INTRODUCTION
Congress is considering how to help state and local officials
combat violent teenage crime. In the House of Representatives, the
most prominent proposal is the Violent Youth Predator Act of 1996
(H.R. 3565), sponsored by Representative Bill McCollum (R-FL),
Chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime. The McCollum
bill would change the federal criminal justice system by mandating
that juveniles who commit two types of federal crime -- serious
violent crimes or major drug trafficking offenses -- will be tried
as adults in federal courts; it also would impose mandatory minimum
sentences on juveniles who use firearms in the commission of a
federal crime. In the Senate, the Violent and Repeat Juvenile
Offender Act of 1996 (S. 1854), sponsored originally by Senator
Orrin Hatch (R-UT) and former Majority Leader Robert Dole (R-KS),
would make similar improvements in federal law.
Both the Hatch and McCollum bills would give states financial
assistance to help them combat juvenile crime. The McCollum bill
would replace the Justice Department's Office of Juvenile Justice
and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) with a new Office of Juvenile
Crime Control. In addition to serving as a clearinghouse for
information disseminated to state officials, this office would make
$500 million available to the states: $250 million in the form of
"incentive grants" to help the states adopt needed reforms -- for
example, tougher sanctions on juvenile criminals, mandatory
restitution, and greater public availability of juvenile
delinquency records -- and another $250 million in the form of
block grants for the states to use as they think best in combating
and preventing juvenile crime.
State and Local Responsibility
While Congress can assist local officials with block grants,
however, taxpayers know that violent juvenile crime, like street
crime in general, is primarily a state and local responsibility.
And while the capacity of all government officials to cope with the
broader cultural and social changes that appear to be driving
increased juvenile criminal behavior is limited, state and local
officials still can take decisive steps to curb violent juvenile
crime.2 They can do this by using
their police forces more effectively and by integrating innovative
community police work with the efforts of community leaders and
other agencies in the criminal justice system. This is happening
already in such localities as New York City and Charleston, South
Carolina. The McCollum bill would help the states by removing the
federal mandates that prevent them from adopting many innovative
solutions and by providing funds for effective new programs,
including the Serious Habitual Offenders Comprehensive Action
Program (SHOCAP).
SHOCAP is one of the most effective ways to attack the juvenile
crime explosion. With sophisticated information technology, local
officials can develop and share crime analysis and case management
files on the most serious violent offenders in the community:
serious habitual offenders. This pioneering effort to combine
police work with emerging information technology, developed by a
team of experts in the Justice Department during the Reagan
Administration, combines the modern microelectronic revolution,
sophisticated data collection and crime analysis, and community
police work. Through computer analysis and effective local
policing, it enables state and local law enforcement officials to
identify, target, arrest, and incarcerate violent teenage
criminals.
In order to institute SHOCAP, state and local officials
should:
- Establish an interagency council chaired by the chief of police
and comprised of the CEOs of SHOCAP component agencies -- juvenile
probation departments, prosecutors, juvenile judges, schools,
social services, and public housing.
- Create or enhance crime analysis units within local police
departments.
- Enlist the cooperation of state and local agencies in
collecting and analyzing data, updating the case files of serious
habitual offenders (SHOs), and establishing a strategy for dealing
with this class of offenders.
- Identify serious habitual offenders. Approximately 6 percent of
all juvenile offenders are responsible for up to 63 percent of
violent juvenile crime.3 The
procedure used to identify and classify these offenders should be
rigorous; it should include, for example, an examination of
previous offenses, arrest and court records, and social and family
histories. Responsible officials then should use the information
developed through this process to create sophisticated,
computerized case management files.
- Share these case management files with police officials,
judges, prosecutors, state probation and parole agencies, and (as
needed) schools and social service agencies.
In addition, states should reform the juvenile justice system by
enacting laws to try violent juvenile criminals as adults when
necessary, and by passing truth-in-sentencing laws that apply to
violent juvenile offenders tried as adults.
THE NEW FACE OF JUVENILE CRIME
Violent teenage criminals are increasingly vicious. John
DiIulio, Professor of Politics and Public Affairs at Princeton
University, says that "[t]he difference between the juvenile
criminals of the 1950s and those of the 1970s and early 1980s was
the difference between the Sharks and the Jets of West Side
Story and the Bloods and the Crips. It is not inconceivable
that the demographic surge of the next ten years will bring with it
young criminals who make the Bloods and the Crips look
tame."4
According to the Council on Crime in America, a bipartisan
commission chaired by former Attorney General Griffin Bell and
former White House Drug Policy Director William J. Bennett,
crimes committed by males ages 14 to 17 will increase by 23 percent
between 1995 and 2005. Because of the deterioration of family life,
and also because of their easy access to guns, these juveniles are
likely to commit more vicious crimes than their predecessors,
targeting strangers as well as known enemies.5 Louis Freeh, Director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, believes that continuation of current
trends in juvenile crime "portends future crime and violence at
nearly unprecedented levels."6
Recent reports of juvenile crime dropping are of little comfort in
light of the coming demographic surge of juveniles in their
crime-prone years from dysfunctional families.7
Growing numbers of young people, often from broken homes or
so-called dysfunctional families, are committing murder, rape,
robbery, kidnapping, and other violent acts. As John DiIulio and
others argue, these emotionally damaged young people, growing up
without faith, fathers, or families, often are the products of
sexual or physical abuse. They live in an aimless and violent
present; have no sense of the past and no hope for the future; and
act, often ruthlessly, to gratify whatever urges or desires drive
them at the moment. They commit unspeakably brutal crimes against
other people, and their lack of remorse is shocking. They are what
Professor DiIulio and others call urban "superpredators." They are
the ultimate urban nightmare, and their numbers are growing. The
number of juveniles arrested for violent crimes has increased
nearly 60 percent over the last ten years:8
- From 1985 to 1993, the number of murder cases involving
15-year-old juveniles increased 207 percent. Arrests of 18-year-old
to 20-year-old males for murder over the same period increased 119
percent.9
- From 1988 to 1992, the number of juveniles involved in
aggravated assaults increased 80 percent to 77,900; the number
involved in robberies went up 52 percent to 32,900; and the number
involved in rapes rose 27 percent to 5,400. Overall, juvenile court
cases increased 26 percent.10 If
trends of the past ten years continue, arrests of juveniles for
violent crimes will double by the year 2010.11
- From 1989 to 1993, transfers of juveniles to adult court
because of delinquency increased 41 percent to 11,800 cases; for
crimes against persons, the number of transfers increased 115
percent to 5,000 cases.12
- Of 1,471,200 juvenile court cases in 1992, personal offenses
were up 56 percent to 301,000; property offenses were up 56 percent
to 842,000; and public order offenses were up 21 percent to
255,900.13
Young Victims
Young people ages 12 to 17 are the most frequent victims of
violent crime. They are raped, robbed, or assaulted at five times
the rate of adults 35 years old or older. In 1992, one juvenile in
13 was the victim of violent crime -- up 23 percent from
1987.14 Also in 1992, 23 percent
of the victims of the 6.6 million violent crimes committed in the
United States were juveniles; the juvenile victimization rate was
74.2 cases per 1,000 juveniles, compared to 13.9 cases per 1,000
adults 35 years old or older.15
Overall, the sad fact is that
Crime has seriously affected teenagers' lives,
especially those who live in neighborhoods seriously hurt by crime,
drugs and gangs. The effects are insidious and long-standing.
Teenagers protect themselves by carrying weapons, skipping school,
changing their routes to and from classes, changing friends or
letting their grades slip. For many young Americans, the carefree
days of adolescence are a nostalgic fantasy.16
Even more shocking than the sheer volume of violent juvenile
crime is the brutality of the crime committed for trivial motives:
a pair of sneakers, a jacket, a real or imagined insult, a
momentary cheap thrill. For example:
- A 59-year-old man out on a morning stroll in Lake Tahoe was
fatally shot four times by teenagers "looking for someone to
scare." The police say the four teenagers -- just 15 and 16 years
old -- were "thrill shooting."
- A 12-year-old and two other youths were charged with kidnapping
a 57-year-old man and taking a joy ride in his Toyota. As the man
pleaded for his life, the juveniles shot him to death.
- A 14-year-old boy was murdered while trying to reclaim a $2,500
stereo system he had received from his grandfather. Five juveniles,
ranging in age from 15 through 17 years, were charged with the
crime.
Seasoned big-city homicide detectives have a hard time coming to
grips with the horror of these kinds of cases: The crimes are
senseless, the motives banal, and the perpetrators all so young.
These shocking incidents -- which occur in America's suburbs as
well as its inner cities -- are creating a growing consensus among
the American people: They have had enough. Lenient sentencing based
strictly on age is no longer acceptable for crimes of this
magnitude.17
Loss of Public Confidence
Polls show that Americans are unhappy with the system as it is:
49 percent believe rehabilitation programs for juveniles are not
successful, 52 percent believe the punishments juveniles receive
should be the same as those given adults, and 83 percent think
juveniles who commit two or more crimes should receive the same
sentencing as adults.18 A 1995
Gallup poll found that 72 percent of Americans also advocate the
death penalty for juveniles who commit murder, as opposed to 24
percent in 1957.19
Teenagers themselves take a hard stance on how their peers
should be treated if they commit violent crimes. Over 93 percent
believe that those accused of murder or rape should be tried as
adults. Moreover, they do not believe these offenders should
receive special consideration because of their age.20 This is consistent with broad public,
judicial, and law enforcement sentiment, which generally has
favored holding juveniles more accountable for their criminal
actions in recent years.
The juvenile justice system that prevails in many states today
does juvenile criminals no favors by being lenient. According to a
1985 Rand Corporation study, "[w]aiting for chronic offenders to
build a record of many arrests and minor dispositions only
compounds the problems that must be dealt with later."21
WHY TODAY'S JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM IS
FAILING
Since 1899, when Illinois adopted the first Juvenile Court Act,
America's juvenile courts have been unable to deal effectively with
the violent juvenile criminal. Law enforcement officers and a
growing number of private citizens realize that this continuing
failure undermines the credibility of the whole juvenile justice
system.
The ultimate price for this failure, of course, is paid by
innocent citizens. For example, only hours after returning home
from a special school program in Costa Rica, Cindy Del Carmen
Villalba, an honor student at Rutgers University, was killed in a
botched robbery attempt. Corie Miller, age 17, and two accomplices
were charged in her death. Miller had been eluding police for about
a week when the slaying occurred. He had fled a Paterson, New
Jersey, "get-tough" rehabilitation program that was supposed to be
a "last ditch effort to reform him." In the case of this habitual
juvenile offender, it took the murder of a young, intelligent girl
with a bright future to force the justice system to take a second
look and finally adopt a tougher stance.22
Failure to Target Serious Habitual Offenders
In many states, the greatest single weakness of the effort to
combat juvenile crime is a simple failure to target the most
dangerous young offenders. This weakness arises from a reluctance
on the part of juvenile justice officials to admit that there is a
point at which a delinquent youth becomes such a threat to the
community that he or she must be held accountable and incarcerated.
Under the current system, the seriously violent juvenile can become
invisible by being mixed in with the general population of
non-violent and non-habitual juvenile offenders. Overwhelmingly,
most urban young people who get arrested for a crime get arrested
only once; seldom are they a serious or long-term threat to the
safety of other citizens. Put another way, not all juvenile
delinquents are alike, and very few are serious habitual offenders.
The official failure to discriminate between minor offenders and
hard-core criminal youth undermines the effectiveness of the entire
system.
The most active juvenile delinquents also are the most
dangerous. Often invisible to the officials who preside over the
system, they are painfully visible to the victims they assault,
rob, and kill. Official failure to develop credible control
measures to suppress habitual juvenile offenders also sows the
seeds of racial prejudice. With the rise of juvenile crime, an
increasingly angry and insecure public tends to look upon all
juveniles, particularly black male teenagers, as threats to the
community. Most juvenile offenders, however, are not: 58 percent of
young black males never have any contact with the police; and of
the other 42 percent, an overwhelming majority do not go on to
become SHOs.23 It is therefore
vital that state and local officials, as well as taxpayers, begin
to think and act differently toward the occasional juvenile
delinquent. The SHO, on the other hand, is a career criminal in the
making.
The Information Gap
Chronic offenders usually can be identified solely on the basis
of their juvenile records. This evidence, however, normally does
not accumulate until after the youth's 16th birthday. If additional
factors describing the youth's school performance and home
situation are included, the age at which youthful chronic offenders
can be identified and an intervention mounted may be moved up
several years.
In reality, these young criminals are shunted in and out of
state and local agencies by bureaucrats who are supposed to be
running the system but who often seem to lack a collective
awareness of the kind of young people they are processing. Too
often, they are oblivious to the repeated and increasingly serious
nature of the behavior of these young criminals. This official
failure to share information can occur for many reasons: because it
is not required by state law, because of bureaucratic inertia or
lack of imagination, or even because of simple negligence. It is a
key weakness in the current system. Most of the juvenile codes in
the United States contain statutory language indicating that the
juvenile judge should consider police reports; field interview
reports; citations; social history information (such as data on
school, family, and work); drug involvement information; motor
vehicle operation information; associates' history; offense
digests; victim accounts; and other relevant information, including
medical and juvenile victimization data. Only rarely, however, is
this information used or shared among youth service agencies; it
often is not even made available to the presiding judge.
Declining Police Morale
The continuing failure of the juvenile justice system in many
states contributes to defeatism and low morale among local police.
Police officers frequently do not treat juvenile crime the same as
they treat crime committed by adults. Since no one else in the
criminal justice system seems to be serious about punishing
juvenile criminals, police officers often feel they will be wasting
their time if they pursue these cases with the same zeal they
display in pursuing adult criminals. They have learned from painful
and frustrating personal experience that spending street time
trying to suppress juvenile crime by arrests is futile; nothing
will be done to the young criminals, who will just be allowed back
out on the streets.24 As a result,
many patrol officers shift juvenile crime problems to the local
department's juvenile unit, transferring both the problem and the
responsibility to a specialized unit that already is
overloaded.
WHY STATES AND LOCALITIES SHOULD ADOPT
SHOCAP
The SHOCAP system has been employed successfully in over 150
communities in the United States and Canada, including Oxnard,
California; Colorado Springs, Colorado; Tallahassee, Florida;
Prince William County, Virginia; and Tampa, Florida (Hillsborough
County Sheriff's Office). SHOCAP works in these communities because
it provides accurate, documented support to police in tactical
operations focused on their most active criminals. SHOCAP enables
law enforcement officials to give direction to police in the field
so that they can use their patrol activities to prevent and
suppress the criminal activities of SHOs. Through computers and
information sharing, SHOCAP provides field forces with
comprehensive information on a SHO's criminal activities beyond
beat or shift boundaries. The system works because a computerized
case file -- either on-line in a police cruiser or accessible by
police dispatchers -- can be punched up by the police within
seconds.
Perhaps the most dramatic example of SHOCAP's effectiveness is
Oxnard, California. Despite having one of the lowest
police-to-population ratios in the country, over a three-year
period in the 1980s, Oxnard experienced a 38 percent reduction in
violent crime and a 60 percent drop in the murder rate. It did this
by targeting and successfully incarcerating a greater number of
SHOs than were targeted and incarcerated in jurisdictions not using
SHOCAP. Recognizing that most crime is committed by a small
minority of felons, Oxnard officials used SHOCAP to remove 30 of
these hard-core juvenile offenders from the streets.25
But SHOCAP is more than an effective short-term anti-crime
program; it also has longer term preventive effects when employed
consistently by local police officials and social service agencies.
SHOCAP has received several evaluations in both the United States
and Canada. Since 1983, for example, the Office of Juvenile Justice
and Delinquency Prevention has evaluated the program three times.
The first evaluation process lasted from May 1, 1983, until July 1,
1986, and served as the basis for later implementation of the
program. Additional studies began on January 1, 1985. These
evaluations indicated that most project cities which remained in
the program exceeded their expectations and reduced crime rates in
neighborhoods from which SHOs were removed. The Canadian
government's 1993-1994 evaluation of the Calgary SHOCAP program led
the Solicitor General of Canada to recommend that SHOCAP be
considered by other Canadian jurisdictions.26
HOW TO IDENTIFY SERIOUS HABITUAL
OFFENDERS
In every community, there is the potential for only 2 percent of
the juvenile offender population to be responsible for up to 60
percent of the violent juvenile crime.27 These serious repeat offenders, who all
too often eventually become adult career criminals, bleed the life
from the community, endangering public safety and undermining
economic stability.
In general, only 25 to 35 juveniles in every 100,000 members of
the population will engage in criminal activity that matches the
Serious Habitual Offender pattern. Based on criteria developed by
the Reagan team at the Department of Justice, this means that 0.03
percent to 0.04 percent of all juveniles between 14 and 17 years
old will be SHOs. At the same time, for each SHO, four other
juveniles are at risk of becoming SHOs themselves.28
Profile of a SHO
Data collected and analyzed by the Reagan Administration team
at the U.S. Department of Justice in the 1980s presents a graphic
portrait of the serious habitual offender. The typical SHO is male,
15 years and six months old. He has been arrested 11 to 14 times,
exclusive of status offenses, and five times for felonies. He comes
from a dysfunctional family; and in 46 percent of cases, at least
one of his parents also has an arrest history. He has received
long-term and continuing social services from as many as six
different community service agencies, including family, youth,
mental health, social services, school, juvenile, or police
authorities,29 and continues to
drain these resources for years before he is finally incarcerated
as a career criminal.
The typical SHO's family history follows a classic pattern of
social pathologies: 53 percent of his siblings also have a history
of arrest; and in 59 percent of these cases, there is no father
figure in the home. The absence of a father is particularly
destructive for boys; only 2 percent of SHOs are female.
Furthermore, 68 percent of these offenders have committed crimes of
violence, 15 percent have a history of committing sex crimes, and
51 percent have a reported missing or runaway record. If a broken
family characterized by physical or sexual abuse is an early
indicator of criminal behavior, then virtually all of these serious
habitual offenders fit this category. Not surprisingly, these
findings are consistent with the Heritage Foundation's widely
reported analysis of the true root causes of violent crime,
particularly the crimogenic conditions associated with broken or
dysfunctional families.30
In fact, SHOs do not consider the crimes they have committed to
be all that bad.31 Forty-five
percent are gang members, 64 percent associate with other serious
habitual offenders, and 75 percent abuse drugs. School, social, and
employment experiences are not good experiences for SHOs,32 who invariably have no moral compass.
The SHO seems to feel that, no matter what he does, the system
barely notices. The effect inevitably is to reinforce his criminal
inclinations; when released from a state prison, for example, one
in 30 of these offenders probably will commit murder.33
Recent empirical evidence shows that illegal drug use among the
young is on the rise.34 It is
worth noting, therefore, that a significant majority of all SHOs
use or sell illegal drugs and often become addicted themselves.
Illegal drug use and alcohol abuse tend to be regular features of
their criminal conduct. Drugs, in particular, are part of the
criminal scene of these juvenile offenders, and the use and sale of
drugs contributes significantly to a SHO's other criminal activity.
The need to purchase illegal drugs, combined with the warped
hedonism of the addict, shapes and drives much of the criminal
activity of this class of criminals.
HOW LOCAL COMMUNITIES CAN DEAL WITH
SERIOUS HABITUAL OFFENDERS
Following a step-by-step process, a community can set up an
interagency council to coordinate efforts by the police and other
local government and social service agencies to collect and analyze
the essential data on SHOs, train police and local government staff
in the use of information technology, and establish a strategy for
dealing with these offenders that includes referrals to social
service agencies for use in a judge's decision to incarcerate.
The Serious Habitual Offender Comprehensive Action Program,
essentially a comprehensive information and case management
process, is directed by the police department's crime analysis
unit. Information is collected from and shared with prosecutors,
schools, probation officials, judges, correctional departments, and
social service and welfare agencies. When community leaders
initiate this process, however, they must remember their target:
The purpose of SHOCAP is not to curb public nuisances, disorderly
conduct among teenagers, or general property crime, but to
identify, isolate, and control a very small group of serious
habitual juvenile offenders -- only about 35 per 100,000 in the
general population. Through SHOCAP, the community can concentrate
its law enforcement and criminal justice resources on apprehending
and incarcerating these juveniles.
SHOCAP also can lay the groundwork for appropriate intervention
by public or private social service or welfare agencies
participating in the program. As Professor DiIulio and others
argue, the best weapon against violent crime is one that stops
juveniles who are at risk of becoming career criminals in the first
place. With early, targeted intervention by dedicated local
community organizations -- especially religious or faith-based
institutions with a social service capacity -- such children can be
taught to tell right from wrong, can acquire personal discipline
and moral virtues, and can learn to respect both themselves and
others.
Certain conditions are essential to the success of any local
SHOCAP program:
CONDITION #1: Establish the local police as the lead agency
in tracking serious habitual offenders
The police department is the logical lead agency in a SHOCAP
program. Police officers have the first contact with criminals in
the community. Police work is a 24-hour, 365-day-a-year job that
involves the front-line responsibility and experience needed to
handle criminal information. The police therefore have the ability
to gather, organize, and analyze a SHO case file; they are familiar
with SHOs and their case histories, as well as the kinds of crimes
they commit and how they operate. On patrol in the neighborhoods,
they will know where SHOs live and who their associates are, as
well as their family and criminal histories.
Functional crime analysis by police is essential to SHOCAP, but
local officials in each case will have to review the capacity of
their own police agency to function as primary collector and
analyzer of the basic SHOCAP information. This capacity varies from
department to department; only two-thirds of all local police
departments use computers, but many have a separate crime analysis
unit.
With regard to the police department's role, a cautionary note
is in order: SHOCAP must be a department-wide responsibility.
Placing the responsibility, particularly for data collection and
analysis, with the juvenile division sends the signal that this
unit can take care of the problem, and the rest of the police force
need not concern itself with this juvenile project. Such an
approach cuts off the agency's most important tactical muscle --
the cop on patrol in the neighborhood.
CONDITION #2: Require local government agencies to share
information on serious habitual offenders
The adoption of a Serious Habitual Offender Comprehensive
Action Program is predicated on gathering and analyzing data, and
then planning an appropriate response to SHOs. The SHOCAP process
improves operational coordination among the police, prosecutors,
courts, probation departments, schools, correctional agencies,
social and family services, and other public and private community
organizations. Computerized case management procedures for tracking
serious habitual juvenile offenders allow the police to identify
the warning signs of potential SHOs, such as a home characterized
by domestic violence or sexual and physical abuse. Then, using the
information gleaned from these routine police reports, local
officials can assign responsibility for intervention or monitoring
to public or private social service agencies.
This is why it is essential that welfare agencies and schools be
included in the information gathering process. The families of
serious habitual offenders often receive various types of public
assistance.35 At the state and
local levels, where many of these welfare programs are
administered, social service workers who know the welfare histories
and family structures of potential and active SHOs can provide
important information on child abuse, neglect, or domestic
violence.
Because of the 1996 federal welfare reform, which includes block
granting of welfare assistance and responsibilities to the states,
cooperation among state welfare or social service agencies should
improve significantly. Vital child victim and abuse information
collected by social service agents in the course of their routine
duties can give particular direction to law enforcement, probation,
court, and corrections officers. Public housing authorities or
managers also have tremendous potential to assist law enforcement
officers in developing a database of serious habitual offenders. A
juvenile growing up in public housing is four to five times more
likely to become a SHO than is a juvenile growing up in non-public
housing.36
School officials, especially administrators, also can play a
significant role in monitoring SHOs because SHOs invariably disrupt
the classroom and are poor candidates for continuing in public
school.37 School officials get to
know who the serious habitual offenders are because of the
pressures of trying to maintain order and discipline in the
classroom, and usually have to spend more time monitoring them than
they do with other students. Under certain circumstances,
specialized schools designed to handle disruptive students should
be an integral part of the intervention plan for these
juveniles.
In the 1980s, juvenile justice files and crime, school, welfare,
social service, and probation records rarely were shared between
agencies. State and local officials, misconstruing the Family
Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA),38 frequently overreacted by withholding
even basic "juvenile information." Law enforcement and other
agencies strained to keep secret common street information
regarding a juvenile's conduct or the receipt of social services or
welfare benefits. Before SHOCAP was implemented, juvenile judges
and prosecutors in current SHOCAP jurisdictions often had access to
less than 30 percent of the information needed for filings or court
dispositions. In places like Colorado Springs and Oxnard, for
example, there was little, if any, sharing of information between
agencies. Where SHOCAP has been implemented, however, there has
been remarkable progress in breaking down barriers to the gathering
of appropriate information on juvenile criminal conduct. A new
consensus has been emerging, both on sharing juvenile records and
on what information within these records ought to be considered
relevant.
A SHOCAP case file should include the following types of
information: biographical data; a description of prior and current
offenses, including criminal history; a listing of known and
suspected associates and confederates; any gang or drug
involvement; a description of any "fencing" activity; a concise,
comprehensive narrative portrait; field investigation data (FI
cards); motor vehicle ownership and violation information; whether
the subject has been named as a suspect in other crimes;
victimization history; the status offense history of the victim as
well as the SHO; any active warrants; school, employment, and
family histories; social and medical services history; and prior
conduct in detention and correctional facilities.
Some states, however, may need to enact SHOCAP enabling
legislation, which allows the sharing of juvenile records and
information before SHOCAP can be established.39 Such legislation helps establish
working relationships among law enforcement and local government
agencies so they can build an effective database and case
management system. To date, seven states have adopted or are
working on SHOCAP enabling legislation.40
Condition #3: Establish local criteria for identifying
serious habitual offenders
Each local jurisdiction must tailor its SHO criteria to fit its
own crime problems, keeping in mind the capacity of its own law
enforcement agencies. The criteria for identifying and tracking
juvenile crime should focus on the worst juvenile offenders --
those who repeatedly have displayed serious criminal misconduct.
Local officials must resist the temptation to broaden the net to
include less serious offenders. Without this discipline, the
program's focus will be lost, and the system will be swamped with
marginal threats to community safety.
Based on the experience of local SHOCAP sites and an analysis
conducted by Justice Department officials during the Reagan
Administration, the following criteria conform to the case
histories of the 35 most serious juvenile offenders per
100,000:41
- Five arrests, with three chargeable as felonies, and three
arrests within the last 12 months; or
- Ten arrests, with two chargeable as felonies, and three arrests
within the last 12 months; or
- One arrest for three or more burglaries, robberies, or sexual
assaults within the preceding 12 months; or
- Ten total arrests, with eight or more for misdemeanor crimes of
theft, assault, battery, narcotics, or controlled substance abuse,
or for possession of weapons, and three arrests within the
preceding 12 months.
By using such criteria, local officials can estimate the
caseload for all components of the criminal justice system,
including the arrest, detention, and prosecution of serious
habitual offenders and the extent of supervision to be provided by
corrections officers after a SHO is released from prison. On the
basis of this projected caseload, local officials also can
inventory the resources available to concentrate on these juveniles
(including both public and private social service agencies desiring
to participate in the prevention aspects of the SHOCAP program) and
allocate those resources accordingly.
Condition #4: Require that information on serious habitual
offenders be shared with the courts and their officers
In court proceedings, as well as in probation and parole
hearings, the comprehensive case management files developed through
SHOCAP can be invaluable. Juvenile judges can be assured that
whatever judicial decisions they make are based on the best
information available. The same is true for judges in adult
criminal courts who have access to such files.
Similarly, prosecutors will have the sort of comprehensive
information they need to prosecute serious habitual offenders
successfully. In fact, once a jurisdiction's SHOCAP program
matures, and depending on caseload, the local prosecutor's office
should consider creating a specific case management position, both
to manage these cases more efficiently and to support vertical
prosecution of SHOs.42 In
addition, SHOCAP gives prosecutors a ready-made case priority and
assignment schedule. A complete SHOCAP file ensures that SHOs are
charged with the highest legally provable offense, prevents the
inappropriate pretrial release of such offenders, and prevents the
sealing or destroying of the records of juveniles designated as
SHOs.
Juvenile probation officers will find that the case file
preparation generated by the SHOCAP process can lessen their
casework and fortify their recommendations to the courts on the
disposition of juvenile cases. They can develop specialized
individual programs and custody levels for such offenders, making a
sharp distinction between SHOs and other juvenile delinquents. The
most important task is to develop specialized control measures for
the SHO on probation or back on the streets after release from
prison.
CUTTING SHORT A CRIMINAL CAREER
For law-abiding citizens, the career criminal is Public Enemy
Number One. By using modern information technology and case
management as embodied in Serious Habitual Offender Comprehensive
Action Programs, law enforcement officers and local government
officials can target and track society's most dangerous criminals.
Almost without exception, the adult career criminal was a serious
habitual offender as a juvenile. Once again, this is a very small
minority of the population: 94 percent of the juveniles arrested
for a criminal offense are never arrested again, 4 percent are
arrested on a regular basis, and only 2 percent are arrested
repeatedly and go on to become serious habitual offenders and
career criminals.43 Career
criminals exhibit common patterns of behavior, as well as a
relationship between age and criminal behavior. Unfortunately,
however, today's juvenile justice and adult criminal justice
systems are not adequately linked.44
Since both the volume and intensity of juvenile crime have
increased and are likely to escalate in the future, it is no longer
feasible to wait until these career criminals reach adulthood to
protect society from their actions.45 There are stages in the life of the
typical career criminal.46 By
channeling resources on the basis of a comprehensive case
management system, SHOCAP can play a crucial role in stifling a
criminal career at each stage. State and local officials therefore
should adopt a SHOCAP program and try some juvenile offenders 18
years old and under as adults.
Stages of Development
In the first stage of criminal development, as amply documented
by Patrick Fagan, these serious
habitual offenders come from abusive, broken, or neglectful
homes.47 Looking backward through
the SHOCAP telescope, local law enforcement and criminal justice
officials can trace the pattern of abuse and neglect that often
results in a delinquent and criminal lifestyle. Based on the SHOCAP
criteria and amplified by indices of negative social conditions
identified by the Heritage Foundation, state and local officials
can design an early intervention strategy for juveniles who are at
risk of becoming serious habitual offenders and career criminals.
Such a strategy can focus community resources, including
private-sector charitable, social, and religious institutions, on
potential and active SHOs and stop their criminal careers before
they gain momentum.
In the second stage of the criminal's development, from 13 to 18
years of age, the SHOCAP process helps judges and other state and
local criminal justice officials answer a critical question: Is the
offender, based on his record, likely to respond to intensive
intervention by social service agencies, or is he in fact a
youthful career criminal who cannot be rehabilitated and should be
locked up? State corrections officials simply do not know how to
rehabilitate some violent young criminals who pose such a clear
danger to society that they must be separated from the community
and controlled. SHOCAP can help state and local judges and other
responsible officials determine who among a larger class of young
offenders are the incorrigibles.
From the vantage point of public safety, the best that state and
local officials can do with the incorrigible juvenile SHO when the
crime is serious is to try him as an adult, sentence him as an
adult, and require him to serve at least 85 percent of his
sentence, as specified by the truth-in-sentencing laws called for
in recent federal legislation and enacted in 22 states.48 This would mean that a 15-year-old
serious habitual offender who is given 20 years for second degree
murder would serve at least 17 years before being released at age
32. Thus, the serious offender would have spent his highest crime
years locked up, unable to prey on more victims.
During the third stage of a criminal's career, from 18 to 30
years of age, SHOCAP gives state and local criminal justice
officials complete criminal histories of career offenders at the
time they are arrested. The police, prosecutors, and judges know
instantly that they are dealing with a SHO and not a petty or first
time offender. Currently, however, an adult criminal's previous
juvenile records are not available to the system in most
jurisdictions. As a result, 18-year-olds with lengthy records of
serious and violent crime frequently are treated as first-time
offenders.
A NEW POLICY TO COMBAT VIOLENT
JUVENILE CRIME
America's juvenile and criminal justice system still works too
slowly to be effective in identifying and incarcerating career
criminals. Congress can assist state and local officials with
money, technology, and advice -- and by removing federal mandates
in the juvenile judicial system -- but controlling and combating
serious crime remains the responsibility primarily of state and
local government. State and local leaders can take a variety of
concrete steps to combat the scourge of violent crime, especially
crimes committed by juveniles. Innovative police methods like those
implemented in cities like Houston and New York are reducing the
rate of violent crime.49 Beyond
adopting an information management system like SHOCAP, state and
local leaders can take three other steps to stop these criminal
careers before they run their destructive course:
- Target and track serious habitual offenders. Enact
legislation at the state level that enables local officials to
share crucial juvenile case files and establish an effective
Serious Habitual Offender Comprehensive Action Program in their
local jurisdictions. SHOCAP can make available to police and state
law enforcement officers, as well as judicial and corrections
officials, the information they need to identify and respond to the
most dangerous young criminals in their communities.
- Try as adults all juveniles who commit heinous crimes.
Enact state laws to try juvenile offenders as adults for specific
violent offenses. Under Title I of Representative McCollum's
Violent Youth Predator Act of 1996, a juvenile criminal 14 or more
years of age who is convicted of a serious federal violent crime or
"a major drug trafficking offense" automatically can be tried as an
adult. States should consider similar legislation for state
offenses.
- Enact truth-in-sentencing laws. Pass legislation
requiring all violent offenders, including juveniles tried as
adults, to serve at least 85 percent of their sentences.50 Thus far, 22 states have adopted such
laws. As the bipartisan Council on Crime in America has concluded,
probation, parole, and other forms of non-incarceration often take
the place of prison, even for violent offenders. More than half of
convicted violent felons still are not sentenced to prison.51 This must end.
CONCLUSION
Congress can encourage state and local officials in their
efforts to combat juvenile crime. The Violent and Repeat Juvenile
Offender Act of 1996 sponsored by Senator Orrin Hatch and former
Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole would allow states to try the
most serious violent juvenile offenders (those charged with federal
offenses) as adults. In many respects, this bill complements the
Violent Youth Predator Act of 1996 sponsored by Representative
McCollum. Both bills also give financial assistance to the
states.
Ultimately, however, the war to defeat the growing menace of
violent juvenile crime must be fought and won by state and local
officials who are smart, tough, and tenacious. The SHOCAP process
is a valuable weapon for communities fighting the war on crime. It
combines the advances of the modern microelectronic revolution with
sophisticated crime and data analysis to target and track America's
most crucial crime perpetrator: the violent habitual juvenile
offender.
By providing instant access to shared information and a complete
case file with relevant information, SHOCAP not only will improve
the capability of the local police, but also will enhance the
quality and caliber of decisions made by key officials in the
criminal justice system. Courts, probation and parole departments,
correctional officials, and social service and welfare agencies all
will benefit from a strong database on juvenile offenders and from
shared access to case management files.
Today's serious habitual offenders are tomorrow's career
criminals. Children who look more like victims of abuse and neglect
than criminals at age 13 may well be engaged in repeatedly
committing the community's most serious and violent offenses from
ages 14 to 17. They are a serious and growing threat to public
safety. Fortunately, if adopted, SHOCAP and the other reforms
advocated in this paper can help America's communities make their
streets, schools, and neighborhoods safe again.
Endnotes:
- James Wootton, President of the
Safe Streets Alliance, served as Deputy Administrator of the Office
of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention at the U.S.
Department of Justice during the Reagan Administration. Robert O.
Heck, a partner in Moore, Bieck, Heck & Associates, was SHOCAP
Project Manager at the Department from 1982-1994. Robert E. Moffit, Deputy
Director of Domestic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation,
contributed to this paper.
- For an excellent discussion of
the range of options available to state and local officials, see
Mary Kate Cary, "How States Can Fight Violent Crime: Two Dozen
Steps to a Safer America," Heritage Foundation State Backgrounder No.
944/S, June 7, 1993. See also Hon. George Allen, "The Real
War on Crime: States on the Front Lines," Heritage Lecture
No. 497, August 10, 1994.
- Research for the initial SHOCAP
project during the Reagan Administration indicated that the
percentage of juveniles responsible for the majority of violent
crime may be as low as 2 percent. See Robert O. Heck, SHOCAP
Project Manager, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.,
unpublished reports. See also Paul E. Tracey, Marvin E. Wolfgang,
and Robert M. Figlio, Delinquency Careers in Two Birth
Cohorts (New York: Plenum Press, 1990).
- The Bloods and Crips are
notorious gangs in Los Angeles; see, for example, John J. DiIulio,
Jr., cited in Council on Crime in America press release, January 5,
1996, p. 2. Professor DiIulio also has gone on record as supporting
H.R. 3565; see John J. DiIulio, Jr., "How to Deal with the Youth
Crime Wave," The Weekly Standard, September 16, 1996, p.
30.
- Ibid.
- Quoted in Neal R. Pierce, "How
Goes the Crime Rate -- Why?," The Baltimore Sun, January 15,
1996, p. A9.
- See notes 9-11 and accompanying
text.
- Howard N. Snyder and Melissa
Sickmund, Juvenile Offenders and Victims: A National Report,
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, U.S.
Department of Justice, August 1995, p. 112.
- Ibid., p. 109.
- J. Butts et al., Juvenile
Court Statistics 1992, Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention, U.S. Department of Justice, 1995.
- Snyder and Sickmund,
Juvenile Offenders and Victims: A National Report, p.
111.
- J. Butts et al., Juvenile
Court Statistics 1993, Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention, U.S. Department of Justice, forthcoming
1996; cited in Howard N. Snyder, Melissa Sickmund, and Eileen
Poe-Yamagata, Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 1996 Update on
Violence, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention, U.S. Department of Justice, February 1996, p. 28.
- Butts et al., Juvenile
Court Statistics 1992, 1995.
- Associated Press, "Violence
Hit 1 in 13 Youths in 1992," The Washington Times, July 18,
1994, p. A3.
- Ibid.
- Sara Engram, "Respect and a
Challenge," The Baltimore Sun, January 14, 1996, p. E3.
- Betti Jane Levine, "New Wave
of Mayhem; Juveniles Are Increasingly Committing Violent Crimes --
And Experts Don't Know Why or How Best to Stop Them," Los
Angeles Times, September 6, 1995, p. E1.
- David W. Moore, "Majority
Advocate Death Penalty for Teenage Killers," The Gallup Poll
Monthly, September 1994, p. 2.
- Ibid., p. 3.
- George Gallup, Jr., and Alec
Gallup, "Teens Say Youths Should Be Tried as Adults for Serious
Crimes," The Gallup Youth Survey, March 8, 1995.
- Rand Corporation, "One More
Chance: The Pursuit of Promising Intervention Strategies for the
Chronic Offender," May 1985.
- David Glovin, Frederick
Kunkle, and Seamus McGraw, "Suspects Have Extensive Records,"
The Record, July 18, 1995, p. A1.
- Snyder and Sickmund,
Juvenile Offenders and Victims: A National Report, p.
49.
- This problem unfortunately has
not been confined to juvenile criminals, and its impact on the
police is no less devastating to their morale. On this point, see
Robert E. Moffit and Edwin Meese III, "Getting Backup: Twenty-One
Steps Public Officials Can Take to Support Their Local Police,"
Heritage Foundation Backgrounder
No. 1089, August 21, 1996, pp. 8-9.
- Eugene H. Methvin, "An
Anti-Crime Solution: Lock Up More Criminals," The Washington
Post, October 27, 1991, pp. C1, C4.
- See Joan Fisher, Police
Policy and Research, Solicitor General of Canada, Report No.
1993-23, February 26, 1994.
- See note 2.
- See note 2.
- Heck, unpublished
reports.
- See Patrick F. Fagan, "The
Real Root Causes of Violent Crime: The Breakdown of Marriage,
Family, and Community," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No.
1026, March 17, 1995.
- Heck, unpublished
reports.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- John Walters, "The Clinton
Administration's Continuing Retreat in the War on Drugs," Heritage
Foundation Backgrounder
Update No. 279, July 12, 1996.
- Under the 1996 congressional
welfare reform bill signed into law by President Clinton, law
enforcement officials will have access to welfare records.
- This information is contained
in SHOCAP closeout documents in federal grant file storage.
- Even though the SHO is likely
to be the most disruptive person in the school setting, school
officials often do not have access to records of past patterns of
criminal behavior. For an excellent discussion of this problem and
the related problem of juvenile violence in schools, see Stephen
Wallis, "How State and Local Officials Can Restore Civility and
Discipline to America's Public Schools," Heritage Foundation
State Backgrounder No. 1018/S, February 9, 1995.
- Family Educational Rights and
Privacy Act of 1974, 20 U.S.C. 1232g.
- The state legislature may need
to enact SHOCAP enabling legislation in order to begin the program.
Model legislation is available from the authors.
- The states are California,
Florida, Illinois, Oklahoma, Texas, Virginia, and Washington.
- Heck, unpublished
reports.
- Under a vertical prosecution,
a specific prosecutor is assigned consistently to cases involving a
specific SHO; thus, every time a SHO comes to court, the same
prosecutor will be dealing with him. This both guarantees that the
prosecutor will possess in-depth knowledge of the SHO's history and
current crime and helps ensure that a SHO does not fall through the
cracks of an overworked court system.
- Heck, unpublished
reports.
- Public Administration Service,
SHOCAP Program Implementation Guide, Office of Juvenile
Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice, January 1992, p.
11.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- See Fagan, "The Real Root
Causes of Violent Crime."
- See James Wootton, "Truth in
Sentencing: Why Should States Make Violent Criminals Do Their
Time," Heritage Foundation State Backgrounder No. 972/S,
December 30,1993.
- See Moffit and Meese, "Getting
Backup."
- See Wootton, "Truth in
Sentencing."
- Council on Crime in America
press release, January 5, 1996.