How Lawyers Aid Juvenile Delinquency Cases
Posted by Law Article on July 17th, 2009 at 01:06am
In this high paced and sometimes detached world, many children are often neglected by parents and society and left to fend for themselves. These kids fall through the cracks of society and feel left out of their peer groups. The unfortunate result is that many often start running with the wrong group and running afoul of the law.
When a child between the ages of ten and eighteen commits a crime, the act is described in legal term as delinquency and the matter is resolved through the intervention of the juvenile court.
Because of the tenderness of the child’s age, these cases are treated and resolved differently. The lawyer also cannot afford to treat these juvenile delinquency cases like he or she would iany other usual crime case involving an adult:
Sometimes the stress of committing the crime may numb the child’s senses internally and he may often withdraw within himself after having committing the crime. In this case the role of the lawyer is of utmost importance:
It has become a strong concern among leading sociologists in the USA about the increasing number of child delinquency cases. Generally the delinquent child is exposed to an unusual environment that molds his mind and behavior in an abnormal and often socially unacceptable way. So the emotional aspect of the child has to be focused upon in order to understand the child’s motive or trigger for committing the crime. Thus ultimately it rests in the hands of the lawyer to draw the sympathy of the jury in order to acquit the child or to be more lenient. The end goal of the lawyer in these cases of juvenile delinquency is to frame the case in a manner that the child is not susceptible to strong legal actions.
Tags: Family Lawyer, Florida Lawyer, Illinois Lawyer, Lawyer, Massachusetts Lawyer, Michigan Lawyer
Under Juvenile Law
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