Juvenile Court Jurisdiction.
Juvenile courts are a division of the state's superior court system. In general, juvenile courts only have jurisdiction over criminal matters concerning persons who are under the age of 18 through the point of adjudication (a juvenile conviction). If criminal proceedings commence after a person's eighteenth birthday for an offense committed prior to the person's eighteenth birthday, the proceedings must be held in adult court and the person is subject to adult sentencing. A juvenile with a pending case in juvenile court at the time they turn 18 may continue to be under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court beyond the juvenile's eighteenth birthday only if, before that date, the juvenile court enters an order extending jurisdiction. With some limited exceptions, the court cannot extend jurisdiction over proceedings past the juvenile's twenty-first birthday.
In addition, there are several circumstances under which state law requires exclusive adult court jurisdiction or allows the juvenile court to decline jurisdiction and transfer the case to adult court:
The parties may also agree to waive exclusive adult court jurisdiction in a criminal matter involving a person under the age of 18 and, with the court's approval, move the matter to juvenile court.
Sentences for Criminal Offenses.
Juvenile court dispositions and adult felony criminal sentences are subject to statutory sentencing guidelines. In both the juvenile and adult systems, a statutory grid establishes the standard sentencing range for a particular offense based on the seriousness level of the offense and an individual's prior juvenile adjudications or adult convictions.
In the juvenile disposition system, the disposition category called local sanctions is the least serious category and may include any of, or a combination of, the following: up to 30 days in confinement in a county juvenile detention facility, up to 12 months of community supervision, and up to 150 hours of community restitution. Any confinement imposed that is greater than 30 days is served through commitment at a Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) juvenile rehabilitation facility.
In general, a juvenile disposition may extend past a juvenile's eighteenth birthday, but may not extend past their twenty-first birthday. However, for juveniles age 16 or 17 who are adjudicated of Robbery in the first degree, Drive By Shooting, or any violent offense while armed with a firearm, jurisdiction remains until the juvenile turns age 25. In these circumstances, jurisdiction is also automatically extended to include a period up to 24 months of parole, not extending past the individual's twenty-fifth birthday.
Felony criminal convictions in adult court are sentenced under the Sentencing Reform Act (SRA). The SRA's sentencing grid ranges from a low-end sentence of zero to 60 days of incarceration for a seriousness level I offense to a possible life sentence for a seriousness level XVI offense. Persons convicted of felonies in adult courts serve sentences of less than one year at local jail facilities, and longer sentences at prison facilities operated by the Department of Corrections. However, persons convicted in adult court of an offense committed prior to turning 18 serve sentences at a DCYF juvenile rehabilitation facility until they age out of the facility, at which point they transfer to the state prison system.
Juvenile court jurisdiction over persons age 18 and older is expanded.
Except in cases in which the adult court has exclusive jurisdiction or the juvenile court has declined jurisdiction, the juvenile court has jurisdiction over all criminal proceedings pertaining to individuals who are accused of committing an offense under the age of 18 when the information is filed before the individual turns 21. The current law requirements for charges to be initiated and for the court to extend jurisdiction prior to the juvenile's eighteenth birthday no longer apply. The court retains jurisdiction to impose a standard range disposition up to a person's twenty-third birthday when the person is adjudicated at age 18 or older for a juvenile offense.
The juvenile court may also extend jurisdiction over persons over the age of 18 accused of criminal offenses committed at the age of 16 or 17 that would otherwise be subject to exclusive adult court jurisdiction when the parties, with the court's approval, have agreed to juvenile court jurisdiction.
Changes are made to the jurisdiction and disposition provisions concerning juveniles accused or adjudicated of Murder in the first or second degree committed at age 14 or older or of Rape in the first degree committed at age 15 or older as follows:
The circumstances for when a discretionary decline hearing may be held when a juvenile is charged with a serious violent offense or Murder in the first or second degree require that the respondent was at the requisite age at the time of the offense, rather than at the time of the proceedings.
Provisions providing juvenile court jurisdiction over cases in which the information was filed before the person turned 21, provisions modifying the discretionary decline provisions, and provisions allowing cases to return to juvenile court from adult court in certain circumstances apply to all pending and future cases, including cases involving an offense that occurred prior to the effective date of the bill. The authorization for a juvenile court to impose a standard range disposition up to a person's twenty-third birthday applies to all cases charged in the future, including cases in which the offense occurred prior to the effective date of the bill.
The substitute bill makes several changes.
It is specified that the juvenile court has jurisdiction over cases in which the information was filed before the age of 21 for a person accused of committing an offense under the age of 18, rather than providing juvenile court jurisdiction over persons under the age of 21 who are accused of committing an offense under the age of 18. Additionally, the juvenile court retains jurisdiction to impose a standard range disposition that extends past the person's twenty-first birthday, but not to exceed their twenty-third birthday, when the person was adjudicated of an offense in juvenile court after turning 18.
The authorization for a juvenile court to impose a disposition up to the twenty-third birthday, and parole up to the twenty-fifth birthday, of a person who committed a murder offense at age 14 or 15 or a Rape in the first degree offense at 15 applies when the person was that age "or older" at the time of the offense. The juvenile court may impose a term of parole for a person who committed a Rape in the first degree offense at age 15 or older for 24 to 36 months, rather than up to 24 months, in alignment with the parole length for that offense in current law.
The retroactivity and applicability clauses are modified in the following ways:
The substitute bill also makes technical changes, removes obsolete language, and reorganizes provisions.
(In support) This bill is an effort to try to address as many cases as possible in juvenile court when the offense was committed by someone under the age of 18. Currently if a youth commits a crime at the age of 17 and for whatever reason the charges are not filed until they turn 18, the case moves to the adult criminal justice system. The exact same offense can be committed by two people of the same age, but because of how long it can take to process a case, one kid may have a completely different outcome than another. Prosecutor backlog is not the fault of the child. Even if the judge and parties are okay with bringing the case back to juvenile court, it is not always possible. These cases are rare, but the collateral consequences of being convicted as an adult are much more severe. There are some differing opinions as to whether this should apply between the ages of 18 and 21, or only 18 and 19.
The system should be fundamentally fair and based on brain development science, and in its current form it is not. There are vast differences between the juvenile system and the adult system. The juvenile system offers more developmentally appropriate treatment than adult court, which is not meant to handle people who commit crimes as juveniles. The bill also allows extension of jurisdiction for some serious offenses committed by juveniles. Allowing longer jurisdiction in these cases is an acknowledgement of the unique circumstances surrounding these offenses, and allows the rehabilitative aspects of juvenile rehabilitation to take place. This bill provides a way to address trauma appropriately, help avoid recidivism, and enhances safety for everyone. This is also one mechanism to address racial disparity.
Many young adults have been adversely affected by the age of 18 being the charging cutoff for juvenile court. It is not uncommon for someone who committed an offense right before turning 18 to be rushed into taking a deal that will result in their incarceration to the age of 21. These can be situations where the juvenile has no financial support to hire their own lawyer and no family support to help with the decision-making. If there was time to negotiate and go through the process, they could have explored options for a better deal. This bill embodies the profound truth that each person is more than their worst act and is capable of change. Young people are opportunities to be invested in, not problems to be solved. People who committed offenses as juveniles deserve to be in a system that believes in their humanity and that is the juvenile justice system.
(Opposed) None.
Representative Julio Cortes, prime sponsor; Katie Hurley, King County Department of Public Defense; Judge Jennifer Forbes, Superior Court Judges' Association; Nicholas Oakley, Center for Children and Youth Justice; Julissa Sanchez, CHOOSE 180; Maureen McKee, Minority & Justice Commission; Cameron Miller; Zaheed Lynch; Matthew Murphy, Collective Justice Program Director, Restorative Dialogues; and Russell Brown, Washington Association of Prosecuting Attorneys.