Youth Justice

[2017 Session] Support a Meaningful Opportunity for Release for Youth Sentenced to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice

Policy Background:

Currently, youth who are 17 and under cannot be sentenced to life without parole for capital felony offenses. Instead, such youth in Texas are subject to life sentences with the possibility of parole after 40 years.

This mandatory minimum sentence length, in addition to the lack of consideration of mitigating factors during sentencing, prohibits Texas from giving a meaningful opportunity for review to those youth who demonstrate that they have been rehabilitated.

[2017 Session] Return Children Under the Age of 18 to the State’s Juvenile Justice System

Policy Background:

In Texas, 17-year-olds who commit a crime are considered adults and enter the adult criminal justice system. Texas is one of only 7 remaining states that charge 17-year-olds as adults, regardless of the offense or the teen’s personal experiences – making us out of line with best practices.

Juvenile justice advocates want age of adulthood raised to 18

Juvenile justice advocates want age of adulthood raised to 18

In Texas, you have to be 21 to apply for a concealed handgun permit, and, in many cities, 18 to buy an e-cigarette. In the eyes of the criminal justice system, however, you are considered an adult at age 17, a nearly century-old law juvenile justice advocates and law enforcement increasingly agree is out of step with national norms.

Read the rest of this article at Corrections One.

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