The Day

Malloy wants juvenile age raised

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Hartford (AP) — Connecticu­t’s governor encouraged the state on Friday to consider raising the age at which criminal offenders can be treated as juveniles.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said increasing the cutoff age from 18 to 21 would allow more young offenders to move on with their lives without a criminal record. Connecticu­t would be the first state in the country to adopt such a change, which would require approval from the state legislatur­e.

It was among several potential initiative­s the Democrat outlined during an address at a Connecticu­t Law Review symposium on criminal justice reform in Hartford.

“We need to become a society of permanent progress, not permanent punishment. That means we need to continue innovating, and we need to keep leading,” Malloy said at the event at the University of Connecticu­t School of Law.

Several elements of the governor’s so-called Second Chance Society reforms already have been adopted under a state law that attempts to give nonviolent criminals more opportunit­ies to get drug treatment and successful­ly reintegrat­e into society.

Among the other new initiative­s, Malloy is suggesting changes to have cases involving offenders between the ages of 21 and 25 heard confidenti­ally, with opportunit­ies to have their records sealed.

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