rcrocket wrote:Let's say 15-year-old Mormon Billie is pending trial for rape of a 14 year old. He smokes weed every day. He doesn't come home. He has just been arrested for assault with a deadly weapon. He doesn't attend school.
Let's say that 16-year-old Mormon Johnny, meth-fueled, comes home one evening and assaults his Mom with a knife? This culminates months of trying to get Johnny to go to school, much less Church, and to stop his drug habit. Smoking dope on the front stoop is an everyday occurrence.
Or, let's say that 16-year-old Mormon Suzie is self-destructive. She cuts herself. She takes meth. She doesn't attend school. She performs sex on any boy who will ask her. Her body is filling with tattoos.
All three of these are case stories with which I have personal knowledge.
Sure, there may be problems with the parents. Who doesn't have problems? But the problem is HERE and NOW. Counseling the parents won't fix the meth use, the sex, the dropping out.
All three of them have had their children in counseling, to the best they have been able to get there. All three of them are looking at or have looked at boot camp as an alternative.
What is the solution? They could be easily be declared incorrigible and sent off to CYA. In two of these above examples, there are other children in the household being exposed to the drug crowd which comes around when parents are absent.
Boot camp, whether it be Mormon or Baptist, can be an acceptable alternative to the CYA. Hope for desperate parents. However, in no case with which I am personally familiar, has the kid returned from boot camp cured; in all cases there was a high degree of recidivism to bad habits.
you are entering the I don't know what I am talking about situation again: CYA is state and probation is county. The case of what the girl is doing is completly different than the situation you described for the males. They could be held at a juvenile detention facility and the parents don't have to do jack. They could be sentenced to a county probation camp or to CYA up until age 26. If the parents brought someone with history of the males back into the home with siblings the parents could lose the siblings to foster care. Do you know of a situation where there is a juvenile with a violent history that is in the home with younger siblings and he could hurt those siblings. Are you a mandated reporter? If so BISHOP, you need to call that in.
Also the girl you desribed would be a WIC 601 and the males you desribed would be a WIC 602. It seems you don't know anything about juvenile law. When was the last time you were in Dependency court in Monterey Park; or when was the last time you were at Sylmar or Los Pardrinos for Deliquency court which is 602.
read up:
http://www.legaltips.org/california/cal ... 618.5.aspx