According to the FBI Uniform Crime Reports, one out of eight violent crimes in 2007 was committed by a juvenile under 18. Juveniles committed nearly one-fifth of all property crimes. These statistics mean that minors were responsible last year for some 173,225 robberies, rapes, aggravated assaults, and murders, and for about 1.8 million burglaries, major thefts, auto thefts, and arsons nationwide. In some jurisdictions, youth gangs terrorize communities and turn schools into combat zones.
This situation is a far cry from the days when mischievous youngsters were sent to the principal's office, or taken behind the woodshed by an embarrassed father with a razor strop. To deal with the often hardened and vicious teenaged and preteen offenders who prey on modern society, states and the federal government have developed a hybrid criminal justice system that retains some of the features of the benevolent juvenile delinquency system while increasingly finding it necessary to process more serious cases in the adult system. The U.S. Supreme Court has issued guidelines in a number of cases to define those principles of criminal procedure that are, or are not, applicable to juvenile cases.









