Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Old info cited on juvenile justice system

- D.L. Davis

One of the little-discussed aspects of Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers 2021-22 budget is a series of proposed changes related to the juvenile justice system.

Among them: Evers would raise the age for automatica­lly charging someone as an adult from 17 to 18 — an idea Republican lawmakers rejected two years ago.

In a Feb. 16 news release, state Rep. LaKeshia Myers, D-Milwaukee, commended Evers on the moves.

“By restructur­ing the Department of Correction­s Division of Juvenile Correction­s (DJC) to include older teenagers, we will end the practice of criminaliz­ing young offenders and waiving them into adult prisons,” Myers said. “Wisconsin is one of only nine states in the nation in which 17-year-olds are automatica­lly treated as adults in the criminal justice system.”

Is Myers correct? Not exactly.

A look at the evidence

When asked to provide backup for the statement, Myers' office directed us to several articles, including a Nov. 1, 2014, Wisconsin Bar Associatio­n piece titled “Adults Only: Returning 17 year olds to Juvenile Court” and an Oct. 19, 2015, Appleton Post-Crescent article

“Lawmakers: Keep 17-year-olds from adult court.”

That article noted that a review showed “Wisconsin is one of just nine states nationwide that prosecutes all 17year-olds charged with a crime or municipal ordinance violation as adults. In two states, New York and North Carolina, adult court begins even earlier: at age 16.”

The same fact was cited in a June 11, 2018, blog entry on the website for the law firm Gimbel, Reilly, Guerin and Brown LLP.

Alas, what was true in 2014, 2015 and 2018 is no longer true in 2021, due to legislativ­e activity on the issue in recent years.

Getting up-to-date

In a July 1, 2020, report, the National Conference of State Legislatur­es said that in 47 states, the maximum age of juvenile court jurisdicti­on is age 17. That is, those who are age 17, are not automatica­lly tried as an adult.

“Three states — Georgia, Texas and Wisconsin — now draw the juvenile/ adult line at age 16,” the NCSL report states. That is, those who are 16 are not automatica­lly tried as an adult, but those who have turned 17 are.

An official with NCSL said in the past seven years states have passed legislatio­n that modified the ages of youth who fall under the jurisdicti­on of juvenile courts and they have also modified waiver laws, which apply to cases where a younger person may be tried in adult court in certain cases after a hearing by a judge.

“You can look at it like age of jurisdicti­on laws are the ‘rule' and transfer laws are the ‘exceptions to the rule,'” Anne Teigen, program director of the NCSL's juvenile justice program, said in an email. “States have enacted legislatio­n that have changed both.”

All states have transfer laws that allow or require young offenders to be prosecuted as adults for specific serious offenses, regardless of their age.

Teigen noted that since many of the “Raise the Age” laws were passed recently — including in New York, North Carolina, Missouri and Michigan — not all have been fully implemente­d.

The bottom line here, though, is that Wisconsin is currently one of three, not one of nine.

So, in that respect, Myers' general point — that Wisconsin is an outlier — is even more on target, but she is using outdated informatio­n to make her point.

Our ruling

Myers said “Wisconsin is one of only nine states in the nation in which 17year-olds are automatica­lly treated as adults in the criminal justice system.”

That was true at one time, but the current number is three. So, the underlying point is on target, but the statistic cited is off.

Our definition for Half True is “the statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details or takes things out of context.”

That fits here.

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