absolutely not.
a young aged kid that has charges against them for breaking the law in any way they do.
Questioner has mistakenly mis-stated the question. The state would not be representing the juvenile against a plaintiff - the state IS the plaintiff and would be prosecuting the juvenile. The person against whom the juvenile committed the offense is known as the COMPLAINANT.
A Juvenile Trial is when you go to court and the jury pleads you guilty with charges or your not guilty with charges.
That depends on what charges are on your juvenile record.
No. Citizens cannot press charges against anyone. Only a prosecutor can bring charges. You can REPORT the matter to the police and the police will investigate and take the proper action.If the assault is confirmed by the police, in all likliehood, they will take action against the minor as a juvenile matter.If you wish to take action against the parents, you will have to file a civil suit of some type against them.
The charging document in juvenile court is typically referred to as a petition or a delinquency petition. It is a written legal document that outlines the specific charges brought against a juvenile in a delinquency case. The petition includes details about the alleged offense and serves as the formal notice to the juvenile and their parent or guardian.
DPNG stands for "Delinquency Petition Not Guilty." In the context of an arraignment, it refers to a plea entered by a juvenile defendant indicating that they do not admit to the charges brought against them. The arraignment is the formal reading of the charges, and a DPNG plea allows the case to proceed to further hearings or trial. This term is specific to juvenile court proceedings.
petition
In most cases you cannot. Once the police are involved the event takes on a life of it's own and is controlled by the local prosecuting attorney or juvenile court. Your best chance would be to contact the prosecuting attorney for more information.
with charges
Then that minor would have assault charges and brought to juvenile detention where they would have to go through juvenile court.
"charges against them" indicates that the answer is the "defendant".