Statement: Prosecuting 10-year old child as an adult is inhumane.

by | June 18, 2024

Home 9 Org Updates 9 Statement: Prosecuting 10-year old child as an adult is inhumane.

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Every child in Wisconsin, regardless of race or place, deserves a stable foundation as well as the opportunity to forge their own path in life. However, due to decades of systemic barriers and disinvestment in our youth justice system, Wisconsin continues to tragically fail its young people that are involved in the justice system. Earlier today, we joined Reverend Joseph Ellwanger, MICAH (Milwaukee Innercity Congregations Allied for Hope) and other organizations in calling on the state legislature and the Governor to pass legislation that would send youth younger than 18, to the juvenile system, not the adult system. 

Thank you to the National Youth Justice Network for their statement uplifting the systemic issues impacting Wisconsin’s youth and providing some recommendations for system change. As members of the National Youth Justice Network, we hope you’ll read their full statement from today’s press event below:

National Youth Justice Network Statement on Prosecuting Milwaukee Child as an Adult

The National Youth Justice Network (NYJN) is deeply troubled by the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s attempt to prosecute a child who was 10 years old at the time of the alleged offense as an adult. This appalling action not only represents a gross miscarriage of justice but it draws attention to the need for significant systemic reform within Wisconsin’s legal system. Treating children as adults is not only inhumane but counterproductive, as it perpetuates cycles of trauma and fails to address the root cause of youth behavior. We urge the Milwaukee County District Attorney to cease criminal prosecution of this child in favor of developmentally-appropriate treatment, as well as to re-evaluate justice policies to ensure that they protect children and actually achieve community safety.

Science and personal experience tell us that children are different from adults. A century ago, the juvenile system was established to protect and rehabilitate children who committed an offense and help them become productive citizens. It recognized their unique needs. Moreover, children are capable of learning and changing. Transfer to adult court is more about punishment than rehabilitation.

Wisconsin is now an outlier in the country in terms of prosecuting ten year old children as adults; it is one of only a handful of states that allow children so young to be transferred into the adult system. The negative impacts of treating children as adults are substantial and often life-long, affecting them, their families, and communities. Children incarcerated in adult facilities are extremely vulnerable to physical and sexual assault and have much higher rates of suicide than youth in juvenile facilities. Having a criminal record may also significantly diminish future chances for employment, education, and decent housing. Studies show that transferring youth to adult court for trial and sentencing has produced the unintended effect of increasing recidivism. A program that is aimed at treating, educating, and rehabilitating youth best protects the public.

Wisconsin is also an outlier internationally in terms of prosecuting 10-year-olds at all. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) urged nations to set their minimum age of criminal responsibility to at least 14 years old, the most common minimum age of criminal responsibility internationally. Wisconsin has set its minimum age of juvenile court jurisdiction at 10 years old –  far below the international standard. It demonstrates how deeply inappropriate it would be to try this child as an adult when he just barely meets Wisconsin’s standard for juvenile court prosecution.

It is unlikely that this child has the capacity or competency necessary to stand trial at all, let alone in an adult court. A ten year old child does not have the mental capacity necessary to fully grasp what it means to break the law or to fully understand the legal and moral implications of their actions. Given his young age, and the fact that he suffered a concussion the year before that may have altered his behavior, he is also very likely incompetent to stand trial. In order to be found competent, a defendant must be able to consult with their lawyer “with a reasonable degree of rational understanding” as well as have “a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him.”[1] Few ten-year-olds meet this standard and it is unlikely that this child, in particular, could have been found competent if he was appropriately assessed.

The best way to address harm that a young child may cause is through treatment of any underlying conditions, not through criminalizing them, and especially not through handling their prosecution in a court meant for adults. Any response to a child’s behavior must be age appropriate to ensure humane and beneficial treatment for the child which, in turn, places them on a positive trajectory that then best safeguards the community.

This case demonstrates the fact that systems change is urgently needed in Wisconsin so that neither this child, nor any other child, are harmed. Change is needed to both ends of the system, so that very young children are not inappropriately prosecuted and 17-year-olds are not routinely prosecuted as if they were adults. The following changes should be made to bring Wisconsin up to national and international standards of humane treatment for children:

  • Raise the minimum age of juvenile court jurisdiction above 10 years old.
  • Raise the upper age of juvenile court jurisdiction to 18 years old.
  • End the ability to transfer children as young as 10 years old into the adult system and end automatic transfers of any children into the adult system; all children should get a judicial review prior to transfer.

NYJN calls on the Milwaukee County District Attorney to end the unjust adult prosecution of this child and provide him with the mental health treatment and other supports that he and his family may need to ensure his healthy development. Every life is precious and no child should be thrown away – but that is exactly what prosecuting a 10-year-old in the adult system and potentially confining him for decades would do. We know you can do better.

About the National Youth Justice Network

The National Youth Justice Network (NYJN) leads a membership community of 63 state-based organizations and nearly 100 alumni of our Youth Justice Leadership Institute (YJLI) program across 41 states and D.C. Our work is premised on the fundamental understanding that our youth legal systems are inextricably bound with the systemic and structural racism that defines our society; as such we seek to change policy and practice through an anti-racist lens by building power with those who are most negatively affected by our youth legal systems, including young people, their families and all people of color. We also recognize that other vulnerable populations — including LGBTQIA+ youth, those with disabilities and mental health conditions, girls, and immigrants — are disparately and negatively impacted by our youth legal systems, and thus we also seek to center their concerns in our policy change work.

Contact: Melissa Goemann, Senior Policy Counsel, National Youth Justice Network, goemann@nyjn.org

[1 See, e.g., Campaign for Youth Justice, “The Consequences Aren’t Minor: The Impact of Trying Youth as Adults and Strategies for Reform” (March 2007), https://www.njjn.org/uploads/digital-library/CFYJNR_ConsequencesMinor.pdf.

[2] “Effects on Violence of Laws and Policies Facilitating the Transfer of Juveniles from the Juvenile to the Adult Justice System: A Report on Recommendations of the Task Force on Community Preventive Services” (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, April 2007): 6-8, www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr5609.pdf.

[1] Dusky v. United States, 362 U.S. 402, 403 (1960).

Learn more about why Wisconsin needs to raise the age here, and check out all of our youth justice advocacy work here.

Contact

Carte’cia Weaver, cweaver@kidsforward.org

Carte'cia Weaver
Carte'cia Weaver

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