California Police Chief- Fall 2013 | Page 20

Gardena PD Brings Juvenile Justice Home By Chief Ed Medrano, Gardena PD Juvenile Justice Policy Landscape In recent years, there has been significant reform in the criminal justice system in California. In Los Angeles County, these reforms had the further consequence of closing the entire informal juvenile justice courts. For Gardena, and all of Los Angeles County, these changes have had many real and unfortunate impacts; vast amounts of youth cited for misdemeanors or status offenses 20 California Police Chief | www.californiapolicechiefs.org receive limited services and are largely falling through the cracks of an overburdened County Court and Probation system. Most cases are given nominal attention and court mandated diversion, which existed for misdemeanors and status offenses, is now completely absent. Juvenile citations are either dismissed with minor consequences, reduced, or are assigned to probation officers who already carry large caseloads. Historically, low-level youth offenders will continue down the wrong path and commit higher-level offenses when the underlying reason for their poor decision-making is not being addressed. Moreover, juveniles don’t commit offenses in a vacuum; rather, a host of issues are well-known contributors to juvenile delinquency. The list of contributing factors include poor attitude, lack of parental supervision, broken homes, antisocial tendencies, peer influence, and violence at home. It should then be no surprise that many youth continually reoffend and become deeper entrenched in the system. What can be done to help these low-level offenders from becoming higher-level offenders later in life? An unconventional approach that Police Chiefs may consider is creating a juvenile diversion and intervention program to help identify youth in need of additional assistance. Although these programs are not new, the advent of a local program working in close collaboration with the local police agency helps increase success and provides for a community centered approach to at-risk behavior.