JV-464-INFO How to Ask to Return to Juvenile Court Jurisdiction and Foster Care Judicial Council for 2025

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Four criteria that could support a juvenile court waiver of jurisdiction are the nature of the offense, the sophistication it requires, the defendants criminal history, and the threat the defendant poses to public safety.
In most States, the juvenile court has original jurisdiction over all youth charged with a criminal law violation who were below the age of 18 at the time of the offense, arrest, or referral to court.
Courts with juvenile jurisdiction generally have jurisdiction over delinquency, status offense, and abuse/neglect matters and may also have jurisdiction in other matters such as adoption, termination of parental rights, and emancipation.
Minors between 14 and 17 are sentenced by juvenile justice. A young adult between 18 and 21 years may still be sentenced by juvenile justice if considered mentally immature.
The Juvenile Courts in Florida have jurisdiction over criminal felonies and misdemeanor cases for defendants under the age of nineteen (19). The 12th Circuit Juvenile Division has one Circuit Judge in Sarasota County, one Circuit Judge in Manatee County, and one Circuit Judge in DeSoto County.
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Every State defines an upper age limit for youth who will come under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court if they commit an illegal act. (See upper age of jurisdiction in the Glossary of Terms section.) Most States define this age to be 17 years, although some States have set the age at 15 or 16.
Although all states have defined maximum ages (usually 16 or 17) for delinquency or status offenses prosecuted under the jurisdiction of the juvenile justice system, most states do not have a minimum age for prosecution SBB, 2021a; SBB, 2021b).
In 44 states, for most offenses, the maximum age of juvenile court jurisdiction is 17, meaning that the juvenile court has jurisdiction until the youths 18th birthday.

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