Whats the Process For A Juvenile Arrest

tmonster

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Hes white AND in a suit not some white trash clothes though.
if we hit the stat books we could control for anecdotal stuff, but this could go on for a while though
so I will leave these two here


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Crakface

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being a young white female mitigates poverty a bit

and this applies to police officers of all colors. minority police are some of the most shook when it comes to handling white people
What about asians.
 

NZA

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What about asians.
they might actually treat asians a little better than whites...depending on the type of asian and their demeanor. if it's some kind of thugged out filipino/vietnamese/hmong/cambodian then they will get treated like a mexican. a dorky japanese/chinese/korean person is going to get handled with kid gloves. that's the model minority.

a thugged out japanese/chinese might confuse the hell out of the police


thugged out koreans are becoming a bit more common though...might get treated pretty rough downtown
 

Crakface

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Half an hour later and she woulda had to get transferred downtown :banderas: We'll see what happens. Told her if she gets arrested again, we arent going to get her till after her court date. She was like :merchant: :sadbron:
 
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unit321

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You get caught stealing, you're 16, they arrest you.
What happens next. Are you in jail? Are you in an office waiting for your parents to show up. And how long do your parents have to not be there before thy put you in a cell. Lastly, is there a fee for being arrested as a juvenile?
Depends on the jurisdiction where the crime occurred.
Some jurisdictions will release a shoplifter, misdemeanor larceny, on a summons, whether an adult or juvenile.
That's the simplest case.
If the stolen item makes the case felony larceny, like stealing a car, then the juvenile is sent to booking. They get printed and photographed. The cop contacts the juvenile detention center and provides information on the crime. The intake officer (at the juv detention center) will determine if the juvenile is to be taken to the detention or released on a summons. Things like second, third or multiple repeat offenses, he or she will get sent to intake. Parents/guardians are contacted but he or she isn't going home. Things like violent crime also will result in the juvenile being transported to intake.
If the juvenile is determined not to be brought into intake, then you need to contact the parent or guardian to pick them up where they got booked. The intake officer who got their information will arrange, with the parents to set an arraignment date. This is at juvenile/family court. Arraignment is just like it is in adult general district court, the judge sets the first trial date and possibly release the juvenile if he was brought in.
Juveniles are not put into an adult jail cell. They are put into juvenile detention.
If parents/guardians are called, they are held onto until someone can come pick them up. They are not going to be baby sat for hours, so in those cases, a relative come pick them up, aunt, uncle, grandparent, or adult sibling. I've had an 18 yo sister pick up her younger brother because the parents were at work and no other adult relative was available.
There is no fee for getting arrested. There may be court fees that are determined by the judge.
 
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