A juvenile may be taken into custody if they are suspected of committing a crime or if there is a court order for their detention.
You will be taken into custody. Since CPS is giving the drug test you must all ready be on probation or have a problem. You will be taken to juvenile court and held in the juvenile justice system.
Law enforcement at least until a hearing is obtained. Then, the judge.
The person taken into custody has been arrested
Take the juvenile into custody.
A 17-year old in Texas may move out of their parent's house. A 17-year old may voluntarily leave their home without parental consent and will not be taken into custody under the Juvenile Justice Code.
The legal age of majority in Georgia is 18. Authorities generally will not get involved unless the juvenile is found to be in unacceptable or dangerous circumstances. However, the parents can petition the court for an order to have the minor taken into custody and returned to the family home or remanded to a juvenile facility. A minor who crosses state lines without parental permission is guilty of a federal violation, and authorities may take the minor into custody and extradite them back to their home state to be placed in the custody of the stte juvenile authorities. (18 USC 2243, 18 USC 2423)
Arrest and arrest warrants are two ways that a person can be taken into custody.
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.
a hearing
"Emancipated juvenile", as used in Colorado, means a juvenile over fifteen years of age and under eighteen years of age who has, with the real or apparent assent of the juvenile's parents, demonstrated independence from the juvenile's parents in matters of care, custody, and earnings. The term may include, but shall not be limited to, any such juvenile who has the sole responsibility for the juvenile's own support, who is married, or who is in the military.
An intact family can't do that. A juvenile detention is related to the commission of a crime, so only the court does that. You can give up the child to family services, but the other parent can challenge for custody.
"Emancipated juvenile", as used in Colorado, means a juvenile over fifteen years of age and under eighteen years of age who has, with the real or apparent assent of the juvenile's parents, demonstrated independence from the juvenile's parents in matters of care, custody, and earnings. The term may include, but shall not be limited to, any such juvenile who has the sole responsibility for the juvenile's own support, who is married, or who is in the military.