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The court is attempting to send the juvenile to be tried in adult court
"Open Juvenile" is short for an open juvenile court case.
That you committed the offense with which you were charged. This is dependent upon what you mean by criminal court. If you mean adult court then you're talking about having a juvenile case transferred to adult court. Fr a prosecutor to do this he has to petition to the juvenile judge that this case should be transferred to adult court, either because of the severity of the charges or because of the frequency at which the juvenile continues to commit delinquent acts. For a prosecutor to prosecute the case into juvenile court there must be enough evidence to show probable cause that the juvenile committed a delinquent act (delinquent acts range from crimes - misdemeanors or felonies - to acts that can only be committed by juveniles, such as truancy and runaway behavior.
The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2000 is the primary legal framework for Juvenile justice in India. The act provides for a special approach towards the prevention and treatment of Juvenile delinquency and provides a framework for the protection, treatment and rehabilitation of children in the purview of the juvenile justice system.
A delinquent juvenile is a young person who has committed a crime or violated a law. They may be subject to the juvenile justice system rather than the adult criminal justice system.
It is unclear what you mean by "juvenile sartation." If you meant "juvenile probation," it typically involves being monitored by the court system and following specific rules or requirements as a result of committing a crime as a minor. Failure to comply can lead to further legal consequences.
Juvenile cases refers to cases heard in juvenile court. Court jurisdictions vary, but most states give Juvenile Court jurisdiction over minors charged with crimes, and certain custody disputes, particularly those where children are removed from their parents' by the state.Another View: The first response is correct only insofar as the handling of juvenile criminal cases is concerned.HOWEVER - the second part of the answer may only be partially correct. Perhaps In SOME states the juvenile division of court may be empowered to hear custody cases, yet in many others, these types of cases are heard in the Family Division of Civil Court.
ACOD ?
I assume that by "in court" you specifically mean "not in juvenile court". Generally speaking, it's 18. For some offenses minors can be tried as adults, but this depends on the jurisdiction and the specific offense.
divert
Judiciary means the court system
I know what you mean. I just had the exact same problem presently. Sorry that i can't be more helpful 8-P