1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act relating to juvenile justice; amending s. 985.03, |
3 | F.S.; redefining terms relating to juvenile justice; |
4 | redefining the terms "day treatment" and "restrictiveness |
5 | level"; creating the minimum-risk nonresidential |
6 | restrictiveness level; providing that temporary release |
7 | may be granted under specified conditions to youth |
8 | committed to the high-risk residential restrictiveness |
9 | level; amending s. 985.207, F.S.; providing that a child |
10 | may be taken into custody for absconding from a |
11 | nonresidential commitment facility; amending s. 985.208, |
12 | F.S.; providing that a child may be taken into custody for |
13 | absconding from a nonresidential commitment facility; |
14 | amending s. 985.215, F.S.; providing for release from |
15 | detention for a child who has absconded; providing for |
16 | detention for committed children awaiting placement; |
17 | providing secure detention for children awaiting minimum- |
18 | risk placement who violate home or nonsecure detention or |
19 | electronic monitoring; providing for limited secure |
20 | detention for children being transported to residential |
21 | commitment programs; requiring the state to pay certain |
22 | detention care costs for juveniles in certain counties for |
23 | fiscal year 2005-2006; amending s. 985.231, F.S.; revising |
24 | provisions relating to powers of disposition; providing |
25 | the maximum length for a minimum-risk nonresidential |
26 | commitment for a second degree misdemeanor; providing that |
27 | the department or a provider report quarterly to the court |
28 | the child's treatment plan progress; making conforming |
29 | changes; amending s. 985.2311, F.S.; requiring parents to |
30 | pay fees for costs of supervision related to minimum-risk |
31 | nonresidential commitment; amending s. 985.316, F.S.; |
32 | providing for assessment of residentially committed youth |
33 | for conditional release services; repealing s. 985.403, |
34 | F.S., relating to the Task Force on Juvenile Sexual |
35 | Offenders and their Victims; creating a new task force on |
36 | juvenile sexual offenders and their victims; providing |
37 | powers and duties; providing membership; requiring a |
38 | report; providing for administrative support; providing |
39 | for dissolution of the task force; creating a task force |
40 | to study the certification of professional staff working |
41 | for a provider of juvenile justice services; providing |
42 | membership; requiring the task force to consider the |
43 | feasibility of implementing and operating a certification |
44 | system for professional staff; requiring the task force to |
45 | consider specified issues; directing the task force to |
46 | recommend a process for testing and validating the |
47 | effectiveness of the recommended staff development system; |
48 | requiring the task force to prepare and submit a report of |
49 | its deliberations and recommendations by a specified date; |
50 | providing for administrative support; providing for |
51 | dissolution of the task force; amending s. 985.4135, F.S.; |
52 | providing for permissible representation on juvenile |
53 | justice county councils or circuit boards; amending s. |
54 | 985.407, F.S.; changing the level of background screening |
55 | required for certain department and provider employees |
56 | from level 1 to level 2; requiring federal criminal |
57 | records checks every 5 years for certain department and |
58 | provider employees; providing for electronic submission of |
59 | specified fingerprint information; providing for retention |
60 | of specified fingerprint information; providing for |
61 | searches; requiring the adoption of rules; providing for |
62 | an annual fee; providing for notice of changes in the |
63 | employment status of persons whose fingerprint information |
64 | is retained; requiring the removal of fingerprint |
65 | information upon the occurrence of specified events; |
66 | providing appropriations; amending ss. 784.075, 984.05, |
67 | 985.31, and 985.3141, F.S.; conforming cross references; |
68 | reenacting ss. 985.201(4)(a), 985.233(4)(b), 985.31(3)(k), |
69 | and 985.311(3)(e), F.S., relating to jurisdiction, |
70 | sentencing alternatives, commitment of serious or habitual |
71 | juvenile offenders, and eligibility for an intensive |
72 | residential treatment program for offenders less than 13 |
73 | years of age, respectively, to incorporate the amendment |
74 | to s. 985.231, F.S., in reference thereto; providing an |
75 | effective date. |
76 |
|
77 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
78 |
|
79 | Section 1. Section 985.03, Florida Statutes, is amended to |
80 | read: |
81 | 985.03 Definitions.--As When used in this chapter, the |
82 | term: |
83 | (1) "Addictions receiving facility" means a substance |
84 | abuse service provider as defined in chapter 397. |
85 | (2) "Adjudicatory hearing" means a hearing for the court |
86 | to determine whether or not the facts support the allegations |
87 | stated in the petition, as is provided for under s. 985.228 in |
88 | delinquency cases. |
89 | (3) "Adult" means any natural person other than a child. |
90 | (4) "Arbitration" means a process whereby a neutral third |
91 | person or panel, called an arbitrator or an arbitration panel, |
92 | considers the facts and arguments presented by the parties and |
93 | renders a decision which may be binding or nonbinding. |
94 | (5) "Authorized agent" or "designee" of the department |
95 | means a person or agency assigned or designated by the |
96 | department of Juvenile Justice or the Department of Children and |
97 | Family Services, as appropriate, to perform duties or exercise |
98 | powers under pursuant to this chapter and includes contract |
99 | providers and their employees for purposes of providing services |
100 | to and managing cases of children in need of services and |
101 | families in need of services. |
102 | (6) "Child" or "juvenile" or "youth" means any unmarried |
103 | person under the age of 18 who has not been emancipated by order |
104 | of the court and who has been found or alleged to be dependent, |
105 | in need of services, or from a family in need of services; or |
106 | any married or unmarried person who is charged with a violation |
107 | of law occurring prior to the time that person reached the age |
108 | of 18 years. |
109 | (7) "Child eligible for an intensive residential treatment |
110 | program for offenders less than 13 years of age" means a child |
111 | who has been found to have committed a delinquent act or a |
112 | violation of law in the case currently before the court and who |
113 | meets at least one of the following criteria: |
114 | (a) The child is less than 13 years of age at the time of |
115 | the disposition for the current offense and has been adjudicated |
116 | on the current offense for: |
117 | 1. Arson; |
118 | 2. Sexual battery; |
119 | 3. Robbery; |
120 | 4. Kidnapping; |
121 | 5. Aggravated child abuse; |
122 | 6. Aggravated assault; |
123 | 7. Aggravated stalking; |
124 | 8. Murder; |
125 | 9. Manslaughter; |
126 | 10. Unlawful throwing, placing, or discharging of a |
127 | destructive device or bomb; |
128 | 11. Armed burglary; |
129 | 12. Aggravated battery; |
130 | 13. Any lewd or lascivious offense committed upon or in |
131 | the presence of a person less than 16 years of age; or |
132 | 14. Carrying, displaying, using, threatening, or |
133 | attempting to use a weapon or firearm during the commission of a |
134 | felony. |
135 | (b) The child is less than 13 years of age at the time of |
136 | the disposition, the current offense is a felony, and the child |
137 | has previously been committed at least once to a delinquency |
138 | commitment program. |
139 | (c) The child is less than 13 years of age and is |
140 | currently committed for a felony offense and transferred from a |
141 | moderate-risk or high-risk residential commitment placement. |
142 | (8) "Child in need of services" means a child for whom |
143 | there is no pending investigation into an allegation or |
144 | suspicion of abuse, neglect, or abandonment; no pending referral |
145 | alleging the child is delinquent; or no current supervision by |
146 | the department of Juvenile Justice or the Department of Children |
147 | and Family Services for an adjudication of dependency or |
148 | delinquency. The child must also, under pursuant to this |
149 | chapter, be found by the court: |
150 | (a) To have persistently run away from the child's parents |
151 | or legal custodians despite reasonable efforts of the child, the |
152 | parents or legal custodians, and appropriate agencies to remedy |
153 | the conditions contributing to the behavior. Reasonable efforts |
154 | shall include voluntary participation by the child's parents or |
155 | legal custodians and the child in family mediation, services, |
156 | and treatment offered by the department of Juvenile Justice or |
157 | the Department of Children and Family Services; |
158 | (b) To be habitually truant from school, while subject to |
159 | compulsory school attendance, despite reasonable efforts to |
160 | remedy the situation under pursuant to ss. 1003.26 and 1003.27 |
161 | and through voluntary participation by the child's parents or |
162 | legal custodians and by the child in family mediation, services, |
163 | and treatment offered by the Department of Juvenile Justice or |
164 | the Department of Children and Family Services; or |
165 | (c) To have persistently disobeyed the reasonable and |
166 | lawful demands of the child's parents or legal custodians, and |
167 | to be beyond their control despite efforts by the child's |
168 | parents or legal custodians and appropriate agencies to remedy |
169 | the conditions contributing to the behavior. Reasonable efforts |
170 | may include such things as good faith participation in family or |
171 | individual counseling. |
172 | (9) "Child who has been found to have committed a |
173 | delinquent act" means a child who, under pursuant to the |
174 | provisions of this chapter, is found by a court to have |
175 | committed a violation of law or to be in direct or indirect |
176 | contempt of court, except that this definition does shall not |
177 | include an act constituting contempt of court arising out of a |
178 | dependency proceeding or a proceeding under pursuant to part III |
179 | of this chapter. |
180 | (10) "Child support" means a court-ordered obligation, |
181 | enforced under chapter 61 and ss. 409.2551-409.2597, for |
182 | monetary support for the care, maintenance, training, and |
183 | education of a child. |
184 | (11) "Circuit" means any of the 20 judicial circuits as |
185 | set forth in s. 26.021. |
186 | (12) "Comprehensive assessment" or "assessment" means the |
187 | gathering of information for the evaluation of a juvenile |
188 | offender's or a child's physical, psychological, educational, |
189 | vocational, and social condition and family environment as they |
190 | relate to the child's need for rehabilitative and treatment |
191 | services, including substance abuse treatment services, mental |
192 | health services, developmental services, literacy services, |
193 | medical services, family services, and other specialized |
194 | services, as appropriate. |
195 | (13) "Conditional release" means the care, treatment, |
196 | help, and supervision provided to a juvenile released from a |
197 | residential commitment program which is intended to promote |
198 | rehabilitation and prevent recidivism. The purpose of |
199 | conditional release is to protect the public, reduce recidivism, |
200 | increase responsible productive behavior, and provide for a |
201 | successful transition of the youth from the department to the |
202 | family. Conditional release includes, but is not limited to, |
203 | nonresidential community-based programs. |
204 | (14) "Court," unless otherwise expressly stated, means the |
205 | circuit court assigned to exercise jurisdiction under this |
206 | chapter. |
207 | (15) "Day treatment" means a nonresidential, community- |
208 | based program designed to provide therapeutic intervention to |
209 | youth who are placed on probation or conditional release or are |
210 | committed to the minimum-risk nonresidential level. A day |
211 | treatment program may provide educational and vocational |
212 | services and shall provide case-management services; individual, |
213 | group, and family counseling; training designed to address |
214 | delinquency risk factors; and monitoring of a youth's compliance |
215 | with, and facilitation of a youth's completion of, sanctions if |
216 | ordered by the court. Program types may include, but are not |
217 | limited to, career programs, marine programs, juvenile justice |
218 | alternative schools, training and rehabilitation programs, and |
219 | gender-specific programs. |
220 | (16)(a)(15)(a) "Delinquency program" means any intake, |
221 | probation, or similar program; regional detention center or |
222 | facility; or community-based program, whether owned and operated |
223 | by or contracted by the department of Juvenile Justice, or |
224 | institution owned and operated by or contracted by the |
225 | department of Juvenile Justice, which provides intake, |
226 | supervision, or custody and care of children who are alleged to |
227 | be or who have been found to be delinquent under pursuant to |
228 | part II. |
229 | (b) "Delinquency program staff" means supervisory and |
230 | direct care staff of a delinquency program as well as support |
231 | staff who have direct contact with children in a delinquency |
232 | program. |
233 | (c) "Delinquency prevention programs" means programs |
234 | designed for the purpose of reducing the occurrence of |
235 | delinquency, including youth and street gang activity, and |
236 | juvenile arrests. The term excludes arbitration, diversionary or |
237 | mediation programs, and community service work or other |
238 | treatment available subsequent to a child committing a |
239 | delinquent act. |
240 | (17)(16) "Department" means the Department of Juvenile |
241 | Justice. |
242 | (18)(17) "Designated facility" or "designated treatment |
243 | facility" means any facility designated by the department of |
244 | Juvenile Justice to provide treatment to juvenile offenders. |
245 | (19)(18) "Detention care" means the temporary care of a |
246 | child in secure, nonsecure, or home detention, pending a court |
247 | adjudication or disposition or execution of a court order. |
248 | There are three types of detention care, as follows: |
249 | (a) "Secure detention" means temporary custody of the |
250 | child while the child is under the physical restriction of a |
251 | detention center or facility pending adjudication, disposition, |
252 | or placement. |
253 | (b) "Nonsecure detention" means temporary custody of the |
254 | child while the child is in a residential home in the community |
255 | in a physically nonrestrictive environment under the supervision |
256 | of the Department of Juvenile Justice pending adjudication, |
257 | disposition, or placement. |
258 | (c) "Home detention" means temporary custody of the child |
259 | while the child is released to the custody of the parent, |
260 | guardian, or custodian in a physically nonrestrictive |
261 | environment under the supervision of the department of Juvenile |
262 | Justice staff pending adjudication, disposition, or placement. |
263 | (20)(19) "Detention center or facility" means a facility |
264 | used pending court adjudication or disposition or execution of |
265 | court order for the temporary care of a child alleged or found |
266 | to have committed a violation of law. A detention center or |
267 | facility may provide secure or nonsecure custody. A facility |
268 | used for the commitment of adjudicated delinquents shall not be |
269 | considered a detention center or facility. |
270 | (21)(20) "Detention hearing" means a hearing for the court |
271 | to determine if a child should be placed in temporary custody, |
272 | as provided for under ss. 985.213 and 985.215 in delinquency |
273 | cases. |
274 | (22)(21) "Disposition hearing" means a hearing in which |
275 | the court determines the most appropriate dispositional services |
276 | in the least restrictive available setting provided for under s. |
277 | 985.231, in delinquency cases. |
278 | (23)(22) "Family" means a collective of persons, |
279 | consisting of a child and a parent, guardian, adult custodian, |
280 | or adult relative, in which: |
281 | (a) The persons reside in the same house or living unit; |
282 | or |
283 | (b) The parent, guardian, adult custodian, or adult |
284 | relative has a legal responsibility by blood, marriage, or court |
285 | order to support or care for the child. |
286 | (24)(23) "Family in need of services" means a family that |
287 | has a child for whom there is no pending investigation into an |
288 | allegation of abuse, neglect, or abandonment or no current |
289 | supervision by the department of Juvenile Justice or the |
290 | Department of Children and Family Services for an adjudication |
291 | of dependency or delinquency. The child must also have been |
292 | referred to a law enforcement agency or the department of |
293 | Juvenile Justice for: |
294 | (a) Running away from parents or legal custodians; |
295 | (b) Persistently disobeying reasonable and lawful demands |
296 | of parents or legal custodians, and being beyond their control; |
297 | or |
298 | (c) Habitual truancy from school. |
299 | (25)(24) "Foster care" means care provided a child in a |
300 | foster family or boarding home, group home, agency boarding |
301 | home, child care institution, or any combination thereof. |
302 | (26)(25) "Habitually truant" means that: |
303 | (a) The child has 15 unexcused absences within 90 calendar |
304 | days with or without the knowledge or justifiable consent of the |
305 | child's parent or legal guardian, is subject to compulsory |
306 | school attendance under s. 1003.21(1) and (2)(a), and is not |
307 | exempt under s. 1003.21(3), s. 1003.24, or any other exemptions |
308 | specified by law or the rules of the State Board of Education. |
309 | (b) Escalating activities to determine the cause, and to |
310 | attempt the remediation, of the child's truant behavior under |
311 | ss. 1003.26 and 1003.27 have been completed. |
312 |
|
313 | If a child who is subject to compulsory school attendance is |
314 | responsive to the interventions described in ss. 1003.26 and |
315 | 1003.27 and has completed the necessary requirements to pass the |
316 | current grade as indicated in the district pupil progression |
317 | plan, the child shall not be determined to be habitually truant |
318 | and shall be passed. If a child within the compulsory school |
319 | attendance age has 15 unexcused absences within 90 calendar days |
320 | or fails to enroll in school, the state attorney may file a |
321 | child-in-need-of-services petition. Before Prior to filing a |
322 | petition, the child must be referred to the appropriate agency |
323 | for evaluation. After consulting with the evaluating agency, |
324 | the state attorney may elect to file a child-in-need-of-services |
325 | petition. |
326 | (c) A school representative, designated according to |
327 | school board policy, and a juvenile probation officer of the |
328 | department of Juvenile Justice have jointly investigated the |
329 | truancy problem or, if that was not feasible, have performed |
330 | separate investigations to identify conditions that could be |
331 | contributing to the truant behavior; and if, after a joint |
332 | staffing of the case to determine the necessity for services, |
333 | such services were determined to be needed, the persons who |
334 | performed the investigations met jointly with the family and |
335 | child to discuss any referral to appropriate community agencies |
336 | for economic services, family or individual counseling, or other |
337 | services required to remedy the conditions that are contributing |
338 | to the truant behavior. |
339 | (d) The failure or refusal of the parent or legal guardian |
340 | or the child to participate, or make a good faith effort to |
341 | participate, in the activities prescribed to remedy the truant |
342 | behavior, or the failure or refusal of the child to return to |
343 | school after participation in activities required by this |
344 | subsection, or the failure of the child to stop the truant |
345 | behavior after the school administration and the department of |
346 | Juvenile Justice have worked with the child as described in s. |
347 | 1003.27(3) shall be handled as prescribed in s. 1003.27. |
348 | (27)(26) "Halfway house" means a community-based |
349 | residential program for 10 or more committed delinquents at the |
350 | moderate-risk commitment level which is operated or contracted |
351 | by the department of Juvenile Justice. |
352 | (28)(27) "Intake" means the initial acceptance and |
353 | screening by the department of Juvenile Justice of a complaint |
354 | or a law enforcement report or probable cause affidavit of |
355 | delinquency, family in need of services, or child in need of |
356 | services to determine the recommendation to be taken in the best |
357 | interests of the child, the family, and the community. The |
358 | emphasis of intake is on diversion and the least restrictive |
359 | available services. Consequently, intake includes such |
360 | alternatives as: |
361 | (a) The disposition of the complaint, report, or probable |
362 | cause affidavit without court or public agency action or |
363 | judicial handling when appropriate. |
364 | (b) The referral of the child to another public or private |
365 | agency when appropriate. |
366 | (c) The recommendation by the juvenile probation officer |
367 | of judicial handling when appropriate and warranted. |
368 | (29)(28) "Judge" means the circuit judge exercising |
369 | jurisdiction pursuant to this chapter. |
370 | (30)(29) "Juvenile justice continuum" includes, but is not |
371 | limited to, delinquency prevention programs and services |
372 | designed for the purpose of preventing or reducing delinquent |
373 | acts, including criminal activity by youth gangs, and juvenile |
374 | arrests, as well as programs and services targeted at children |
375 | who have committed delinquent acts, and children who have |
376 | previously been committed to residential treatment programs for |
377 | delinquents. The term includes children-in-need-of-services and |
378 | families-in-need-of-services programs; conditional release; |
379 | substance abuse and mental health programs; educational and |
380 | career programs; recreational programs; community services |
381 | programs; community service work programs; and alternative |
382 | dispute resolution programs serving children at risk of |
383 | delinquency and their families, whether offered or delivered by |
384 | state or local governmental entities, public or private for- |
385 | profit or not-for-profit organizations, or religious or |
386 | charitable organizations. |
387 | (31)(30) "Juvenile probation officer" means the authorized |
388 | agent of the department of Juvenile Justice who performs the |
389 | intake, case management, or supervision functions. |
390 | (32)(31) "Juvenile sexual offender" means: |
391 | (a) A juvenile who has been found by the court under |
392 | pursuant to s. 985.228 to have committed a violation of chapter |
393 | 794, chapter 796, chapter 800, s. 827.071, or s. 847.0133; |
394 | (b) A juvenile found to have committed any felony |
395 | violation of law or delinquent act involving juvenile sexual |
396 | abuse. "Juvenile sexual abuse" means any sexual behavior which |
397 | occurs without consent, without equality, or as a result of |
398 | coercion. For purposes of this subsection, the following |
399 | definitions apply: |
400 | 1. "Coercion" means the exploitation of authority, use of |
401 | bribes, threats of force, or intimidation to gain cooperation or |
402 | compliance. |
403 | 2. "Equality" means two participants operating with the |
404 | same level of power in a relationship, neither being controlled |
405 | nor coerced by the other. |
406 | 3. "Consent" means an agreement including all of the |
407 | following: |
408 | a. Understanding what is proposed based on age, maturity, |
409 | developmental level, functioning, and experience. |
410 | b. Knowledge of societal standards for what is being |
411 | proposed. |
412 | c. Awareness of potential consequences and alternatives. |
413 | d. Assumption that agreement or disagreement will be |
414 | accepted equally. |
415 | e. Voluntary decision. |
416 | f. Mental competence. |
417 |
|
418 | Juvenile sexual offender behavior ranges from noncontact sexual |
419 | behavior such as making obscene phone calls, exhibitionism, |
420 | voyeurism, and the showing or taking of lewd photographs to |
421 | varying degrees of direct sexual contact, such as frottage, |
422 | fondling, digital penetration, rape, fellatio, sodomy, and |
423 | various other sexually aggressive acts. |
424 | (33)(32) "Legal custody or guardian" means a legal status |
425 | created by court order or letter of guardianship which vests in |
426 | a custodian of the person or guardian, whether an agency or an |
427 | individual, the right to have physical custody of the child and |
428 | the right and duty to protect, train, and discipline the child |
429 | and to provide him or her with food, shelter, education, and |
430 | ordinary medical, dental, psychiatric, and psychological care. |
431 | (34)(33) "Licensed child-caring agency" means a person, |
432 | society, association, or agency licensed by the Department of |
433 | Children and Family Services to care for, receive, and board |
434 | children. |
435 | (35)(34) "Licensed health care professional" means a |
436 | physician licensed under chapter 458, an osteopathic physician |
437 | licensed under chapter 459, a nurse licensed under part I of |
438 | chapter 464, a physician assistant licensed under chapter 458 or |
439 | chapter 459, or a dentist licensed under chapter 466. |
440 | (36)(35) "Likely to injure oneself" means that, as |
441 | evidenced by violent or other actively self-destructive |
442 | behavior, it is more likely than not that within a 24-hour |
443 | period the child will attempt to commit suicide or inflict |
444 | serious bodily harm on himself or herself. |
445 | (37)(36) "Likely to injure others" means that it is more |
446 | likely than not that within a 24-hour period the child will |
447 | inflict serious and unjustified bodily harm on another person. |
448 | (38)(37) "Mediation" means a process whereby a neutral |
449 | third person called a mediator acts to encourage and facilitate |
450 | the resolution of a dispute between two or more parties. It is |
451 | an informal and nonadversarial process with the objective of |
452 | helping the disputing parties reach a mutually acceptable and |
453 | voluntary agreement. In mediation, decisionmaking authority |
454 | rests with the parties. The role of the mediator includes, but |
455 | is not limited to, assisting the parties in identifying issues, |
456 | fostering joint problem solving, and exploring settlement |
457 | alternatives. |
458 | (39)(38) "Necessary medical treatment" means care which is |
459 | necessary within a reasonable degree of medical certainty to |
460 | prevent the deterioration of a child's condition or to alleviate |
461 | immediate pain of a child. |
462 | (40)(39) "Next of kin" means an adult relative of a child |
463 | who is the child's brother, sister, grandparent, aunt, uncle, or |
464 | first cousin. |
465 | (41)(40) "Parent" means a woman who gives birth to a child |
466 | and a man whose consent to the adoption of the child would be |
467 | required under s. 63.062(1). If a child has been legally |
468 | adopted, the term "parent" means the adoptive mother or father |
469 | of the child. The term does not include an individual whose |
470 | parental relationship to the child has been legally terminated, |
471 | or an alleged or prospective parent, unless the parental status |
472 | falls within the terms of either s. 39.503(1) or s. 63.062(1). |
473 | (42)(41) "Preliminary screening" means the gathering of |
474 | preliminary information to be used in determining a child's need |
475 | for further evaluation or assessment or for referral for other |
476 | substance abuse services through means such as psychosocial |
477 | interviews; urine and breathalyzer screenings; and reviews of |
478 | available educational, delinquency, and dependency records of |
479 | the child. |
480 | (43)(42) "Preventive services" means social services and |
481 | other supportive and rehabilitative services provided to the |
482 | parent of the child, the legal guardian of the child, or the |
483 | custodian of the child and to the child for the purpose of |
484 | averting the removal of the child from the home or disruption of |
485 | a family which will or could result in the placement of a child |
486 | in foster care. Social services and other supportive and |
487 | rehabilitative services shall promote the child's need for a |
488 | safe, continuous, stable living environment and shall promote |
489 | family autonomy and shall strengthen family life as the first |
490 | priority whenever possible. |
491 | (44)(43) "Probation" means the legal status of probation |
492 | created by law and court order in cases involving a child who |
493 | has been found to have committed a delinquent act. Probation is |
494 | an individualized program in which the freedom of the child is |
495 | limited and the child is restricted to noninstitutional quarters |
496 | or restricted to the child's home in lieu of commitment to the |
497 | custody of the department of Juvenile Justice. Youth on |
498 | probation may be assessed and classified for placement in day- |
499 | treatment probation programs designed for youth who represent a |
500 | minimum risk to themselves and public safety and do not require |
501 | placement and services in a residential setting. Program types |
502 | in this more intensive and structured day-treatment probation |
503 | option include career programs, marine programs, juvenile |
504 | justice alternative schools, training and rehabilitation |
505 | programs, and gender-specific programs. |
506 | (45)(44) "Relative" means a grandparent, great- |
507 | grandparent, sibling, first cousin, aunt, uncle, great-aunt, |
508 | great-uncle, niece, or nephew, whether related by the whole or |
509 | half blood, by affinity, or by adoption. The term does not |
510 | include a stepparent. |
511 | (46)(45) "Restrictiveness Residential Commitment level" |
512 | means the level of programming and security provided by programs |
513 | that service the supervision, custody, care, and treatment needs |
514 | of committed children. Sections 985.3141 and 985.404(11) apply |
515 | to children placed in programs at any residential commitment |
516 | level. The restrictiveness levels of residential commitment are |
517 | as follows: |
518 | (a) Minimum-risk nonresidential.--Programs or program |
519 | models at this commitment level work with youth who remain in |
520 | the community and participate at least 5 days per week in a day |
521 | treatment program. Youth assessed and classified for programs at |
522 | this commitment level represent a minimum risk to themselves and |
523 | public safety and do not require placement and services in |
524 | residential settings. Youth in this level have full access to, |
525 | and reside in, the community. Youth who have been found to have |
526 | committed delinquent acts that involve firearms, that are sexual |
527 | offenses, or that would be life felonies or first-degree |
528 | felonies if committed by an adult may not be committed to a |
529 | program at this level. |
530 | (b)(a) Low-risk residential.--Programs or program models |
531 | at this commitment level are residential but may allow youth to |
532 | have unsupervised access to the community. Youth assessed and |
533 | classified for placement in programs at this commitment level |
534 | represent a low risk to themselves and public safety but do |
535 | require placement and services in residential settings. Children |
536 | who have been found to have committed delinquent acts that |
537 | involve firearms, delinquent acts that are sexual offenses, or |
538 | delinquent acts that would be life felonies or first degree |
539 | felonies if committed by an adult shall not be committed to a |
540 | program at this level. |
541 | (c)(b) Moderate-risk residential.--Programs or program |
542 | models at this commitment level are residential but may allow |
543 | youth to have supervised access to the community. Facilities are |
544 | either environmentally secure, staff secure, or are hardware- |
545 | secure with walls, fencing, or locking doors. Facilities shall |
546 | provide 24-hour awake supervision, custody, care, and treatment |
547 | of residents. Youth assessed and classified for placement in |
548 | programs at this commitment level represent a moderate risk to |
549 | public safety and require close supervision. The staff at a |
550 | facility at this commitment level may seclude a child who is a |
551 | physical threat to himself or herself or others. Mechanical |
552 | restraint may also be used when necessary. |
553 | (d)(c) High-risk residential.--Programs or program models |
554 | at this commitment level are residential and do shall not allow |
555 | youth to have access to the community except that, temporary |
556 | release providing community access for up to 72 continuous hours |
557 | may be approved by a court for a youth who has made successful |
558 | progress in his or her program in order for the youth to attend |
559 | a family emergency or, during the final 60 days of his or her |
560 | placement, to visit his or her home, enroll in school or a |
561 | vocational program, complete a job interview, or participate in |
562 | a community service project. High-risk residential facilities |
563 | are hardware-secure with perimeter fencing and locking doors. |
564 | Facilities shall provide 24-hour awake supervision, custody, |
565 | care, and treatment of residents. Youth assessed and classified |
566 | for this level of placement require close supervision in a |
567 | structured residential setting. Placement in programs at this |
568 | level is prompted by a concern for public safety that outweighs |
569 | placement in programs at lower commitment levels. The staff at a |
570 | facility at this commitment level may seclude a child who is a |
571 | physical threat to himself or herself or others. Mechanical |
572 | restraint may also be used when necessary. The facility may |
573 | provide for single cell occupancy. |
574 | (e)(d) Maximum-risk residential.--Programs or program |
575 | models at this commitment level include juvenile correctional |
576 | facilities and juvenile prisons. The programs are long-term |
577 | residential and do shall not allow youth to have access to the |
578 | community. Facilities are maximum-custody hardware-secure with |
579 | perimeter security fencing and locking doors. Facilities shall |
580 | provide 24-hour awake supervision, custody, care, and treatment |
581 | of residents. The staff at a facility at this commitment level |
582 | may seclude a child who is a physical threat to himself or |
583 | herself or others. Mechanical restraint may also be used when |
584 | necessary. The facility shall provide for single cell occupancy, |
585 | except that youth may be housed together during prerelease |
586 | transition. Youth assessed and classified for this level of |
587 | placement require close supervision in a maximum security |
588 | residential setting. Placement in a program at this level is |
589 | prompted by a demonstrated need to protect the public. |
590 | (47)(46) "Respite" means a placement that is available for |
591 | the care, custody, and placement of a youth charged with |
592 | domestic violence as an alternative to secure detention or for |
593 | placement of a youth when a shelter bed for a child in need of |
594 | services or a family in need of services is unavailable. |
595 | (48)(47) "Secure detention center or facility" means a |
596 | physically restricting facility for the temporary care of |
597 | children, pending adjudication, disposition, or placement. |
598 | (49)(48) "Serious or habitual juvenile offender," for |
599 | purposes of commitment to a residential facility and for |
600 | purposes of records retention, means a child who has been found |
601 | to have committed a delinquent act or a violation of law, in the |
602 | case currently before the court, and who meets at least one of |
603 | the following criteria: |
604 | (a) The youth is at least 13 years of age at the time of |
605 | the disposition for the current offense and has been adjudicated |
606 | on the current offense for: |
607 | 1. Arson; |
608 | 2. Sexual battery; |
609 | 3. Robbery; |
610 | 4. Kidnapping; |
611 | 5. Aggravated child abuse; |
612 | 6. Aggravated assault; |
613 | 7. Aggravated stalking; |
614 | 8. Murder; |
615 | 9. Manslaughter; |
616 | 10. Unlawful throwing, placing, or discharging of a |
617 | destructive device or bomb; |
618 | 11. Armed burglary; |
619 | 12. Aggravated battery; |
620 | 13. Any lewd or lascivious offense committed upon or in |
621 | the presence of a person less than 16 years of age; or |
622 | 14. Carrying, displaying, using, threatening, or |
623 | attempting to use a weapon or firearm during the commission of a |
624 | felony. |
625 | (b) The youth is at least 13 years of age at the time of |
626 | the disposition, the current offense is a felony, and the child |
627 | has previously been committed at least two times to a |
628 | delinquency commitment program. |
629 | (c) The youth is at least 13 years of age and is currently |
630 | committed for a felony offense and transferred from a moderate- |
631 | risk or high-risk residential commitment placement. |
632 | (50)(49) "Serious or habitual juvenile offender program" |
633 | means the program established in s. 985.31. |
634 | (51)(50) "Shelter" means a place for the temporary care of |
635 | a child who is alleged to be or who has been found to be |
636 | delinquent. |
637 | (52)(51) "Shelter hearing" means a hearing provided for |
638 | under s. 984.14 in family-in-need-of-services cases or child-in- |
639 | need-of-services cases. |
640 | (53)(52) "Staff-secure shelter" means a facility in which |
641 | a child is supervised 24 hours a day by staff members who are |
642 | awake while on duty. The facility is for the temporary care and |
643 | assessment of a child who has been found to be dependent, who |
644 | has violated a court order and been found in contempt of court, |
645 | or whom the Department of Children and Family Services is unable |
646 | to properly assess or place for assistance within the continuum |
647 | of services provided for dependent children. |
648 | (54)(53) "Substance abuse" means using, without medical |
649 | reason, any psychoactive or mood-altering drug, including |
650 | alcohol, in such a manner as to induce impairment resulting in |
651 | dysfunctional social behavior. |
652 | (55)(54) "Taken into custody" means the status of a child |
653 | immediately when temporary physical control over the child is |
654 | attained by a person authorized by law, pending the child's |
655 | release, detention, placement, or other disposition as |
656 | authorized by law. |
657 | (56)(55) "Temporary legal custody" means the relationship |
658 | that a juvenile court creates between a child and an adult |
659 | relative of the child, adult non relative approved by the court, |
660 | or other person until a more permanent arrangement is ordered. |
661 | Temporary legal custody confers upon the custodian the right to |
662 | have temporary physical custody of the child and the right and |
663 | duty to protect, train, and discipline the child and to provide |
664 | the child with food, shelter, and education, and ordinary |
665 | medical, dental, psychiatric, and psychological care, unless |
666 | these rights and duties are otherwise enlarged or limited by the |
667 | court order establishing the temporary legal custody |
668 | relationship. |
669 | (57)(56) "Temporary release" means the terms and |
670 | conditions under which a child is temporarily released from a |
671 | residential commitment facility or allowed home visits. If the |
672 | temporary release is from a moderate-risk residential facility, |
673 | a high-risk residential facility, or a maximum-risk residential |
674 | facility, the terms and conditions of the temporary release must |
675 | be approved by the child, the court, and the facility. The term |
676 | includes periods during which the child is supervised pursuant |
677 | to a conditional release program or a period during which the |
678 | child is supervised by a juvenile probation officer or other |
679 | nonresidential staff of the department or staff employed by an |
680 | entity under contract with the department. |
681 | (58)(57) "Training school" means one of the following |
682 | facilities: the Arthur G. Dozier School or the Eckerd Youth |
683 | Development Center. |
684 | (59)(58) "Violation of law" or "delinquent act" means a |
685 | violation of any law of this state, the United States, or any |
686 | other state which is a misdemeanor or a felony or a violation of |
687 | a county or municipal ordinance which would be punishable by |
688 | incarceration if the violation were committed by an adult. |
689 | (60)(59) "Waiver hearing" means a hearing provided for |
690 | under s. 985.226(3). |
691 | Section 2. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section |
692 | 985.207, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
693 | 985.207 Taking a child into custody.-- |
694 | (1) A child may be taken into custody under the following |
695 | circumstances: |
696 | (d) By a law enforcement officer who has probable cause to |
697 | believe that the child is in violation of the conditions of the |
698 | child's probation, home detention, post commitment probation, or |
699 | conditional release supervision, has absconded from |
700 | nonresidential commitment, or has escaped from residential |
701 | commitment. |
702 |
|
703 | Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to allow the |
704 | detention of a child who does not meet the detention criteria in |
705 | s. 985.215. |
706 | Section 3. Section 985.208, Florida Statutes, is amended |
707 | to read: |
708 | 985.208 Detention of escapee or absconder on authority of |
709 | the department.-- |
710 | (1) If an authorized agent of the department has |
711 | reasonable grounds to believe that any delinquent child |
712 | committed to the department has escaped from a residential |
713 | commitment facility of the department or from being lawfully |
714 | transported thereto or there from, or has absconded from a |
715 | nonresidential commitment facility, the agent may take the child |
716 | into active custody and may deliver the child to the facility |
717 | or, if it is closer, to a detention center for return to the |
718 | facility. However, a child may not be held in detention longer |
719 | than 24 hours, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, |
720 | unless a special order so directing is made by the judge after a |
721 | detention hearing resulting in a finding that detention is |
722 | required based on the criteria in s. 985.215(2). The order shall |
723 | state the reasons for such finding. The reasons shall be |
724 | reviewable by appeal or in habeas corpus proceedings in the |
725 | district court of appeal. |
726 | (2) Any sheriff or other law enforcement officer, upon the |
727 | request of the secretary of the department or duly authorized |
728 | agent, shall take a child who has escaped or absconded from a |
729 | residential commitment department facility for committed |
730 | delinquent children, or from being lawfully transported thereto |
731 | or there from, or has absconded from a nonresidential commitment |
732 | facility, into custody and deliver the child to the appropriate |
733 | juvenile probation officer of the department. |
734 | Section 4. Subsections (2) and (10) of section 985.215, |
735 | Florida Statutes, are amended to read: |
736 | 985.215 Detention.-- |
737 | (2) Subject to the provisions of subsection (1), a child |
738 | taken into custody and placed into nonsecure or home detention |
739 | care or detained in secure detention care prior to a detention |
740 | hearing may continue to be detained by the court if: |
741 | (a) The child is alleged to be an escapee from a |
742 | residential commitment program, or an absconder from a |
743 | nonresidential commitment program, a probation program, or |
744 | conditional release supervision, or is alleged to have escaped |
745 | while being lawfully transported to or from a residential |
746 | commitment such program or supervision. |
747 | (b) The child is wanted in another jurisdiction for an |
748 | offense which, if committed by an adult, would be a felony. |
749 | (c) The child is charged with a delinquent act or |
750 | violation of law and requests in writing through legal counsel |
751 | to be detained for protection from an imminent physical threat |
752 | to his or her personal safety. |
753 | (d) The child is charged with committing an offense of |
754 | domestic violence as defined in s. 741.28 and is detained as |
755 | provided in s. 985.213(2)(b)3. |
756 | (e) The child is charged with possession or discharging a |
757 | firearm on school property in violation of s. 790.115. |
758 | (f) The child is charged with a capital felony, a life |
759 | felony, a felony of the first degree, a felony of the second |
760 | degree that does not involve a violation of chapter 893, or a |
761 | felony of the third degree that is also a crime of violence, |
762 | including any such offense involving the use or possession of a |
763 | firearm. |
764 | (g) The child is charged with any second degree or third |
765 | degree felony involving a violation of chapter 893 or any third |
766 | degree felony that is not also a crime of violence, and the |
767 | child: |
768 | 1. Has a record of failure to appear at court hearings |
769 | after being properly notified in accordance with the Rules of |
770 | Juvenile Procedure; |
771 | 2. Has a record of law violations prior to court hearings; |
772 | 3. Has already been detained or has been released and is |
773 | awaiting final disposition of the case; |
774 | 4. Has a record of violent conduct resulting in physical |
775 | injury to others; or |
776 | 5. Is found to have been in possession of a firearm. |
777 | (h) The child is alleged to have violated the conditions |
778 | of the child's probation or conditional release supervision. |
779 | However, a child detained under this paragraph may be held only |
780 | in a consequence unit as provided in s. 985.231(1)(a)1.c. If a |
781 | consequence unit is not available, the child shall be placed on |
782 | home detention with electronic monitoring. |
783 | (i) The child is detained on a judicial order for failure |
784 | to appear and has previously willfully failed to appear, after |
785 | proper notice, for an adjudicatory hearing on the same case |
786 | regardless of the results of the risk assessment instrument. A |
787 | child may be held in secure detention for up to 72 hours in |
788 | advance of the next scheduled court hearing pursuant to this |
789 | paragraph. The child's failure to keep the clerk of court and |
790 | defense counsel informed of a current and valid mailing address |
791 | where the child will receive notice to appear at court |
792 | proceedings does not provide an adequate ground for excusal of |
793 | the child's nonappearance at the hearings. |
794 | (j) The child is detained on a judicial order for failure |
795 | to appear and has previously willfully failed to appear, after |
796 | proper notice, at two or more court hearings of any nature on |
797 | the same case regardless of the results of the risk assessment |
798 | instrument. A child may be held in secure detention for up to 72 |
799 | hours in advance of the next scheduled court hearing pursuant to |
800 | this paragraph. The child's failure to keep the clerk of court |
801 | and defense counsel informed of a current and valid mailing |
802 | address where the child will receive notice to appear at court |
803 | proceedings does not provide an adequate ground for excusal of |
804 | the child's nonappearance at the hearings. |
805 |
|
806 | A child who meets any of these criteria and who is ordered to be |
807 | detained pursuant to this subsection shall be given a hearing |
808 | within 24 hours after being taken into custody. The purpose of |
809 | the detention hearing is to determine the existence of probable |
810 | cause that the child has committed the delinquent act or |
811 | violation of law with which he or she is charged and the need |
812 | for continued detention, except where the child is alleged to |
813 | have absconded from a nonresidential commitment program in which |
814 | case the court, at the detention hearing, shall order that the |
815 | child be released from detention and returned to his or her |
816 | nonresidential commitment program. Unless a child is detained |
817 | under paragraph (d) or paragraph (e), the court shall use |
818 | utilize the results of the risk assessment performed by the |
819 | juvenile probation officer and, based on the criteria in this |
820 | subsection, shall determine the need for continued detention. A |
821 | child placed into secure, nonsecure, or home detention care may |
822 | continue to be so detained by the court pursuant to this |
823 | subsection. If the court orders a placement more restrictive |
824 | than indicated by the results of the risk assessment instrument, |
825 | the court shall state, in writing, clear and convincing reasons |
826 | for such placement. Except as provided in s. 790.22(8) or in |
827 | subparagraph (10)(a)2., paragraph (10)(b), paragraph (10)(c), or |
828 | paragraph (10)(d), when a child is placed into secure or |
829 | nonsecure detention care, or into a respite home or other |
830 | placement pursuant to a court order following a hearing, the |
831 | court order must include specific instructions that direct the |
832 | release of the child from such placement no later than 5 p.m. on |
833 | the last day of the detention period specified in paragraph |
834 | (5)(b) or paragraph (5)(c), or subparagraph (10)(a)1., whichever |
835 | is applicable, unless the requirements of such applicable |
836 | provision have been met or an order of continuance has been |
837 | granted pursuant to paragraph (5)(f). |
838 | (5) |
839 | (d) Except as provided in paragraph (g), a child may not |
840 | be held in secure, nonsecure, or home detention care for more |
841 | than 15 days following the entry of an order of adjudication. |
842 | (g) Upon good cause being shown that the nature of the |
843 | charge requires additional time for the prosecution or defense |
844 | of the case, the court may extend the time limits for detention |
845 | specified in paragraph (c) an additional 9 days if the child is |
846 | charged with an offense that would be, if committed by an adult, |
847 | a capital felony, a life felony, a felony of the first degree, |
848 | or a felony of the second degree involving violence against any |
849 | individual. |
850 | (10)(a)1. When a child is committed to the Department of |
851 | Juvenile Justice awaiting dispositional placement, removal of |
852 | the child from detention care shall occur within 5 days, |
853 | excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. Any child held |
854 | in secure detention during the 5 days must meet detention |
855 | admission criteria pursuant to this section. If the child is |
856 | committed to a moderate-risk residential program, the department |
857 | may seek an order from the court authorizing continued detention |
858 | for a specific period of time necessary for the appropriate |
859 | residential placement of the child. However, such continued |
860 | detention in secure detention care may not exceed 15 days after |
861 | commitment, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays, |
862 | and except as otherwise provided in this subsection. |
863 | 2. The court must place all children who are adjudicated |
864 | and awaiting placement in a residential commitment program in |
865 | detention care. Children who are in home detention care or |
866 | nonsecure detention care may be placed on electronic monitoring. |
867 | (b) A child who is placed in home detention care, |
868 | nonsecure detention care, or home or nonsecure detention care |
869 | with electronic monitoring, while awaiting placement in a |
870 | minimum-risk, low-risk, or moderate-risk program, may be held in |
871 | secure detention care for 5 days, if the child violates the |
872 | conditions of the home detention care, the nonsecure detention |
873 | care, or the electronic monitoring agreement. For any subsequent |
874 | violation, the court may impose an additional 5 days in secure |
875 | detention care. |
876 | (c) If the child is committed to a high-risk residential |
877 | program, the child must be held in detention care until |
878 | placement or commitment is accomplished. |
879 | (d) If the child is committed to a maximum-risk |
880 | residential program, the child must be held in detention care |
881 | until placement or commitment is accomplished. |
882 | (e) Upon specific appropriation, the department may obtain |
883 | comprehensive evaluations, including, but not limited to, |
884 | medical, academic, psychological, behavioral, sociological, and |
885 | vocational needs of a youth with multiple arrests for all level |
886 | criminal acts or a youth committed to a minimum-risk or low-risk |
887 | commitment program. |
888 | (f) Regardless of detention status, a child being |
889 | transported by the department to a residential commitment |
890 | facility of the department may be placed in secure detention |
891 | overnight, not to exceed a 24-hour period, for the specific |
892 | purpose of ensuring the safe delivery of the child to his or her |
893 | residential commitment program, court, appointment, transfer, or |
894 | release. |
895 | Section 5. Notwithstanding s. 985.2155, Florida Statutes, |
896 | as amended by ch. 2004-473, Laws of Florida, the state, subject |
897 | to appropriation, shall pay all costs of detention care for |
898 | juveniles for Highlands County, Sumter County, and Wakulla |
899 | County for fiscal year 2005-2006. |
900 | Section 6. Paragraphs (a) and (d) of subsection (1) and |
901 | subsection (2) of section 985.231, Florida Statutes, are amended |
902 | to read: |
903 | 985.231 Powers of disposition in delinquency cases.-- |
904 | (1)(a) The court that has jurisdiction of an adjudicated |
905 | delinquent child may, by an order stating the facts upon which a |
906 | determination of a sanction and rehabilitative program was made |
907 | at the disposition hearing: |
908 | 1. Place the child in a probation program or a |
909 | postcommitment probation program under the supervision of an |
910 | authorized agent of the department of Juvenile Justice or of any |
911 | other person or agency specifically authorized and appointed by |
912 | the court, whether in the child's own home, in the home of a |
913 | relative of the child, or in some other suitable place under |
914 | such reasonable conditions as the court may direct. A probation |
915 | program for an adjudicated delinquent child must include a |
916 | penalty component such as restitution in money or in kind, |
917 | community service, a curfew, revocation or suspension of the |
918 | driver's license of the child, or other nonresidential |
919 | punishment appropriate to the offense and must also include a |
920 | rehabilitative program component such as a requirement of |
921 | participation in substance abuse treatment or in school or other |
922 | educational program. If the child is attending or is eligible to |
923 | attend public school and the court finds that the victim or a |
924 | sibling of the victim in the case is attending or may attend the |
925 | same school as the child, the court placement order shall |
926 | include a finding pursuant to the proceedings described in s. |
927 | 985.23(1)(d). Upon the recommendation of the department at the |
928 | time of disposition, or subsequent to disposition pursuant to |
929 | the filing of a petition alleging a violation of the child's |
930 | conditions of postcommitment probation, the court may order the |
931 | child to submit to random testing for the purpose of detecting |
932 | and monitoring the use of alcohol or controlled substances. |
933 | a. A restrictiveness level classification scale for levels |
934 | of supervision shall be provided by the department, taking into |
935 | account the child's needs and risks relative to probation |
936 | supervision requirements to reasonably ensure the public safety. |
937 | Probation programs for children shall be supervised by the |
938 | department or by any other person or agency specifically |
939 | authorized by the court. These programs must include, but are |
940 | not limited to, structured or restricted activities as described |
941 | in this subparagraph, and shall be designed to encourage the |
942 | child toward acceptable and functional social behavior. If |
943 | supervision or a program of community service is ordered by the |
944 | court, the duration of such supervision or program must be |
945 | consistent with any treatment and rehabilitation needs |
946 | identified for the child and may not exceed the term for which |
947 | sentence could be imposed if the child were committed for the |
948 | offense, except that the duration of such supervision or program |
949 | for an offense that is a misdemeanor of the second degree, or is |
950 | equivalent to a misdemeanor of the second degree, may be for a |
951 | period not to exceed 6 months. When restitution is ordered by |
952 | the court, the amount of restitution may not exceed an amount |
953 | the child and the parent or guardian could reasonably be |
954 | expected to pay or make. A child who participates in any work |
955 | program under this part is considered an employee of the state |
956 | for purposes of liability, unless otherwise provided by law. |
957 | b. The court may conduct judicial review hearings for a |
958 | child placed on probation for the purpose of fostering |
959 | accountability to the judge and compliance with other |
960 | requirements, such as restitution and community service. The |
961 | court may allow early termination of probation for a child who |
962 | has substantially complied with the terms and conditions of |
963 | probation. |
964 | c. If the conditions of the probation program or the |
965 | postcommitment probation program are violated, the department or |
966 | the state attorney may bring the child before the court on a |
967 | petition alleging a violation of the program. Any child who |
968 | violates the conditions of probation or postcommitment probation |
969 | must be brought before the court if sanctions are sought. A |
970 | child taken into custody under s. 985.207 for violating the |
971 | conditions of probation or postcommitment probation shall be |
972 | held in a consequence unit if such a unit is available. The |
973 | child shall be afforded a hearing within 24 hours after being |
974 | taken into custody to determine the existence of probable cause |
975 | that the child violated the conditions of probation or |
976 | postcommitment probation. A consequence unit is a secure |
977 | facility specifically designated by the department for children |
978 | who are taken into custody under s. 985.207 for violating |
979 | probation or postcommitment probation, or who have been found by |
980 | the court to have violated the conditions of probation or |
981 | postcommitment probation. If the violation involves a new charge |
982 | of delinquency, the child may be detained under s. 985.215 in a |
983 | facility other than a consequence unit. If the child is not |
984 | eligible for detention for the new charge of delinquency, the |
985 | child may be held in the consequence unit pending a hearing and |
986 | is subject to the time limitations specified in s. 985.215. If |
987 | the child denies violating the conditions of probation or |
988 | postcommitment probation, the court shall appoint counsel to |
989 | represent the child at the child's request. Upon the child's |
990 | admission, or if the court finds after a hearing that the child |
991 | has violated the conditions of probation or postcommitment |
992 | probation, the court shall enter an order revoking, modifying, |
993 | or continuing probation or postcommitment probation. In each |
994 | such case, the court shall enter a new disposition order and, in |
995 | addition to the sanctions set forth in this paragraph, may |
996 | impose any sanction the court could have imposed at the original |
997 | disposition hearing. If the child is found to have violated the |
998 | conditions of probation or postcommitment probation, the court |
999 | may: |
1000 | (I) Place the child in a consequence unit in that judicial |
1001 | circuit, if available, for up to 5 days for a first violation, |
1002 | and up to 15 days for a second or subsequent violation. |
1003 | (II) Place the child on home detention with electronic |
1004 | monitoring. However, this sanction may be used only if a |
1005 | residential consequence unit is not available. |
1006 | (III) Modify or continue the child's probation program or |
1007 | postcommitment probation program. |
1008 | (IV) Revoke probation or postcommitment probation and |
1009 | commit the child to the department. |
1010 | d. Notwithstanding s. 743.07 and paragraph (d), and except |
1011 | as provided in s. 985.31, the term of any order placing a child |
1012 | in a probation program must be until the child's 19th birthday |
1013 | unless he or she is released by the court, on the motion of an |
1014 | interested party or on its own motion. |
1015 | 2. Commit the child to a licensed child-caring agency |
1016 | willing to receive the child, but the court may not commit the |
1017 | child to a jail or to a facility used primarily as a detention |
1018 | center or facility or shelter. |
1019 | 3. Commit the child to the department of Juvenile Justice |
1020 | at a restrictiveness residential commitment level defined in s. |
1021 | 985.03. Such commitment must be for the purpose of exercising |
1022 | active control over the child, including, but not limited to, |
1023 | custody, care, training, urine monitoring, and treatment of the |
1024 | child and release of the child from residential commitment into |
1025 | the community in a postcommitment nonresidential conditional |
1026 | release program. If the child is eligible to attend public |
1027 | school following residential commitment and the court finds that |
1028 | the victim or a sibling of the victim in the case is or may be |
1029 | attending the same school as the child, the commitment order |
1030 | shall include a finding pursuant to the proceedings described in |
1031 | s. 985.23(1)(d). If the child is not successful in the |
1032 | conditional release program, the department may use the transfer |
1033 | procedure under s. 985.404. Notwithstanding s. 743.07 and |
1034 | paragraph (d), and except as provided in s. 985.31, the term of |
1035 | the commitment must be until the child is discharged by the |
1036 | department or until he or she reaches the age of 21. |
1037 | 4. Revoke or suspend the driver's license of the child. |
1038 | 5. Require the child and, if the court finds it |
1039 | appropriate, the child's parent or guardian together with the |
1040 | child, to render community service in a public service program. |
1041 | 6. As part of the probation program to be implemented by |
1042 | the department of Juvenile Justice, or, in the case of a |
1043 | committed child, as part of the community-based sanctions |
1044 | ordered by the court at the disposition hearing or before the |
1045 | child's release from commitment, order the child to make |
1046 | restitution in money, through a promissory note cosigned by the |
1047 | child's parent or guardian, or in kind for any damage or loss |
1048 | caused by the child's offense in a reasonable amount or manner |
1049 | to be determined by the court. The clerk of the circuit court |
1050 | shall be the receiving and dispensing agent. In such case, the |
1051 | court shall order the child or the child's parent or guardian to |
1052 | pay to the office of the clerk of the circuit court an amount |
1053 | not to exceed the actual cost incurred by the clerk as a result |
1054 | of receiving and dispensing restitution payments. The clerk |
1055 | shall notify the court if restitution is not made, and the court |
1056 | shall take any further action that is necessary against the |
1057 | child or the child's parent or guardian. A finding by the court, |
1058 | after a hearing, that the parent or guardian has made diligent |
1059 | and good faith efforts to prevent the child from engaging in |
1060 | delinquent acts absolves the parent or guardian of liability for |
1061 | restitution under this subparagraph. |
1062 | 7. Order the child and, if the court finds it appropriate, |
1063 | the child's parent or guardian together with the child, to |
1064 | participate in a community work project, either as an |
1065 | alternative to monetary restitution or as part of the |
1066 | rehabilitative or probation program. |
1067 | 8. Commit the child to the department of Juvenile Justice |
1068 | for placement in a program or facility for serious or habitual |
1069 | juvenile offenders in accordance with s. 985.31. Any commitment |
1070 | of a child to a program or facility for serious or habitual |
1071 | juvenile offenders must be for an indeterminate period of time, |
1072 | but the time may not exceed the maximum term of imprisonment |
1073 | that an adult may serve for the same offense. The court may |
1074 | retain jurisdiction over such child until the child reaches the |
1075 | age of 21, specifically for the purpose of the child completing |
1076 | the program. |
1077 | 9. In addition to the sanctions imposed on the child, |
1078 | order the parent or guardian of the child to perform community |
1079 | service if the court finds that the parent or guardian did not |
1080 | make a diligent and good faith effort to prevent the child from |
1081 | engaging in delinquent acts. The court may also order the parent |
1082 | or guardian to make restitution in money or in kind for any |
1083 | damage or loss caused by the child's offense. The court shall |
1084 | determine a reasonable amount or manner of restitution, and |
1085 | payment shall be made to the clerk of the circuit court as |
1086 | provided in subparagraph 6. |
1087 | 10. Subject to specific appropriation, commit the juvenile |
1088 | sexual offender to the department of Juvenile Justice for |
1089 | placement in a program or facility for juvenile sexual offenders |
1090 | in accordance with s. 985.308. Any commitment of a juvenile |
1091 | sexual offender to a program or facility for juvenile sexual |
1092 | offenders must be for an indeterminate period of time, but the |
1093 | time may not exceed the maximum term of imprisonment that an |
1094 | adult may serve for the same offense. The court may retain |
1095 | jurisdiction over a juvenile sexual offender until the juvenile |
1096 | sexual offender reaches the age of 21, specifically for the |
1097 | purpose of completing the program. |
1098 | (d) Any commitment of a delinquent child to the department |
1099 | of Juvenile Justice must be for an indeterminate period of time, |
1100 | which may include periods of temporary release; however, but the |
1101 | period of time may not exceed the maximum term of imprisonment |
1102 | that an adult may serve for the same offense, except that the |
1103 | duration of a minimum-risk nonresidential commitment for an |
1104 | offense that is a misdemeanor of the second degree, or is |
1105 | equivalent to a misdemeanor of the second degree, may be for a |
1106 | period not to exceed 6 months. The duration of the child's |
1107 | placement in a residential commitment program of any |
1108 | restrictiveness level shall be based on objective performance- |
1109 | based treatment planning. The child's treatment plan progress |
1110 | and adjustment-related issues shall be reported to the court |
1111 | quarterly, unless the court requests monthly reports each month. |
1112 | The child's length of stay in a residential commitment program |
1113 | may be extended if the child fails to comply with or participate |
1114 | in treatment activities. The child's length of stay in the such |
1115 | program shall not be extended for purposes of sanction or |
1116 | punishment. Any temporary release from such program must be |
1117 | approved by the court. Any child so committed may be discharged |
1118 | from institutional confinement or a program upon the direction |
1119 | of the department with the concurrence of the court. The child's |
1120 | treatment plan progress and adjustment-related issues must be |
1121 | communicated to the court at the time the department requests |
1122 | the court to consider releasing the child from the residential |
1123 | commitment program. Notwithstanding s. 743.07 and this |
1124 | subsection, and except as provided in ss. 985.201 and 985.31, a |
1125 | child may not be held under a commitment from a court under |
1126 | pursuant to this section after becoming 21 years of age. The |
1127 | department shall give the court that committed the child to the |
1128 | department reasonable notice, in writing, of its desire to |
1129 | discharge the child from a commitment facility. The court that |
1130 | committed the child may thereafter accept or reject the request. |
1131 | If the court does not respond within 10 days after receipt of |
1132 | the notice, the request of the department shall be deemed |
1133 | granted. This section does not limit the department's authority |
1134 | to revoke a child's temporary release status and return the |
1135 | child to a commitment facility for any violation of the terms |
1136 | and conditions of the temporary release. |
1137 | (2) Following a delinquency adjudicatory hearing pursuant |
1138 | to s. 985.228 and a delinquency disposition hearing pursuant to |
1139 | s. 985.23 which results in a commitment determination, the court |
1140 | shall, on its own or upon request by the state or the |
1141 | department, determine whether the protection of the public |
1142 | requires that the child be placed in a program for serious or |
1143 | habitual juvenile offenders and whether the particular needs of |
1144 | the child would be best served by a program for serious or |
1145 | habitual juvenile offenders as provided in s. 985.31. The |
1146 | determination shall be made pursuant to ss. 985.03(49)(48) and |
1147 | 985.23(3). |
1148 | Section 7. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section |
1149 | 985.2311, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
1150 | 985.2311 Cost of supervision; cost of care.-- |
1151 | (1) Except as provided in subsection (3) or subsection |
1152 | (4): |
1153 | (a) When any child is placed into home detention, |
1154 | probation, or other supervision status with the department of |
1155 | Juvenile Justice, or is committed to the minimum-risk |
1156 | nonresidential restrictiveness level, the court shall order the |
1157 | parent of such child to pay to the department a fee for the cost |
1158 | of the supervision of such child in the amount of $1 per day for |
1159 | each day that the child is in such supervision status. |
1160 | Section 8. Subsection (3) of section 985.316, Florida |
1161 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1162 | 985.316 Conditional release.-- |
1163 | (3) For juveniles referred or committed to the department, |
1164 | the function of the department may include, but shall not be |
1165 | limited to, assessing each committed juvenile placed in a |
1166 | residential commitment program to determine the need for |
1167 | conditional release services upon release from the a commitment |
1168 | program, supervising the juvenile when released into the |
1169 | community from a residential commitment facility of the |
1170 | department, providing such counseling and other services as may |
1171 | be necessary for the families and assisting their preparations |
1172 | for the return of the child. Subject to specific appropriation, |
1173 | the department shall provide for outpatient sexual offender |
1174 | counseling for any juvenile sexual offender released from a |
1175 | residential commitment program as a component of conditional |
1176 | release. |
1177 | Section 9. Section 985.403, Florida Statutes, is repealed. |
1178 | Section 10. Task Force on Juvenile Sexual Offenders and |
1179 | their Victims.-- |
1180 | (1) On or before August 1, 2005, there shall be created a |
1181 | task force to review and evaluate the state's laws that define |
1182 | and address juvenile sex offenders and the Department of |
1183 | Juvenile Justice's practices and procedures for serving these |
1184 | offenders and their victims. The task force shall make findings |
1185 | that include, but are not limited to: identification of statutes |
1186 | that address juvenile sexual offenders; a profile of the acts |
1187 | committed by each juvenile placed in juvenile sexual offender |
1188 | programming in this state between July 2000 and June 2005 and an |
1189 | assessment of the appropriateness of those placements based upon |
1190 | the acts committed; identification of community-based and |
1191 | residential commitment programming available for juvenile sexual |
1192 | offenders and an assessment of such programming's effectiveness; |
1193 | and identification of qualifications required for staff who |
1194 | serve juvenile sexual offenders. Based on its findings, the task |
1195 | force shall make recommendations for the improvement of the |
1196 | state's laws, policies, programs, and funding for juvenile |
1197 | sexual offenders, and such recommendations shall specifically |
1198 | include, but are not limited to, identification of criteria that |
1199 | should be satisfied prior to placement of a juvenile in juvenile |
1200 | sexual offender programming. |
1201 | (2) The Governor shall appoint up to 12 members to the |
1202 | task force. The task force shall be composed of representatives |
1203 | who shall include, but are not limited to: a circuit court judge |
1204 | with at least 1 year's experience in the juvenile division, a |
1205 | state attorney with at least 1 year's experience in the juvenile |
1206 | division, a public defender with at least 1 year's experience in |
1207 | the juvenile division, one representative of the Department of |
1208 | Juvenile Justice, two representatives of providers of juvenile |
1209 | sexual offender services, one member of the Florida Juvenile |
1210 | Justice Association, one member of the Florida Association for |
1211 | the Treatment of Sexual Abusers, and one victim of a juvenile |
1212 | sexual offense. |
1213 | (3) The task force shall submit a written report of its |
1214 | findings and recommendations to the Governor, the President of |
1215 | the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives by |
1216 | December 1, 2005. |
1217 | (4) Administrative support for the task force shall be |
1218 | provided by the Department of Juvenile Justice. Members of the |
1219 | task force shall receive no salary from the state beyond the |
1220 | salary already received from their sponsoring agency, if any, |
1221 | and are not entitled to reimbursement for travel and per diem |
1222 | expenses. |
1223 | (5) The task force shall be dissolved upon submission of |
1224 | its report. |
1225 | Section 11. Task force to study certification for juvenile |
1226 | justice provider staff.-- |
1227 | (1) On or before August 1, 2005, there shall be created a |
1228 | task force to study the feasibility of establishing a |
1229 | certification process for staff employed by a provider under |
1230 | contract with the Department of Juvenile Justice to provide |
1231 | juvenile justice services to youth. |
1232 | (2) The Governor shall appoint up to 12 members to the |
1233 | task force. The task force shall be composed of representatives |
1234 | who shall include, but are not limited to, the following: two |
1235 | representatives of the Department of Juvenile Justice, two |
1236 | representatives of providers of juvenile justice services, two |
1237 | members of the Florida Juvenile Justice Association, two |
1238 | provider employees who provide direct care services, and two |
1239 | representatives of the Florida Certification Board. |
1240 | (3) The task force shall consider the feasibility of |
1241 | implementing and operating a certification system for staff who |
1242 | work in juvenile justice facilities, services, or programs. At a |
1243 | minimum, the task force shall consider and make recommendations |
1244 | concerning: per diem levels, the occupational levels of staff |
1245 | subject to certification, the criteria that may be used to |
1246 | certify staff, the levels of certification, and a process for |
1247 | testing and validating the effectiveness of any recommended |
1248 | staff certification system. In making its recommendations, the |
1249 | task force shall make findings regarding the benefits of a staff |
1250 | certification system for the state's juvenile justice |
1251 | programming and the cost to implement such a system. |
1252 | (4) The task force shall submit a written report of its |
1253 | findings and recommendations to the Governor, the President of |
1254 | the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives by |
1255 | January 1, 2006. |
1256 | (5) Administrative support for the task force shall be |
1257 | provided by the Department of Juvenile Justice. Members of the |
1258 | task force shall receive no salary from the state beyond the |
1259 | salary already received from their sponsoring agency, if any, |
1260 | and are not entitled to reimbursement for travel and per diem |
1261 | expenses. |
1262 | (6) The task force shall be dissolved upon submission of |
1263 | its report. |
1264 | Section 12. Subsection (10) of section 985.4135, Florida |
1265 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1266 | 985.4135 Juvenile justice circuit boards and juvenile |
1267 | justice county councils.-- |
1268 | (10) Membership of the juvenile justice county councils, |
1269 | or juvenile justice circuit boards established under subsection |
1270 | (9), may must include representatives from the following |
1271 | entities: |
1272 | (a) Representatives from the school district, which may |
1273 | include elected school board officials, the school |
1274 | superintendent, school or district administrators, teachers, and |
1275 | counselors. |
1276 | (b) Representatives of the board of county commissioners. |
1277 | (c) Representatives of the governing bodies of local |
1278 | municipalities within the county. |
1279 | (d) A representative of the corresponding circuit or |
1280 | regional entity of the Department of Children and Family |
1281 | Services. |
1282 | (e) Representatives of local law enforcement agencies, |
1283 | including the sheriff or the sheriff's designee. |
1284 | (f) Representatives of the judicial system. |
1285 | (g) Representatives of the business community. |
1286 | (h) Representatives of other interested officials, groups, |
1287 | or entities, including, but not limited to, a children's |
1288 | services council, public or private providers of juvenile |
1289 | justice programs and services, students, parents, and advocates. |
1290 | Private providers of juvenile justice programs may not exceed |
1291 | one-third of the voting membership. |
1292 | (i) Representatives of the faith community. |
1293 | (j) Representatives of victim-service programs and victims |
1294 | of crimes. |
1295 | (k) Representatives of the Department of Corrections. |
1296 | Section 13. Subsection (4) of section 985.407, Florida |
1297 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1298 | 985.407 Departmental contracting powers; personnel |
1299 | standards and screening.-- |
1300 | (4)(a) For any person employed by the department, or by a |
1301 | provider under contract with the department, in delinquency |
1302 | facilities, services, or programs, the department shall require: |
1303 | 1. A level 2 employment screening pursuant to chapter 435 |
1304 | prior to employment, using the level 1 standards for screening |
1305 | set forth in that chapter, for personnel in delinquency |
1306 | facilities, services, and programs. |
1307 | 2. A federal criminal records check by the Federal Bureau |
1308 | of Investigation every 5 years following the date of the |
1309 | person's employment. |
1310 | (b) Except for law enforcement, correctional, and |
1311 | correctional probation officers, to whom s. 943.13(5) applies, |
1312 | the department shall electronically submit to the Department of |
1313 | Law Enforcement: |
1314 | 1. Fingerprint information obtained during the employment |
1315 | screening required by subparagraph (a)1. |
1316 | 2. Beginning on December 15, 2005, fingerprint information |
1317 | for all persons employed by the department, or by a provider |
1318 | under contract with the department, in delinquency facilities, |
1319 | services, or programs if such fingerprint information has not |
1320 | previously been electronically submitted to the Department of |
1321 | Law Enforcement under this paragraph. |
1322 | (c) All fingerprint information electronically submitted |
1323 | to the Department of Law Enforcement under paragraph (b) shall |
1324 | be retained by the Department of Law Enforcement and entered |
1325 | into the statewide automated fingerprint identification system |
1326 | authorized by s. 943.05(2)(b). Thereafter, such fingerprint |
1327 | information shall be available for all purposes and uses |
1328 | authorized for arrest fingerprint information entered into the |
1329 | statewide automated fingerprint identification system pursuant |
1330 | to s. 943.051 until the fingerprint information is removed |
1331 | pursuant to paragraph (e). The Department of Law Enforcement |
1332 | shall search all arrest fingerprint information received |
1333 | pursuant to s. 943.051 against the fingerprint information |
1334 | entered into the statewide automated fingerprint system pursuant |
1335 | to this subsection. Any arrest records identified as a result of |
1336 | the search shall be reported to the department in the manner and |
1337 | timeframe established by the Department of Law Enforcement by |
1338 | rule. |
1339 | (d) The department shall pay an annual fee to the |
1340 | Department of Law Enforcement for its costs resulting from the |
1341 | fingerprint information retention services required by this |
1342 | subsection. The amount of the annual fee and procedures for the |
1343 | submission and retention of fingerprint information and for the |
1344 | dissemination of search results shall be established by the |
1345 | Department of Law Enforcement by a rule that is applicable to |
1346 | the department individually pursuant to this subsection or that |
1347 | is applicable to the department and other employing agencies |
1348 | pursuant to rulemaking authority otherwise provided by law. |
1349 | (e) The department shall notify the Department of Law |
1350 | Enforcement when a person whose fingerprint information is |
1351 | retained by the Department of Law Enforcement under this |
1352 | subsection is no longer employed by the department, or by a |
1353 | provider under contract with the department, in a delinquency |
1354 | facility, service, or program. This notice shall be provided by |
1355 | the department to the Department of Law Enforcement no later |
1356 | than 6 months after the date of the change in the person's |
1357 | employment status. Fingerprint information for persons |
1358 | identified by the department in the notice shall be removed from |
1359 | the statewide automated fingerprint system. |
1360 | Section 14. The sums of $36,834 in recurring funds and |
1361 | $86,407 in nonrecurring funds are appropriated from the General |
1362 | Revenue Fund to the Department of Juvenile Justice for expenses |
1363 | for the 2005-2006 fiscal year. The sum of $133,335 in recurring |
1364 | funds is appropriated from the Administrative Trust Fund to the |
1365 | Department of Juvenile Justice for expenses for the 2005-2006 |
1366 | fiscal year. |
1367 | Section 15. Section 784.075, Florida Statutes, is amended |
1368 | to read: |
1369 | 784.075 Battery on detention or commitment facility staff |
1370 | or a juvenile probation officer.--A person who commits a battery |
1371 | on a juvenile probation officer, as defined in s. 984.03 or s. |
1372 | 985.03, on other staff of a detention center or facility as |
1373 | defined in s. 984.03(19) or s. 985.03(19), or on a staff member |
1374 | of a commitment facility as defined in s. 985.03(45), commits a |
1375 | felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in s. |
1376 | 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. For purposes of this |
1377 | section, a staff member of the facilities listed includes |
1378 | persons employed by the Department of Juvenile Justice, persons |
1379 | employed at facilities licensed by the Department of Juvenile |
1380 | Justice, and persons employed at facilities operated under a |
1381 | contract with the Department of Juvenile Justice. |
1382 | Section 16. Section 984.05, Florida Statutes, is amended |
1383 | to read: |
1384 | 984.05 Rules relating to habitual truants; adoption by |
1385 | State Board of Education and Department of Juvenile |
1386 | Justice.--The Department of Juvenile Justice and the State Board |
1387 | of Education shall work together on the development of, and |
1388 | shall adopt, rules as necessary for the implementation of ss. |
1389 | 984.03(27), 985.03(26)(25), and 1003.27. |
1390 | Section 17. Paragraph (e) of subsection (3) and paragraph |
1391 | (a) of subsection (4) of section 985.31, Florida Statutes, are |
1392 | amended, and for the purpose of incorporating the amendment to |
1393 | section 985.231, Florida Statutes, in references thereto, |
1394 | paragraph (k) of subsection (3) of said section is reenacted to |
1395 | read: |
1396 | 985.31 Serious or habitual juvenile offender.-- |
1397 | (3) PRINCIPLES AND RECOMMENDATIONS OF ASSESSMENT AND |
1398 | TREATMENT.-- |
1399 | (e) After a child has been adjudicated delinquent pursuant |
1400 | to s. 985.228, the court shall determine whether the child meets |
1401 | the criteria for a serious or habitual juvenile offender |
1402 | pursuant to s. 985.03(49)(48). If the court determines that the |
1403 | child does not meet such criteria, the provisions of s. |
1404 | 985.231(1) shall apply. |
1405 | (k) Any commitment of a child to the department for |
1406 | placement in a serious or habitual juvenile offender program or |
1407 | facility shall be for an indeterminate period of time, but the |
1408 | time shall not exceed the maximum term of imprisonment which an |
1409 | adult may serve for the same offense. Notwithstanding the |
1410 | provisions of ss. 743.07 and 985.231(1)(d), a serious or |
1411 | habitual juvenile offender shall not be held under commitment |
1412 | from a court pursuant to this section, s. 985.231, or s. 985.233 |
1413 | after becoming 21 years of age. This provision shall apply only |
1414 | for the purpose of completing the serious or habitual juvenile |
1415 | offender program pursuant to this chapter and shall be used |
1416 | solely for the purpose of treatment. |
1417 | (4) ASSESSMENTS, TESTING, RECORDS, AND INFORMATION.-- |
1418 | (a) Pursuant to the provisions of this section, the |
1419 | department shall implement the comprehensive assessment |
1420 | instrument for the treatment needs of serious or habitual |
1421 | juvenile offenders and for the assessment, which assessment |
1422 | shall include the criteria under s. 985.03(49)(48) and shall |
1423 | also include, but not be limited to, evaluation of the child's: |
1424 | 1. Amenability to treatment. |
1425 | 2. Proclivity toward violence. |
1426 | 3. Tendency toward gang involvement. |
1427 | 4. Substance abuse or addiction and the level thereof. |
1428 | 5. History of being a victim of child abuse or sexual |
1429 | abuse, or indication of sexual behavior dysfunction. |
1430 | 6. Number and type of previous adjudications, findings of |
1431 | guilt, and convictions. |
1432 | 7. Potential for rehabilitation. |
1433 | Section 18. Subsection (2) of section 985.3141, Florida |
1434 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
1435 | 985.3141 Escapes from secure detention or residential |
1436 | commitment facility.--An escape from: |
1437 | (2) Any residential commitment facility described in s. |
1438 | 985.03(46)(45), maintained for the custody, treatment, |
1439 | punishment, or rehabilitation of children found to have |
1440 | committed delinquent acts or violations of law; or |
1441 |
|
1442 | constitutes escape within the intent and meaning of s. 944.40 |
1443 | and is a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in |
1444 | s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. |
1445 | Section 19. For the purpose of incorporating the amendment |
1446 | to section 985.231, Florida Statutes, in a reference thereto, |
1447 | paragraph (a) of subsection (4) of section 985.201, Florida |
1448 | Statutes, is reenacted to read: |
1449 | 985.201 Jurisdiction.-- |
1450 | (4)(a) Notwithstanding ss. 743.07, 985.229, 985.23, and |
1451 | 985.231, and except as provided in ss. 985.31 and 985.313, when |
1452 | the jurisdiction of any child who is alleged to have committed a |
1453 | delinquent act or violation of law is obtained, the court shall |
1454 | retain jurisdiction, unless relinquished by its order, until the |
1455 | child reaches 19 years of age, with the same power over the |
1456 | child that the court had prior to the child becoming an adult. |
1457 | Section 20. For the purpose of incorporating the amendment |
1458 | to section 985.231, Florida Statutes, in a reference thereto, |
1459 | paragraph (b) of subsection (4) of section 985.233, Florida |
1460 | Statutes, is reenacted to read: |
1461 | 985.233 Sentencing powers; procedures; alternatives for |
1462 | juveniles prosecuted as adults.-- |
1463 | (4) SENTENCING ALTERNATIVES.-- |
1464 | (b) Sentencing to juvenile sanctions.--For juveniles |
1465 | transferred to adult court but who do not qualify for such |
1466 | transfer pursuant to s. 985.226(2)(b) or s. 985.227(2)(a) or |
1467 | (b), the court may impose juvenile sanctions under this |
1468 | paragraph. If juvenile sentences are imposed, the court shall, |
1469 | pursuant to this paragraph, adjudge the child to have committed |
1470 | a delinquent act. Adjudication of delinquency shall not be |
1471 | deemed a conviction, nor shall it operate to impose any of the |
1472 | civil disabilities ordinarily resulting from a conviction. The |
1473 | court shall impose an adult sanction or a juvenile sanction and |
1474 | may not sentence the child to a combination of adult and |
1475 | juvenile punishments. An adult sanction or a juvenile sanction |
1476 | may include enforcement of an order of restitution or probation |
1477 | previously ordered in any juvenile proceeding. However, if the |
1478 | court imposes a juvenile sanction and the department determines |
1479 | that the sanction is unsuitable for the child, the department |
1480 | shall return custody of the child to the sentencing court for |
1481 | further proceedings, including the imposition of adult |
1482 | sanctions. Upon adjudicating a child delinquent under subsection |
1483 | (1), the court may: |
1484 | 1. Place the child in a probation program under the |
1485 | supervision of the department for an indeterminate period of |
1486 | time until the child reaches the age of 19 years or sooner if |
1487 | discharged by order of the court. |
1488 | 2. Commit the child to the department for treatment in an |
1489 | appropriate program for children for an indeterminate period of |
1490 | time until the child is 21 or sooner if discharged by the |
1491 | department. The department shall notify the court of its intent |
1492 | to discharge no later than 14 days prior to discharge. Failure |
1493 | of the court to timely respond to the department's notice shall |
1494 | be considered approval for discharge. |
1495 | 3. Order disposition pursuant to s. 985.231 as an |
1496 | alternative to youthful offender or adult sentencing if the |
1497 | court determines not to impose youthful offender or adult |
1498 | sanctions. |
1499 |
|
1500 | It is the intent of the Legislature that the criteria and |
1501 | guidelines in this subsection are mandatory and that a |
1502 | determination of disposition under this subsection is subject to |
1503 | the right of the child to appellate review under s. 985.234. |
1504 | Section 21. For the purpose of incorporating the amendment |
1505 | to section 985.231, Florida Statutes, in a reference thereto, |
1506 | paragraph (e) of subsection (3) of section 985.311, Florida |
1507 | Statutes, is reenacted to read: |
1508 | 985.311 Intensive residential treatment program for |
1509 | offenders less than 13 years of age.-- |
1510 | (3) PRINCIPLES AND RECOMMENDATIONS OF ASSESSMENT AND |
1511 | TREATMENT.-- |
1512 | (e) After a child has been adjudicated delinquent pursuant |
1513 | to s. 985.228(5), the court shall determine whether the child is |
1514 | eligible for an intensive residential treatment program for |
1515 | offenders less than 13 years of age pursuant to s. 985.03(7). If |
1516 | the court determines that the child does not meet the criteria, |
1517 | the provisions of s. 985.231(1) shall apply. |
1518 | Section 22. This act shall take effect July 1, 2005. |