juvenile’s laws are getting harder and harder to face delinquency. For example, in France, the two main candidates (N. Sarkozy and S. Royal) have project to strengthen juvenile criminal law.

Notes

  1. American juvenile justice system
  2. juvenile law
  3. Sénat in French
  4. The federal Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Act
  5. Jurispedia, Minorité pénale in French
  6. Rosenczveig, Jean Pierre; Droit pénal des mineurs, étude de
  7. American juvenile justice system
  8. juvenile law
  9. juvenile law
  10. American juvenile justice system
  11. American juvenile justice system
  12. US Info
  13. Sénat in French
  14. Juvenile Sanctions, Info Online

Sources

External links

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