How To Use Juvenile court In A Sentence

  • The teenagers, all of whom are incarcerated at Alameda County juvenile hall, will undergo closed juvenile court proceedings.
  • Earlier, at the Juvenile Court Center in Texarkana, the Avilas waived their right to an initial hearing on allegations concerning four of their other sons, who range in age from 8 to 14. Parents say they have left Tony Alamo Ministries; want 5 children returned from protective custody
  • On returning to Mobile she retained attorney Norborne R. Clarke to draft a plan based on the Colorado model for a separate juvenile court and detention home in Mobile.
  • A sixth defendant pleaded guilty in juvenile court more than a year ago.
  • Assault claim: A 15-year-old Darlington boy appeared before the town's Juvenile Court yesterday facing accusations of assault.
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  • The first appearance a child would make after being charged would be before a youth court, formerly called a juvenile court.
  • The boy's case was adjudged in the juvenile court.
  • The boy's case was adjudged in the juvenile court.
  • The Pikes appealed to a juvenile court judge, who ruled in their favor.
  • The defendant appeared at the juvenile court yesterday.
  • Starr said a juvenile court would try to work to help the children rather than punish them.
  • A new generation of professional charity workers appeared; many of them were college trained women who practiced ‘scientific philanthropy’ in settlement houses, orphan asylums, juvenile courts and reformatories.
  • She wasn't sent to the juvenile court; instead she was cautioned.
  • No child could be detained for a lengthy period of time without an order from juvenile court.
  • The hearing at a juvenile court yesterday took place behind closed doors. Times, Sunday Times
  • The youth, of Rostraver Township was adjudicated delinquent in juvenile court and placed in a residential program.
  • Many juvenile court advocates harshly criticized how the police handled young offenders.
  • Young people between the ages of ten and sixteen are usually dealt with in the Juvenile Court. Working with Teenagers
  • In October 2000, the Post-Gazette asked judges in two counties to permit the press and public into two high-profile juvenile court cases involving abused and neglected children.

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