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<text id=94TT1268>
<link 94TO0202>
<title>
Sep. 19, 1994: Cover:Crime:When Kids Go Bad
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER/CRIME, Page 60
When Kids Go Bad
</hdr>
<body>
<p> America's juvenile-justice system is antiquated, inadequate
and no longer able to cope with the violence wrought by children
whom no one would call innocents
</p>
<p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Richard Behar/New York, Nina Burleigh/Washington,
Scott Norvell/Atlanta and James Willwerth/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> Frank Jackson knows something about violent crime. As head of
the Dangerous Offenders Task Force in Wake County, North Carolina,
he's been around his share. Even so, this tape makes him cringe.
It's a 911 call made to police the night of July 27. A young
woman is phoning for help from her apartment in Fuquay-Varina,
about 15 miles from Raleigh. Just before the tape goes dead--police believe the phone was ripped from the wall--she
can be heard screaming, "Don't harm my baby!" Jackson knows
what happened next. Over the next several minutes she was beaten
bloody with a mop handle and raped. The attacker was a neighbor
who had apparently become infatuated with her. The woman, who
survived, is 22. The accused rapist, Andre Green, is 13.
</p>
<p> Green will be the first youthful offender tried under a North
Carolina law passed earlier this year that permits children
as young as 13 to be tried as adults. If convicted of rape,
Green, who confessed to the crime but has no previous criminal
record, will not be eligible for parole for 20 years. Jackson,
who will prosecute the case, thinks Green is somebody who can't
be let off lightly. He also wonders if lengthy confinement won't
make Green worse. "It's kind of scary to think what kind of
monster may be created," Jackson says. "He could be released
at the age of 33 after having been raised in the department
of corrections with some of the most hardened criminals North
Carolina has to offer."
</p>
<p> The American juvenile-justice system was designed 100 years
ago to reform kids found guilty of minor crimes. Increasingly
these days, the system is overwhelmed by the Andre Greens, by
pint-size drug runners and by 16-year-old gunmen. The response
on the part of lawmakers has been largely to siphon the worst
of them out of that system by lowering the age at which juveniles
charged with serious crimes--usually including murder, rape
and armed assault--can be tried in adult courts. Last week
California Governor Pete Wilson signed a bill lowering the threshold
to 14. Earlier this year Arkansas did the same, and Georgia
decided that youths from the ages of 14 through 17 who are charged
with certain crimes will be tried as adults automatically. This
being election time, candidates around the country are engaged
in a kind of reverse auction to see who would send even younger
felons to the adult system. Fourteen? Why not 13? Why not 12?
</p>
<p> Even if the spectacle of politics coming to grips with pathology
is not pretty, who can deny that when 11-year-olds like Robert
("Yummy") Sandifer kill or when a 14-year-old drives nails into
the heels of a younger boy--a recent episode from Somerset,
Pennsylvania--there is good reason to be unnerved? A breeding
ground of poverty and broken families and drugs and guns and
violence, real or just pictured, has brought forth a violent
generation. "We need to throw out our entire juvenile-justice
system," says Gil Garcetti, the District Attorney of Los Angeles
County, whose biggest headache, after the O.J. trial, is the
city's youth gangs. "We should replace it with one that both
protects society from violent juvenile criminals and efficiently
rehabilitates youths who can be saved--and can differentiate
between the two."
</p>
<p> During the past six years, there has been a significant increase
in juvenile crime in the most serious categories: murder, rape,
robbery and aggravated assault. Homicide arrests of kids ages
10 through 14 rose from 194 to 301 between 1988 and 1992. In
1986 a majority of cases in New York City's Family Court were
misdemeanors; today more than 90% are felonies. Though killers
under the age of 15 are still relatively rare--over the past
three years in L.A., for instance, those 14 or younger accounted
for just 17 of the 460 homicides committed by kids under 18--younger kids are increasingly involved in deadlier crime.
"There is far more gratuitous violence and far more anger, more
shooting," says Judge Susan R. Winfield, who presides over the
Family Division of the Washington, D.C., Superior Court. "Youngsters
used to shoot each other in the body. Then in the head. Now
they shoot each other in the face."
</p>
<p> Gunfire has become sufficiently common in and around classrooms,
mostly in the inner city, that an astonishing number of schools
have started to treat their own corridors as potential crime
scenes. Some are tearing out lockers to deny hiding places for
handguns or banning carryalls and bookbags for the same reason.
</p>
<p> No segment of society is immune to the problem. The most famous
youthful offenders of the '90s, Erik Menendez, at 19, of Beverly
Hills, California, and Amy Fisher, at 17, of Merrick, Long Island,
came from mostly white communities of nice houses. But it's
in the inner cities where an interlocking universe of guns,
gangs and the drug trade has made mayhem a career path for kids
and equipped them with the means to do maximum damage along
the way. Children involved in the drug trade get guns to defend
themselves against older kids who want their money. For the
ones still on a piggy-bank budget, the streets offer rent-a-guns
for $20 an hour. Who can be surprised, then, that on a typical
day last year about 100,000 juveniles were in lockup across
the country?
</p>
<p> With the omnibus crime bill that just squeezed through Congress,
the Federal Government made its partial gesture toward a solution.
Under the new law, it's a crime for juveniles to possess a handgun
or for any adult to transfer one to them except in certain supervised
situations. It also provides for programs--like those that
keep schools open later--intended to discourage kids from
finding trouble.
</p>
<p> Those were the very provisions that some Republicans denounced
as "pork." Yet while crime control can be one of the most contentious
issues in American life, there is something resembling an emerging
ideological consensus on one thing: some kids are beyond help.
You can hear it even when talking with Attorney General Janet
Reno, who believes crime has its roots among neglected children.
She still stresses the need for "a continuum" of government
attention that begins with prenatal care and includes the school
system, housing authorities, health services and job-training
programs. But she also recognizes that the continuum will sometimes
end in an early jail cell. "It's imperative for serious juvenile
offenders to know they will face a sanction," she says. "Too
many of them don't understand what punishment means because
they have been raised in a world with no understanding of reward
and punishment."
</p>
<p> A consensus is also developing about the juvenile-justice system.
It takes forever to punish kids who seriously break the law,
and it devotes far too much time and money to hardened young
criminals while neglecting wayward kids who could still be turned
around. "We can't look a kid in the eye and tell him that we
can't spend a thousand dollars on him when he's 12 or 13 but
that we'll be happy to reserve a jail cell for him and spend
a hundred grand a year on him later," says North Carolina attorney
general Mike Easley. "It's not just bad policy; it's bad arithmetic."
</p>
<p> For some experienced offenders, the prospect of jail can make
a real difference in their decisions about what crimes they
are willing to commit. L.A.'s Garcetti recalls the calculating
questions of a teen who raised his hand when the district attorney
appeared at a detention center last April. "If I kill someone,"
the kid asked, "can I be executed?"
</p>
<p> "Not at this age, no," said Garcetti.
</p>
<p> "What if I kill more than one person?"
</p>
<p> "Under current California law, you cannot be executed."
</p>
<p> "Right now, I'm under 16. If I kill someone, I get out of prison
when I'm 25, right?"
</p>
<p> "Right," said Garcetti, who eventually cut off the unnerving
questions by predicting, "People are so tired, so fearful and
so disgusted that I think you're going to see some real changes
in juvenile laws."
</p>
<p> But few young offenders are so calculating. "These kids don't
think before they do things," insists Dwayne of Atlanta, at
18 a seasoned criminal whose list of felony arrests includes
armed robbery and assault. "It ain't like they stop to think,
`Now what they gonna do to me if I get caught?'" Nearby, 17-year-old
DeMarcus (grand-theft auto, aggravated assault) sums up another
problem: prison doesn't usually last forever, and life on the
outside is an open invitation to go bad again. "They send you
straight back into the same situation," he says. "The house
is dirty when you left it, and it's dirty when you get back."
</p>
<p> So the people who work with young offenders generally favor
punishment for some and something like tough love for the rest.
The larger problem, as always, is figuring which of the best-intended
programs are better than jail cells. "Nobody has tracked the
process carefully enough to find out who is good at it, in what
states and by what means," says James Q. Wilson, the well-known
authority on crime policy at the University of California, Los
Angeles.
</p>
<p> Knowing what works might help the Florida judge who has to decide
this week on what to do about Percy Campbell. Eighteen months
ago, Percy was a 12-year-old arrested for attempted burglary
in northwest Fort Lauderdale. As it turned out, he already had
more than 30 arrests for a total of 57 crimes on his rap sheet,
some of them felonies. No surprise--he also had a mother in
jail for murder and an uncle who had taught him how to steal
cars.
</p>
<p> Dennis Grant, a church elder in Fort Lauderdale, thought he
could help. He gained permission to have Percy placed in the
custody of his grandmother, whom Grant arranged to have relocated
from a neighborhood ruled by the crack trade. The boy stayed
out of trouble until June, when he broke into a neighbor's home.
So it now appears that his grandmother's home wasn't the best
place to be. She was arrested on shoplifting charges last week.
This week a Broward County judge decides whether to try Percy
as an adult or to turn him back to Grant one more time. "These
kids can be changed," Grant insists. "We need to break the cycle."
The prosecutors demur. "This child is being glorified," grumbles
assistant state attorney Susan Aramony. "Maybe it's time to
spend the resources on someone else who may benefit from them."
</p>
<p> Percy's case highlights a key dilemma: how to distinguish kids
who may be beyond change from the ones who aren't. In an article
in this month's Commentary, James Q. Wilson observes that numerous
studies of young criminals tend toward a shared conclusion:
in any given age group, only 6% of the boys will be responsible
for at least half of the serious crimes committed by all boys
of that age. What do those kids have in common? Criminal parents,
many of them--more than half of all kids in long-term juvenile
institutions in the U.S. have immediate relatives who have been
incarcerated. A low verbal-intelligence quotient and poor grades
are also common. The boys tend to be both emotionally cold and
impulsive. From an early age they drink and get high. By an
early age too, they make their first noticeable trouble, sometimes
around the third grade.
</p>
<p> If every offender who fit that profile were beyond help, judges
would know better which kids to consign to lockups. They aren't
all beyond help, so authorities stumble around in the dark.
Indeed, the records of young offenders are generally closed,
so previous offenses aren't always disclosed to judges who rule
on subsequent ones. When New York State passed its juvenile-offender
law in 1978, the outcome was regarded as the toughest new arrangement
in the nation. On the surface, it was: those from 13 through
15 accused of heinous felonies were moved from Family Court,
where the maximum penalty was 18 months regardless of the crime,
to the State Supreme Court. But the law allows only for lighter
sentences than would be given to adults who are convicted of
equivalent crimes--meaning the kids are often back on the
streets in a few years, jobless, with a felony conviction that
makes employment more difficult to find. The inadequacies of
the system led Justice Michael Corriero to push for the creation
of the job he now holds. He takes on all juvenile-offender cases
that come through Manhattan Supreme Court. In this capacity,
he has the power to fashion a midway solution for some offenders,
determining whether to send convicted kids to hard time or,
if he believes them salvageable, to a community-based program
that keeps close tabs while offering drug counseling, job training
or schooling. Still, says Corriero, "even though the legislature
gave us the bodies of these kids, they gave us no support services.
We don't have a probation-department representative who tells
me the Family Court history. We don't have any mental-health
services to refer them to. We don't have any residential programs.
We don't have any resources that the Family Court has."
</p>
<p> Corriero wants to return all the cases to Family Court but give
judges discretion to bat the worst kids back to stand trial
as adults. That won't work, says Peter Reinharz, who heads the
Family Court Division. It would still load too many desperate
characters into a system underequipped to deal with them. "I
don't know what the solution is," says Reinharz, but "I can
tell you what it isn't. You're looking at it."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>