National Commentator's View: Jena 6 Shows Why Juvenile Courts Are Dumping Grounds
Earl Ofari Hutchinson is a nationally known author and political analyst. He is not a staff member of DiversityInc. A beaming Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III effusively praised Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco for arm-twisting La Salle Parish Prosecutor Reed Walters not to challenge an Appellate Court's decision overturning the adult court conviction of If Walters chooses to retry Three years before the Rev. Sharpton/Gov. Blanco meeting on
Numerous reports on the workings of the juvenile-justice system in other states have also found that the system is often a dumping ground for youth that society has given up on. They are children with mental-health problems, minor school-related misconduct and other adolescent problems. Then there are the courts. The youthful offenders in many cases have shoddy or nonexistent legal representation, few appeal rights, and there is no bail. Juvenile offenders are considered child wards of the court, and the judge has the discretion to release them to their parents or keep them locked down indefinitely. An American Bar Association study in 2003 found that when Studies have found that many U.S. children ages 15 and younger are unable to understand criminal proceedings, hindering their ability to be competent defendants. Bell's troubles started at about that age. He was remanded to juvenile courts for the four offenses he was charged with before his conviction for beating white teen Justin Barker. Bell backers railed that his trial in adult court was a farce. His public defender never requested a change of venue, never challenged the all-white jury selection, presented no evidence, and didn't call a single defense witness. But if he had been tried in juvenile court, the likelihood is the outcome would have been exactly the same, or worse. He could have been detained without bail if he was considered a threat to the community. Walters and Judge J.P. Mauffray have repeatedly called Bell a threat. That was a prime reason Mauffray revoked his bail. The judge has the sole power to make that decision. In La Salle Parish, Mauffray wears the dual hat of both a juvenile court as well as a district judge. Bell would have been assigned a public defender, tried by an adult judge (possibly even Mauffray), and if convicted by the adult judge on the serious felony charge of aggravated battery with his prior juvenile offenses could have been ordered held until he's 25 in a prison-like juvenile facility. Or he could be shipped off to an adult prison to serve his sentence. Nationally, black and Latino youth make up the majority of those youthful offenders that are convicted in juvenile courts and ordered to serve their sentences in adult prisons. The towering flaws and abuses that wrack the juvenile court and justice system in Louisiana are no different than those that plague the system in other states. It's a system that desperately screams for reform. Blanco knew that reform is desperately needed even as she met with Sharpton on Bell. But those screams have mostly fallen on the tone-deaf ears of public and state legislators determined to be as tough on youthful offenders as adults. Bell and the nation will discover that harsh truth if he's dumped back in a juvenile-court docket. |