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North Carolina Juvenile Level 3 Disposition and Commitment Order - Delinquent

State:
North Carolina
Control #:
NC-J-462
Format:
PDF
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Description

Juvenile Level 3 Disposition and Commitment Order (Delinquent): This is an official form from the North Carolina Administration of the Courts (AOC), which complies with all applicable laws and statutes. USLF amends and updates the forms as is required by North Carolina statutes and law.


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FAQ

Juvenile intake officers handle minors who are referred to their offices by families, law enforcement officials, or other agents. They work with court systems, families, and underage offenders to gather information and make punishment or rehabilitation recommendations.

The most commonly committed crimes by juveniles are typically nonviolent misdemeanor offenses. The most common is theft-larceny, which showed an arrest rate of 401.3 per 100,000 youths in 2016. The second most common is simple assault, with an arrest rate of 382.3 per 100,000 youths.

The juvenile justice process involves nine major decision points: (1) arrest, (2) referral to court, (3) diversion, (4) secure detention, (5) judicial waiver to adult criminal court, (6) case petitioning, (7) delinquency finding/adjudication, (8) probation, and (9) residential placement, including confinement in a

The juvenile justice process involves nine major decision points: (1) arrest, (2) referral to court, (3) diversion, (4) secure detention, (5) judicial waiver to adult criminal court, (6) case petitioning, (7) delinquency finding/adjudication, (8) probation, and (9) residential placement, including confinement in a

Intake: The process used for every youth referred to juvenile court. Intake involves screening each youth to determine the appropriateness for release or referral to a diversionary program or agency for nonofficial or nonjudicial handling.

If the juvenile is found guilty (or involved) at the adjudicatory hearing this finding is called an adjudication.

Intake into a Secure Care Facility At admission, education, medical and mental health staff interview and evaluate each youth. They conduct comprehensive assessments of his/her educational level and medical and psychological conditions. A treatment plan is developed for each youth based on his/her needs.

Larceny. Assault. Illegal Purchases. Other Drug and Alcohol Crimes. Violent Crimes. Sexual Offenses. Status Offenses. Vandalism.

When Cases Go to Juvenile Court. Once the police officer refers a case to juvenile court, a prosecutor or juvenile court intake officer (often a probation officer) takes over. That person may decide to dismiss the case, handle the matter informally, or file formal charges (called "petitioning the case").

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North Carolina Juvenile Level 3 Disposition and Commitment Order - Delinquent