California News

Daily News - 15 mins ago
Examiner.com - 22 mins ago
CBS2-KCAL - 39 mins ago

Multimedia News

Madonna's 'Sticky and Sweet' Concert Photos
20 photos
Madonna performs in concert during her 'Stick...
French Fashion Show
20 photos
A model wears a creation by French fashion de...
National League baseball highlights
20 photos
Los Angeles Dodgers' Matt Kemp, right, pours ...
Best NFL hits
20 photos
Chicago Bears linebacker Lance Briggs (55) sa...
American League baseball highlights
20 photos
Los Angeles Angels third baseman Chone Figgin...

AG: Keep some teens out of adult jail

Dec 31, 2007 12:00 AM (281 days ago) by Scott McCabe and Bill Myers, The Examiner
This story ranks # 1,667 of 4,830
Related Topics: WASHINGTON
Outgoing District of Columbia Attorney General Linda Singer is pushing for a change in federal law regarding charging juveniles as adults.
(Greg Whitesell/Examiner)
Outgoing District of Columbia Attorney General Linda Singer is pushing for a change in federal law regarding charging juveniles as adults.

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - Outgoing District of Columbia Attorney General Linda Singer is creating a controversy on her way out the door by lobbying to prevent prosecutors from automatically sending teenagers to adult jail for violent crimes, The Examiner has learned.

Since she announced her resignation two weeks ago, Singer has said in private meetings that she has committed staff to pushing for a change in federal law that allows prosecutors to charge 16- and 17-year-olds as adults when they’re accused of serious crimes like homicide.

Children 15 and younger can be tried as adults, but prosecutors must obtain a judge’s order to do so. Most juvenile offenders can’t be held in custody past their 21st birthday, while those tried as adults can be sentenced to life in prison.

D.C.’s juvenile crime bedevils city leaders. On one side are those who say, like Singer, that the city ought to focus on rehabilitating young offenders.

This story continues below
Advertisement

“We’re prosecuting too many juveniles as adults. It doesn’t make sense,” said D.C. Council member Phil Mendelson, D-at large, chairman of the council’s Judiciary Committee. “Everything we know about juvenile behavior shows that juveniles aren’t treated best by the adult prison population.”

On the other side are those who say that some child crimes are so severe that the juvenile system can’t deal with the offender appropriately.

“We believe the current statute strikes the right balance,” U.S. Attorney Jeffrey A. Taylor told The Examiner. “We make no apologies for aggressively prosecuting those cases.”

Singer could not be reached for comment, and her spokeswoman denied that she was working to change the law. But top law enforcement sources told The Examiner that Singer met with Taylor, D.C. Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier and D.C. court official Paul Quander Jr. in recent days to tell them that she wanted to, as one source said, “get this done.”

D.C. General Counsel Peter Nickles, who will become acting attorney general next, said he was “reserving judgment” on the matter. But Nickles is an outspoken critic of what he calls “the lock ’em up” approach to juvenile justice.

Liz Ryan, executive director of the Campaign for Youth Justice, said the current policy makes matters worse. She cited a report released last month by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that found that youth who were transferred to the adult criminal justice system were 34 percent more likely to commit crimes than youth retained in the juvenile justice system.

But Kristopher Baumann, head of the police union, said D.C. laws are already making young criminals view current juvenile law with contempt.

“It’s not just about the criminal, it’s about the negative influence these people have on their neighborhoods,” Baumann said. “For kids to have a chance in those neighborhoods, we need to clean up the streets and put the criminals away for a long time.”

Youth crime stats

» Children were the killers in 22 percent of homicides between 2002 and 2005

» Up to 70 percent of arrested juveniles have prior records

» The number of children in D.C. Jail has nearly quadrupled, from 12 to 42, since last year

smccabe@dcexaminer.com

bmyers@dcexaminer.com

Add a Comment


Name: (required)
Comments:
characters left
Comments are regulated by the Terms of Use.

Comments from Examiner Readers

1:48 PM MST on Wed., May. 21, 2008 re: "AG: Keep some teens out of adult jail"

Examiner Reader said:
“Everything we know about juvenile behavior shows that juveniles aren’t treated best by the adult prison population.”

3 agree | 1 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree

11:54 AM MST on Mon., Feb. 18, 2008 re: "AG: Keep some teens out of adult jail"

Amanda Rabb said:
I am 17 year old teen, and i have got to say living in this soceity is insane, you see the teens that i deal with wants to have future. that is why i chose vey carely who i hang out with. My parents are not blind to what is going on, they talk to me and my sibling, there are 6 of us and my parents do not play. But the point is yes i think that if a teen do a grown up crime then they should do grown up time. Because they know right from wrong.

120 agree | 108 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
11:18 PM MST on Mon., Dec. 31, 2007 re: "AG: Keep some teens out of adult jail"

Examiner Reader said:
Linda Singer should have never had the job as Attorney General, bottom line is that she is not qualified for it. That being said, this liberal bleeding heart city is an embrassment. These thugs that get charged and convicted as adults should be put in prision and have the key thrown away. Bottom line is this city is full of young thug pieces of crap who will end up in jail sooner or later anyways. But who cares, this world is better of without them.

126 agree | 124 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
11:59 AM MST on Mon., Dec. 31, 2007 re: "AG: Keep some teens out of adult jail"

Examiner Reader said:
In the news in recent months, D.C. teens have shot at people (including cops), tried to run over a cop with a stolen car, and killed each other. They are not stealing candy bars, for goodness sake. Why not make it known that if they want to commit adult crimes, they will face real penalties -- not just hand-holding and therapy.

123 agree | 121 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
8:34 AM MST on Mon., Dec. 31, 2007 re: "AG: Keep some teens out of adult jail"

Examiner Reader said:
She has resigned and no longer has any influence in District affairs.

138 agree | 124 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
12:55 PM MST on Thu., Nov. 8, 2007 re: "A.G.'s absence questioned"

Examiner Reader said:
The attorney general should be fired-she sides with the dishonest gov. employees against innocent people-she is incompetent-also get rid of her lacky Andy Saidon.

135 agree | 150 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
7:24 PM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "A.G.'s absence questioned"

Examiner Reader said:
I posted this comment this morning at 8:10 a.m. Amazingly, an alien , I think, deleted it from the hairnet. Dare to question them, they will not censor you. Comments from Examiner Readers 8:10 AM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "Officials question attorney general?s absence" Examiner Reader said: This article confirms Bill Myers and the Examiner are a first-rate team. First, Myers details the AG's absenteeism and lame defense of the District in the eye gouging case, then he explains that in two separate incidents, the AG's office wtnow he complains the AG's office is not protecting the District. Bill Myers is obviously mindful of the few victories either in court that have saved the District's taxpayers hundreds of dollars in potential liability each year. It is true that the AG's office was twice cited for contempt by a court and this is inexcusable. Bill Myer's and the Examiner should be darn proud of this insightful and dead-on journalism.

141 agree | 147 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
7:23 PM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "A.G.'s absence questioned"

Examiner Reader said:
I posted this comment this morning at 8:10 a.m. Amazingly, an alien , I think, deleted it from the hairnet. Dare to question them, they will not censor you. Comments from Examiner Readers 8:10 AM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "Officials question attorney general?s absence" Examiner Reader said: This article confirms Bill Myers and the Examiner are a first-rate team. First, Myers details the AG's absenteeism and lame defense of the District in the eye gouging case, then he explains that in two separate incidents, the AG's office wtnow he complains the AG's office is not protecting the District. Bill Myers is obviously mindful of the few victories either in court that have saved the District's taxpayers hundreds of dollars in potential liability each year. It is true that the AG's office was twice cited for contempt by a court and this is inexcusable. Bill Myer's and the Examiner should be darn proud of this insightful and dead-on journalism.

147 agree | 131 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
1:41 PM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "Attorney general’s absence questioned"

Examiner Reader said:
Is anyone surprised that she people are starting to uncover the INCOMPETENCE of the AG AND the MAYOR? One day folks will wake up...

152 agree | 143 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
12:46 PM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "Attorney general’s absence questioned"

Examiner Reader said:
I posted this comment this morning at 8:10 a.m. Amazingly, Bill Myers and the Examiner removed it from the internet. Dare to question them, they will censor you. Comments from Examiner Readers 8:10 AM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "Officials question attorney general?s absence" Examiner Reader said: This article confirms Bill Myers and the Examiner as the most biased rag in the city. First, Myers complains about the AG's aggresive defense of the District in the eye gouging case, now he complains the AG's office is not protecting the District. Bill Myers is obviously ignorant of the hundreds of victories either in court, summary judgment or favorable settlements that save the District's taxpayers millions of dollars in potential liability each year. Only an amateur would lob such broadsides based upon 2 cases without any research whatsoever and try to make a statement out of it. Bill Myer's and the Examiner should be renamed Access Hollywood.

156 agree | 145 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Advertisement