JAK wrote:Minors have some responsibilities. None of these supersede the responsibility of parents and parenting. Legally, parents have responsibility for minors. They are certainly responsible for where they place their children.
Children, yes. Teenagers aren't children. Which is why under some circumstances they are tried as adults. And it depends on the behavior, if the minor is responsible or not. Illegal activity is always going to be the minor's responsibility (and the parents', if they knew about it and did nothing, at least in some states).
Did GoodK “kill someone”?
I wasn't referring to GoodK in that paragraph at all. Those were general rhetorical questions. I'm wondering why you sought to direct them to GoodK?
Why raise the issue? Specifically, what confirmed information is there regarding what GoodK did? What objectively reviewed detailed information is available to legal authority?
Because teenagers, which is what GoodK was when he was sent to the facility, have been known to engage in all of those activities,
and be tried as adults.
So... is it possible GoodK smoking tobacco? Maybe he was smoking pot or using drugs? Was he drinking? Was he drinking and driving? All of those things are illegal for teenagers. On a sliding scale, getting caught with tobacco would only get him a slap on the wrist and a fine, but if he was drunk, drove his car, and killed a pedestrian or another driver, he would not be tried as a juvenile; he would likely be tried as an adult and would serve his sentence in an adult correctional facility. And in some states, his parents would have some legal responsibility if they knew about his actions and did nothing.
While many would not agree with his parents' decision, if his behaviors spilled over into illegal activity, it's not hard to justify their decision.
If his parents “shipped off” this teenager to a place where no access was permitted in either direction, the parents are entirely responsible for what they did.
And the teenager, while there, is solely responsible for his/her behavior there, and the resulting consequences.
The larger issue here is how is this “facility” held accountable by the laws of the federal or state government. If there is no oversight, no inspection, no subordination to the laws of the state or federal government, the “facility” is operating deliberately beyond the reach of the law. Why?
I think Jersey has shown how the system works in Utah. If you need a refresher, just scroll back a few pages. She laid it out quite plainly.
Any parent who places a minor in a place which makes itself invisible to legal authority takes a great risk with that minor. If a minor kills someone, that minor is subject to the application of the law.
I don't see how these two sentences are related. Would you explain how you think they are?
If this “facility” attempts to hide its treatment of minors from parents and from the law, it’s a highly questionable “facility.”
I don't think anyone is disputing that, JAK. Why are you?
(Nevo, Jan 23) And the Melchizedek Priesthood may not have been restored until the summer of 1830, several months after the organization of the Church.