ARE YOU A JUVENILE OR AN ADULT? Mo. Laws make this question very complicated. Sometimes we might think we are juvenile’s, but by law we can be and treated as an adult. At age 13, you can go to some health clinics and get some medical treatments and testing done without your parents permission, such as pregnancy, alcohol / drug , and sexual transmitted diseases.
Most of the time, if you are under 18, you need your parents permission, unless you a remarried, or in the military. At 15 1/2, you can get a special permit to drive with a legal guardian, but if you break a traffic law you a reconsidered an adult. But at 16, you can get your own drivers license. If you are under 18 and even at age 12, you can be considered an adult if you commit a serious crime, such a skilling, drug related. rape, repeated offenses, or stealing a car. If you are under 18, and are picked up by a police officer and taken to juvenile court, a juvenile officer will decide how to handle your case.
Then a juvenile judge hears the evidence with you and your parents. The judge studies the whole complete picture of you, and your whole life and everything in and around you, and your crime, and then decides as to whether or not your case will be held in Juvenile Court or in a Adult Court. If your case is held in Juvenile Court and you a refound guilty, and since he has made a complete study of you and your case, he will be the one to decide how and what will happen to you. If you are tried as an adult and found guilty, naturally the punishment will be more severe such as: 1. Prison 2. Probation with a second chance to stay out of trouble.
The Term Paper on Crown Court Law Courts Jury
LAW AND ORDER The present British legal system forms the basis of the Judiciary - the third branch of the government - and comprises three separate systems - that for England and Wales, that for Scotland and that for Northern Ireland. They differ somewhat from each other in terms of procedure, courts and the legal professions. Generally, however, Scottish and Northern Irish laws are in line with ...
3. Sent to juvenile detention for awhile, then on to prison. 4. You will always be tried as an adult. 5.
1 st degree murder, if you were 16 at the time of the crime, you can receive the death penalty. The question needs to be ask almost all the time, are we adults or juveniles?