It depends on your state. There is no one law that specifically GUARANTEES adults protection from their juvenile criminal records being used against them. Access to a person’s juvenile crime records is much more restricted than access to adult crime records, though. Most states consider juvenile crime records confidential and will deny the public and media access. Access to juvenile records is usually only granted to certain persons and organizations, such as:
Local, state and federal law enforcement
Prosecutors
Court officials
Parents
The juvenile’s attorney
Victims or potential victims
School officials
People or organizations seeking access might have to get court permission by making a showing of good cause, and even then, the court may have the authority to deny the request in its discretion.
Some states have exceptions to the general confidentiality provided juvenile records when the juvenile is charged with a particularly violent crime or a crime that would be a felony if committed by an adult. States that currently have this exception are Arkansas, California, Colorado, Georgia, Indiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Oklahoma, Vermont, and Washington.
On the other hand, some states guarantee that juvenile records will remain sealed to the public and media after a person turns 21 years old, as long as he did not commit another serious crime after the age of 18.
2006-09-23 16:36:19
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answer #1
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answered by dh1977 7
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In Indiana, most offenses by juveniles are heard in juvenile court, unless the offense is so serious that it is waived to adult court. Juvenile cases are usually dealt with by probation, although some do result in incarceration of the juvenile at a detention facility. If the juvenile completes all the terms of their probation, the case is successfully closed, and those offenses will not continue to haunt the child into adulthood. IF they do not complete all the terms of their probation, we close the case unsuccessfully, and the record can be used against them for any offenses they commit as an adult. Alternatively, if they continue to commit offenses while on probation, and we deem them unable to be rehabilitated, we can ask that they be waived to adult court.
2006-09-23 21:59:56
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answer #2
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answered by Mama Pastafarian 7
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No police, criminal specialist, or choose ought to waste their time on a case of attack 14 years previous. If no homicide changed into dedicated then there is not any desire positioned someone on trial for some thing they dedicated as a smooth criminal. To a lot time has surpassed, i imagine there's a statute of downside or per chance there is not any for this reason. i do not understand some thing about Ontario regulation yet i understand you won't be able to be tried as an human being till you dedicated an offense at the same time as your an human being. in case you dedicated a criminal offense as a juvenile, you'd be tried as a smooth criminal, you won't be able to be tried as an human being years later for crimes dedicated as a smooth criminal. once you change into an human being, your youthful criminal record is erased and replaced with an human being record, in case you nonetheless commit crimes you presently have a an human being record which does no longer erase.
2016-11-23 18:24:42
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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same as name i think..
juvenilelaw.
http://www.juvenilelaw.org/CaseSummaries2006/06-1-18.HTM
2006-09-23 16:23:23
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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statute of limitations
2006-09-23 16:22:04
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answer #5
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answered by angelo 3
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