Ad
related to: evins regional juvenile facility inmate search indiana free forms
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Pendleton Juvenile Correctional Facility is a maximum-security Indiana Department of Corrections prison for juvenile males between the ages of 12 and one minute before they turn 22. [1] The facility is located in Fall Creek Township, Madison County, southwest of Pendleton. [2] The campus-style facility has an average daily population of 245 ...
Per the Offender Population Statistical Report, provided by the Indiana Department of Correction Division of Data Science and Analytics, there were 22,758 adult male offenders (including 724 county jail “back-ups” and 23 in contracted beds) on January 01, 2025. This population is 13% below the operational bed capacity.
McLennan County State Juvenile Correctional Facility (Unit I and Unit II) - Partially in Mart, [16] mostly inunincorporated McLennan County [17] [18] [19] As of 2011 units I and II were combined into one facility. [20] The TYC governing board's original agenda had plans to close both McLennan County units, but the board changed its plans. [21]
Judges throughout the state began demanding that Pahokee be closed. During a July 1999 hearing, Palm Beach County Juvenile Judge Ron Alvarez warned that keeping the facility open without improvements courted disaster. “Treatment of these children comes dangerously close to being inhumane,” the judge said. “We’re dealing with human beings.
In 2006, 19-year-old Robert Schulze, an inmate incarcerated at Coke who had earlier said that he felt unsafe at the facility, hanged himself in his cell. [57] In 2007, after the TYC inspected the facility, the TYC moved the approximately 200 youth it contracted to the center out of the Coke County facility and caused it to close. [58]
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The U.S. Justice Department found on Thursday that Texas has routinely violated the civil rights of juveniles at five of its detention facilities by using excessive force, failing to protect them ...
As of 2003, the JDAI had produced some promising results from their programs. Detention center populations fell by between 14% and 88% in JDAI counties over the course of 7 years (1996–2003). These same counties saw declines in juvenile arrests (an indicator of overall juvenile crime rates) during the same time period ranging from 37–54%. [41]