union county, nc a closer look at 2008 juvenile justice data presented by the union county dmc...

19
Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Upload: dinah-henderson

Post on 29-Dec-2015

217 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Union County, NC

A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data

Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Page 2: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Snapshot on Complaints Referred/Received•506 Complaints were referred/received for 2008 calendar year•Only 16% of the total complaints occurred in the summer months•Males made up 81% of complaints•62% of male complaints occurred in the 1st and 4th quarters

Page 3: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Snapshot on Complaints Referred/Received•Black youth made up 31% of all complaints•Latino youth accounted for 7% of all complaints•Minority youth accounted for 43% of all complaints•Complaints were highest for black youth in the 1st and 4th quarters•Complaints were highest for white youth in the 2nd and 4th quarters

Page 4: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

2008 Juvenile Complaints Data Review

• 506 total complaints were received • Males accounted for 81% of all complaints• 31% of complaints were brought against black

youth – all minorities made up 43% of complaints

• Union County’s minority youth population is 25.1%

Page 5: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

• 44% of all juvenile offenses occurred between 7am and 3pm

• While national research shows that juvenile crime spikes from the hours of 3pm to 6pm, only 12% of Union County’s juvenile crime occurred during these hours

• 24% of complaints either had no time listed or were status offenses

Page 6: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board
Page 7: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Top Offenses Referred

1. Simple Assault2. Larceny (M)3. Injury to Real Property4. Injury to Personal

Property5. Break and Enter (F)

6. Communicating Threats7. Assault on Government

employee8. Larceny (F)9. Possession of marijuana

up to ½ oz.

•72% of all juvenile complaints received in 2008 were misdemeanor charges

Page 8: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Snapshot on Times of Juvenile Offenses•Contrary to national research, Union County’s highest rate of juvenile offenses occur between 7am and 3pm•In the summer months of 2008, juvenile offense rates spiked during the hours of 12am and 7am•During the summer months, offense rates decreased during the hours of 7am to 3pm

Page 9: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

•Of all offenses occurring between 7am and 6pm, 69% were school related or occurred on a school campus•The highest number of school related offenses occurred from October 1st to December 31st •The school related offenses occurring from July through September were on summer school campuses

Page 10: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board
Page 11: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board
Page 12: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Snapshot of School Complaints

• A total of 198 or 39% of all complaints were school related

• Of the complaints made from 7am-6pm, a time when youth are likely on a school campus, 69% were school related

• Anecdotal data suggests that roughly 50% of all school related charges were diverted from court

Page 13: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board
Page 14: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

•There was a total of 76 detention admissions in Union County for the year 2008•Of these admissions, 51% were black youth and 43% were white youth•Males accounted for 74% of detention admissions

Snapshot on Detention Admissions

Page 15: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board
Page 16: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board
Page 17: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Detention

• In 2008, youth were sent to detention 76 different times

• 51% of these youth were black – 57% of these youth were all minorities

• 74% of youth were sent to detention as a result of a violation of probation

Page 18: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Violations of Probation

• The top five reasons listed for a VOP detention admission were:– Curfew Violation (18)– Out of School Suspension (15)– Truancy (14)– Drug Use (6)– Refusal to cooperate with treatment (5)

Page 19: Union County, NC A Closer Look at 2008 Juvenile Justice Data Presented by the Union County DMC Advisory Board

Contact Information

• Rebecca Smith, Project [email protected]

• Karen Tucker, Project [email protected]

Please visit us on the web at www.uniondmc.webs.com