The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State of juvenile justice far from united

Juvenile justice

- Katherine Sypher and Anthony J. Wallace are Donald W. Reynolds Foundation fellows.

Some young offenders, including Zyion Houston- Sconiers of Tacoma, Wash., skip the youth facilities and are sentenced as adults, subjecting them to the same prosecutio­n and prisons as older and more violent criminals.

Others, like Will Lewis from Riverdale, Ga., are steered by police, probation officers, defense attorneys, prosecutor­s, judges or others toward the system’s “off- ramps” — diversion or second- chance programs designed to give them skills and improve their futures.

Today, Houston- Sconiers is inmate # 368944 at the Monroe Correction­al Complex in a Seattle suburb.

Lewis juggles raising his infant daughter, Carmen, and working with the Brighter Future initiative at United Way of Greater Atlanta, while he looks for his dream job as an IT specialist in the aviation industry.

According to Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquenc­y Prevention data from 2018, nearly 40% of Black juveniles charged with weapons offenses had their cases adjudicate­d — deemed responsibl­e for their actions, most likely by a juvenile judge — and about 13% were placed in a secure facility away from home. By comparison, nearly 27% of white children facing the same charges were adjudicate­d and about 5% were placed in a facility.

Although they represent 14% of the country’s children age 18 or younger, Black kids account for 66% of U. S. youth robbery offenses.

Lewis and Houston- Sconiers are Black, 25 years old, and both have a propensity for data and numbers. Lewis recently graduated from Middle Georgia State University with a master’s degree in cybersecur­ity; Houston- Sconiers earns money fromday- trading stocks with the help of his wife while behind bars.

They both grew up poor, joined gangs to find the camaraderi­e and love their fractured families couldn’t provide — and both admit they made a mistake. As teenagers, both committed robbery and had their cases tried in adult court.

Backed by friends, Houston- Sconiers threatened kids in his neighborho­od with a gun to hand over their Halloween candy. Lewis and some friends attacked a group of boys in a back alley, emptying their pockets in the process.

“What we call it in the streets is respect… when all it is is love,” Lewis said, referring towhat the gang provided him. Growing up in poverty, he said, “your family is in survival mode constantly, so there’s no room for, ‘ Hey, I love you.’”

Following their arrests, Lewis andHouston- Sconiers had life- changing interactio­ns. Lewis for the better, in an innovative second- chance program. Houston- Sconiers, for the worse, after he was sentenced to 31 years in prison.

“I knew deep down inmy heart that I wanted better,” Lewis said. “I just didn’t know how to get it.”

According to researcher­s and advocates, detention hurts the developmen­t of young people, making them less likely to graduate from high school or find a steady job, and more likely to end up in prison as adults.

“( We) think that yelling at them and shaming them and blaming them and incarcerat­ing them and threatenin­g them is going to get a result,” said Adam Foss, a former Suffolk County assistant district attorney in Boston. “But really all that is doing is further entrenchin­g their trauma and making them more violent people.”

Houston- Sconierswa­s 17 at the time of his crime. In prison, he doesn’t getmuch sleep. He adheres to his “program”: a strict weekday routine starting at 6: 30 a. m. He reads the Wall Street Journal or Forbes magazine, skips prison breakfasts of bran bars in favor of trading stocks, gives his wife a call to “make sure she made it to work.”

“You have towork through the brickwalls you run into, you gotta find a way around them,” he said.

Unraveling the system

Most advocates agree that youth incarcerat­ion in prison- like facilities should be reserved for rare cases and replaced by rehabilita­tive programs. Elizabeth Cauffman oversees the Crossroads Study, a study based at University of California, Irvine, where her team researched how the system handles “tipping point” offenses — burglary, simple assault and other medium- level offenses.

What they’ve found, she said, is that for juveniles who commit these crimes, the likelihood of being locked up is “basically 50- 50. Some of those kids get probation or get some sort of diversion and some of those kids get locked up.”

“The more punitive, the more harsh, the more the severe the sanction, the worse the outcome for the kid,” she said. “If you really want to improve public safety, if you really want to reduce criminal offending, getting tough is not the solution.”

On Oct. 31, 2012, in Tacoma, Houston- Sconiers and four other boys, armed with a small silver revolver, approached groups of trick- or- treaters and other individual­s, and stole 96 pieces of candy, a pumpkin candy bag, a red devil mask and a phone.

Houston- Sconiers was tried as an adult, convicted of robbery, and given a sentence thatwould have kept him locked up until he was nearly 50. Jeannie Darneille, who was elected to Washington’s state Senate just one week after Houston- Sconiers’ arrest, said shewas flabbergas­ted.

Since 2012, she has led the effort to undo the legislatio­n involved in his case and enact reforms for the juvenile justice system in Washington. She proposed new laws, including one that led to Houston- Sconiers’ release after five years served. But shortly after, he reoffended.

According to data from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquenc­y Prevention, nearly 2.5 million kids were arrested in 1999 and more than 100,000 were detained on any one day in a juvenile facility. In 2018, the number of kids arrested fell to nearly 730,000 and the number of detained kids on a given day dropped to just more than 37,500.

Some courts offer alternativ­es. Judge Steven Teske, the juvenile judge who oversaw Lewis’ case in Georgia’s Clayton County, took note of the model airplanes probation officers saw in the Lewis home and the decent grades on his report cards. He saw a future Lewis didn’t see for himself.

Teske enrolled Lewis in “Second Chance Court,” a program that offers high- risk felony offenders an alternativ­e to detention. If Lewis and others in the program comply with the court’s require---

ments, which include wearing a GPS tracker for six months and cognitive behavioral therapy, they can avoid detention. Lewis went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in aviation science and management.

According to Teske, 65% of juveniles who are sent to Georgia’s youth prisons reoffend upon release. But only 17% in Teske’s second- chance program reoffend. “I’m just trying to get them to adulthood without killing somebody else or themselves, creating the opportunit­y to do what the science informs me that most of them will do, and that is age out of delinquenc­y,” Teske said.

The mind of a child

Houston- Sconiers said his mother abused him physically for more than a decade before child protective workers placed him in foster care. When he was 12, he began running away from his foster homes and committing petty crimes, like vandalizin­g city buses. From age 12 to 17, he cycled between foster homes and juvenile detention centers.

“I think I’ve only spent, like, two ofmy birthdays since the age of 12 … actually out,” Houston- Sconiers said. “The rest of them I’ve been incarcerat­ed for.”

Eventually, he landed with a family in University Place, Wash.

“I was doing great, I really was. I was going to school every day, I was making my allowance money,” he said. “This was the first place I felt the love.”

But Houston- Sconiers said child protective workers involuntar­ily removed him from the home and returned him to Hilltop, where he found camaraderi­e with the Hill top Crips, a gang that rose to infamy during the country’s crack epidemic, and took to the streets.

Teske said he often consults with jurisdicti­ons across the country that “divert very few kids” and “can’t figure out why their recidivist rate is high.” “Most kids age out of their delinquenc­y and you’re not giving them a chance to do it, for God’s sakes,” he said.

Adam Foss, a former prosecutor, said he graduated fromlawsch­ool “without hearing theword trauma.” Throughout Foss’ career, he opposed locking up young people.

Delinquenc­y “is very normative, boneheaded behavior,” said Foss, who runs Prosecutor Impact, a not- for- profit dedicated to educating prosecutor­s. “Then at some point in time you just stop. And it’s not because you’ve learned your lesson. It’s because you’ve literally grown; you’re now an adult.”

He said it is inappropri­ate for juveniles to be treated as adults.

“Someprosec­utors disagree andthink that there are situations where it is not only appropriat­e but preferred,” he said in an email. “According to physicians, psychologi­sts, scientists, criminolog­ists and impacted communitie­s, those prosecutor­s are wrong, and they are actively harming the community that they should be serving.”

‘ I’m just trying to get themto adulthood without killing somebody else or themselves, creating the opportunit­y to do what the science informs me that most of them will do, and that is age out of delinquenc­y.’ Steven Teske Clayton County juvenile judge

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 ?? MICHELE ABERCROMBI­E / NEWS21 COURTESYOF WILL LEWIS ?? Will Lewis holds his daughter, Carmen, in his home in Riverdale. “Iwant to be instrument­al in her life in everyway I can be, because I knowI didn’t get that,” Lewis said. “I had football games, award ceremonies. I looked up ( at the stands) and nobody that I knewwas there and everybody else’s familywas cheering themon. Itwas very discouragi­ng.” Lewiswas arrested for robbing a group of boys when hewas a teenager, but an innovative second- chance programkep­t himout of detention. Now25, heworks at Brighter Future, aUnitedWay ofGreater Atlanta program.
MICHELE ABERCROMBI­E / NEWS21 COURTESYOF WILL LEWIS Will Lewis holds his daughter, Carmen, in his home in Riverdale. “Iwant to be instrument­al in her life in everyway I can be, because I knowI didn’t get that,” Lewis said. “I had football games, award ceremonies. I looked up ( at the stands) and nobody that I knewwas there and everybody else’s familywas cheering themon. Itwas very discouragi­ng.” Lewiswas arrested for robbing a group of boys when hewas a teenager, but an innovative second- chance programkep­t himout of detention. Now25, heworks at Brighter Future, aUnitedWay ofGreater Atlanta program.
 ?? GRACIE BONDS STAPLES/ GSTAPLES@ AJC. COM ?? Chief Judge Steven Teske iswidely knownfor his leadership on juvenile justice issues in Georgia and nationwide, including banning the use of shackles in juvenile court.
GRACIE BONDS STAPLES/ GSTAPLES@ AJC. COM Chief Judge Steven Teske iswidely knownfor his leadership on juvenile justice issues in Georgia and nationwide, including banning the use of shackles in juvenile court.
 ?? COURTESYOF ARROGRANCE­WOOD- HOUSTON ?? ZyionHoust­on- Sconiers visitswith his wife, Arrogrance­Wood- Houston, via video call from Monroe Correction­alComplex outside Seattle.
COURTESYOF ARROGRANCE­WOOD- HOUSTON ZyionHoust­on- Sconiers visitswith his wife, Arrogrance­Wood- Houston, via video call from Monroe Correction­alComplex outside Seattle.

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