State courts have struggled to balance the tensions between the juvenile justice system and a juvenile\u27s constitutional rights at post-adjudicatory predisposition proceedings. Washington courts do not provide a clear standard for protecting a juvenile\u27s rights at these proceedings. This Comment examines the punitive nature of Washington\u27s juvenile justice system and argues that the right against self-incrimination should attach at juvenile predisposition proceedings. It also argues that a grant of use and derivative use immunity at such proceedings provides optimal protection for juvenile rights because it safeguards a juvenile\u27s rights while fostering the treatment component of the Juvenile Justice Act
In the last two decades, the juvenile justice system has focused on the early identification of yout...
This Note addresses constitutional issues relevant to pretrial detention and identifies problematic ...
This comment discusses the history and characteristics of traditional status offense laws, demonstra...
This Comment analyzes the significance of the principles animating the constitutional privilege agai...
Youth in the justice system are at risk of self-incrimination, and the attendant consequence of pros...
Article I, section 20 of the Washington Constitution states that [a]ll persons charged with crimes ...
A juvenile offender whose case has been transferred from juvenile court to criminal court may be con...
My comments use a developmental perspective on adolescents’ capacities as a way to supplement the co...
This Comment considers the juvenile justice system and the application of the Fifth Amendment’s priv...
Genevieve Fay Brumley was adjudged a delinquent child by the juvenile court of Snohomish County on D...
This Article attempts to provide an analytical framework for identifying the punitive aspects of the...
The right against self-incrimination has been a part of American law since before the enactment of t...
This Comment addresses the issue of a juvenile\u27s right to trial by jury. The author traces the or...
Despite the differences between the criminal and juvenile court systems, the Supreme Court has exte...
This Comment argues that the juvenile justice system should be retained in theory, but that Washingt...
In the last two decades, the juvenile justice system has focused on the early identification of yout...
This Note addresses constitutional issues relevant to pretrial detention and identifies problematic ...
This comment discusses the history and characteristics of traditional status offense laws, demonstra...
This Comment analyzes the significance of the principles animating the constitutional privilege agai...
Youth in the justice system are at risk of self-incrimination, and the attendant consequence of pros...
Article I, section 20 of the Washington Constitution states that [a]ll persons charged with crimes ...
A juvenile offender whose case has been transferred from juvenile court to criminal court may be con...
My comments use a developmental perspective on adolescents’ capacities as a way to supplement the co...
This Comment considers the juvenile justice system and the application of the Fifth Amendment’s priv...
Genevieve Fay Brumley was adjudged a delinquent child by the juvenile court of Snohomish County on D...
This Article attempts to provide an analytical framework for identifying the punitive aspects of the...
The right against self-incrimination has been a part of American law since before the enactment of t...
This Comment addresses the issue of a juvenile\u27s right to trial by jury. The author traces the or...
Despite the differences between the criminal and juvenile court systems, the Supreme Court has exte...
This Comment argues that the juvenile justice system should be retained in theory, but that Washingt...
In the last two decades, the juvenile justice system has focused on the early identification of yout...
This Note addresses constitutional issues relevant to pretrial detention and identifies problematic ...
This comment discusses the history and characteristics of traditional status offense laws, demonstra...