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Background to the Nathaniel Abraham case
The origins of the juvenile justice system in America
By Alden Long
11 November 1999
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The trial of 13-year-old Nathaniel Abraham in Pontiac, Michigan
has focused attention on the nation's juvenile justice system.
Abraham has been charged as an adult for first-degree murder under
a 1997 Michigan law that sets no minimum age for the prosecution
of children as adults for violent and serious offenses.
Abraham was only 11 years old at the time of the shooting death
of Ronnie Greene on October 29, 1997, the crime for which he stands
accused. His attorneys have further argued that at the time he
was functioning at the level of a six- to eight-year-old child.
The state has concocted its case against Nathanielin which
they have presented no evidence to substantiate their chargesin
an attempt to set a precedent and legitimize the 1997 law.
The Abraham case underscores a growing tendency throughout
the US judicial system to prosecute and sentence children as adults.
Forty-six states have in recent years changed legislation to allow
juveniles to be tried as a adults, with fourteen of these states
having instituted mandatory adult prosecution for some offenses.
The human rights organization Amnesty International has condemned
the US for its treatment of children in the judicial system, particularly
its execution of juvenile offenders.
This trend aimed at the dismantling of a system in which children
are treated differently in the eyes of the courts goes against
practices and traditions dating back decades. The juvenile justice
system in the US has its origins in a movement by progressive
reformers a century ago to stop the barbaric practice of treating
children like criminals.
The Act to Regulate the Treatment and Control of Dependent,
Neglected and Delinquent Childrenor the Illinois Juvenile
Court Actwas enacted by the Illinois legislature on July
1, 1899. This reform of the criminal system rejected as cruel
and unjust the treatment of children as adults under criminal
law. It was one of the earliest reforms of the middle-class Progressive
movement in the United States, and it was so well received that
within 10 years similar laws were adopted by 22 other states.
Jane Addams, the founder of Hull House in Chicago, was one
of the leaders of the Juvenile Court movement to stop the abuse
of children by the adult criminal system. For Addams and the settlement
house reformers the campaign for a Juvenile Court system went
hand in hand with other reforms to eliminate abusive conditions
faced by children.
The settlement movement of Jane Addams and Hull House had its
origin in the settlement concept, which came from Britain. The
idea was that well-educated, middle-class, young people would
be in a better position to help solve some of the problems of
the working class, poor and immigrants in the overcrowded cities
by settling in the slum neighborhoods. One distinction of Jane
Addams's Hull House was that it drew members from beyond its educated
middle-class base, from the working class. The movement attracted
trade unionists, including those involved in the 1894 Pullman
strike led by socialist Eugene Debs, as well as immigrants living
in Chicago's tenements.
Among the other issues facing working-class and immigrant children
raised by Jane Addams and the residents of Hull House was the
practice of sending poor children to poorhouses, called almshouses.
The Hull House Bulletin of April 1, 1897 pointed out: Curiously
enough there is no law in Illinois forbidding the presence of
children in the poorhouse, and hundreds of children pass through
the poorhouses of Illinois every year. However, a bill designed
to stop the practice of sending children to the almshouses, sponsored
by Hull House and another organization of reformers called the
Board of Charities, failed to pass the state legislature in 1897.
Frederick Wines, secretary of the Illinois Board of Charities,
described the kind of Juvenile Court system sought by the Progressive
reformers in his speech summing up the 1898 conference of the
Board of Charities, whose topic was Who are the Children
of the State? Wines said, We make criminals out of
children who are not criminals by treating them as if they were
criminals. That ought to be stopped. What we should have, in our
system of criminal jurisprudence, is an entirely separate system
of courts for children, in large cities, who commit offenses which
would be criminal in adults. We ought to have a children's
court' in Chicago, and we ought to have a children's judge'
who should attend to no other business. We want some place of
detention for those children other than a prison.
The 1899 Illinois Juvenile Court Act set up such a court, and
it was located across the street from Hull House in Chicago. It
created children's judges who, for a period of time, were appointed
by the city with the informal approval of Hull House. Youthful
offenders were no longer prosecuted or condemned as criminals;
they were called delinquents," and the law put juvenile
offenders on probation and kept them out of adult jails. Hull
House continued to play a major role in the Juvenile Court system
after the legislation was passed.
Julia Lathrop, a leading advocate from Hull House, became the
first chairperson of the Juvenile Court Committee, and a working-class
Hull House resident, Alzina Stevens, became the court's first
probation officer. The Juvenile Court was not originally intended
to be a legal institution. The reformers envisioned it more as
place where specialists could work together to examine a child's
character, background, psychology and home environment, and develop
a plan of treatment in the child's best interest.
The second judge of the Juvenile Court in Chicago was Julian
Mack, who was appointed in 1904. A legal scholar who had been
a founding editor of the Harvard Law Review, Mack had no
previous experience working with children and the law, but was
closely associated with Hull House. He developed the legal theory
and procedure for the new Juvenile Court, and promoted it widely
and enthusiastically.
Mack found precedent for the separate and humane treatment
of children by a modern juvenile court system in the old chancery
procedures of the common law English courts. His other major contribution
to the legal foundations of the juvenile justice system was to
elaborate the doctrine of parens patriae whereby the state
is recognized as the ultimate parent of all children and is therefore
responsible for every child's welfare.
The state, said Judge Mack, as the greater parent of
all of the children within its border, must deal with the child
as the wise, the kind, the just but the merciful parent would
deal with his own child, must abandon the idea that for every
petty offense the great authority of the state must be vindicated,
and its punishment visited upon the minor.
Mack, like the Progressive reformers of the last century, advocated
that the court should look into the background of the child. Why
isn't it the duty of the state, he remarked, instead
of asking merely whether a boy or girl has committed a specific
offense, to find out what he is, physically, mentally, morally
and then, if it learns that he is treading the path that leads
to criminality, to take him in charge, not so much to punish as
to reform, not to degrade but to uplift, not to crush but to develop,
not to make him a criminal but a worthy citizen.
Judge Ben Lindsey, the founder of the Denver Juvenile Court,
contrasted the criminal court to the Juvenile Court system as
follows: The criminal court for child offenders is based
on the doctrine of fear, degradation and punishment. It was, and
is, absurd. The Juvenile Court was founded on the principle of
love. We assumed that the child had committed not a crime, but
a mistake, and that he deserved correction, not punishment. Of
course, there is firmness and justice, for without these there
would be danger in leniency. But there is no justice without love.
It is worth comparing these compassionate sentiments to the
vindictive outlook of prosecutors and judges today who have tossed
out the conception of social support and the rehabilitation of
children in favor of the criminalization and punishment of the
youth.
The Juvenile Court system abandoned the adversarial format
of the criminal courts. It sought to provide the care and
guidance necessary for rehabilitation, and tried to extend
probation to allow children to stay in their homes. They replaced
criminal charges with petitions of delinquency, trials with hearings,
findings of guilt with adjudications of delinquency; criminal
sentences were replaced with dispositions. Juvenile Court proceedings
were not public in order to protect children from the stigma of
criminal prosecution.
The rehabilitative ideal of the Juvenile Court system was based
on the progressive viewpoint of the reformers that the cause of
juvenile crime was to be found in the environment in which the
children were living, and that a change in their conditions could
change their characters. Advocates of the rehabilitative model
rejected the old justifications for criminal punishment like deterrence,
retribution and incapacitation. They supported sanctions only
to change the characters, attitudes, and behavior of convicted
offenders.
Little change was made in the structure or formal objectives
of the Juvenile Court system until the Supreme Court intervened
in the 1960s. Three decisions by the Supreme Court between 1966
and 1970Kent v. United States (1966), In re Gault (1967)
and In re Winship (1970)attempted to improve the Juvenile
Court system as it then existed by extending Constitutional democratic
rights guarantees and criminal procedure safeguards to children
in the Juvenile Court system.
The Kent case described the Juvenile Court system as the worst
of both worlds, where children received neither the
protections accorded to adults nor the solicitous
care and regenerative treatment postulated for children
by the progressive reformers. Justice Fortas wrote the Court's
opinion and stated that the Court would no longer tolerate procedural
arbitrariness in juvenile courts. The Court held that juveniles
had the right to a lawyer before the Juvenile Court could waive
jurisdiction and transfer their case to adult criminal court.
Kent also addressed the issue of mental incapacity, based on
the then-new District of Columbia definition of criminal responsibility
in the Durham case. The Durham test defining criminal responsibility
was that an accused is not criminally responsible if his
unlawful act was the product of mental disease or mental defect.
In re Gault is the landmark Supreme Court case that articulated
the Warren Court's solutions to the shortcomings it found in the
Juvenile Court system. The Court decided in Gault to extend basic
Constitutional due process rights to children. It held that certain
criminal procedure protections guaranteed by the Constitution
under the Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment in the adult
criminal law system must be applied to children in the Juvenile
Court system.
In re Gault required that the due process rights of notice,
counsel, cross-examination and the right against self-incrimination
must be provided to children facing delinquency dispositions in
the Juvenile Court system. In re Winship added that the criminal
burden of proof must also apply in juvenile proceedings.
The present-day proponents of the prosecution of children as
adultsas in the Nathaniel Abraham casepose a danger
to the protection of children established under the Juvenile Court
system and threaten a return to conditions children faced in the
nineteenth century.
The American Civil Liberties Union reports that juveniles sentenced
to adult criminal jails are five times more likely to be sexually
assaulted, twice as likely to be beaten and 50 percent more likely
to be attacked with a weapon than children housed in juvenile
facilities.
While under the Juvenile Court doctrine of parens patriae
the state is supposed to be ultimately responsible for the well-being
of all children within its borders, particularly those in its
direct custody, it is precisely this state that now poses the
greatest threat to the youngest and most defenseless members of
society.
See Also:
Michigan prosecutes 13-year-old as
an adult
Closing arguments due in murder trial of Nathaniel Abraham
[10 November 1999]
Forensic psychiatrist speaks on the Abraham
case: "When Nathaniel needed a system there was no system
there for him"
[10 November 1999]
US youth crime bill: more
children to be tried as adults
[24 June 1999]
Michigan judge condemns 16
year old to life sentence with no parole
[18 March 1999]
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