A pandemic bump in auto thefts and some other crimes is fueling a heated debate about how 黑料吃瓜网 handles juvenile offenders.
Critics say children who break the law get too many chances. But reform advocates say the state should increase services for troubled kids and keep more out of the criminal justice system.
In the series Juveniles, Joyrides & Justice, 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 investigative reporting team explored how the pandemic affected crime and punishment for 黑料吃瓜网 youth.
Reporting by the Accountability Project showed that hundreds of teens waited months longer for their delinquency cases to be resolved, delaying access to important services.
The series also explained how high-risk juvenile offenders are handled today, examined misleading portrayals of youth crime and described potential solutions.
The graphics below illustrate some key findings from the series:
1. Vehicle thefts spiked in 黑料吃瓜网 in 2020. But they鈥檙e still near historic lows.
The increase mirrored an uptick nationwide, and experts say it鈥檚 likely that disruptions brought on by the pandemic were the prevailing cause 鈥 not policies in any one jurisdiction.
Thefts might also be subsiding. The latest crime data reported by police departments in 黑料吃瓜网 for the first half of 2021 suggest the increase has peaked. Thefts during the period from April through June 2021 were lower than during the same time last year and closer to levels over the last decade.
2. Police data doesn鈥檛 show that juveniles are to blame for rising auto theft.
That鈥檚 because so few car thieves are ever apprehended. In many jurisdictions, motor vehicle theft is among the least commonly solved crimes.
In 黑料吃瓜网, the clearance rate for auto thefts in recent years was around 10%. It dropped to around 7% in 2020, according to state data.
Of those who are caught, youth are in the minority, although they comprised a growing share of accused car thieves in recent years.
3. 黑料吃瓜网 locks up fewer teens than most other states. That hasn鈥檛 produced a spike in repeat offenders.
Reforms enacted over the last decade prevent children from being arrested for skipping too much school or running away from home. The state also stopped sending all 16- and 17-year-olds accused of breaking the law to the adult court system, and it restricted police from dropping off children at detention centers; now they need a judge鈥檚 order to do so.
Today, 黑料吃瓜网 incarcerates children at one of the lowest rates in the country. And drastically fewer children are on probation or intertwined in the juvenile justice system 鈥 about half as many as in 2011.
At the same time, the recidivism rate for juvenile offenders 鈥 a measurement of how many break the law again 鈥 hasn鈥檛 substantially increased, based on a review of court records.
Most teens who offend again are accused of low-level offenses, such as breach of peace and disorderly conduct.
4. Courts slowed down during the pandemic, and that meant hundreds of youth offenders were waiting for services.
The juvenile justice system connects children with therapy, extracurricular activities, jobs and a range of other supports.
During the height of the pandemic, it took months longer for some teens to be steered into those beneficial programs.
For many, those referrals come only after the case is closed. And for months, courts here were behind. The number of juvenile courts hearing cases dropped temporarily from 15 to two.
The courts slowed down so much that hundreds more kids were waiting more than six months for their cases to be resolved.
5. Auto theft has shifted from big cities to the suburbs. And experts say it鈥檚 increasingly a crime of opportunity.
Wealthier communities along the Interstate 91 and Interstate 84 corridors for vehicle theft in recent years, according to work by researcher Lisa Barao.
Police departments in Bridgeport, Hartford, New Haven and other large cities still report some of the highest theft numbers each year. But rates increased faster in some suburban communities with higher median incomes.
Most car thefts are nonviolent. Vehicles are usually taken when the owner isn鈥檛 around.
And increasingly, cars are taken with the keys left inside.
The National Insurance Crime Bureau estimates it now happens in the Nutmeg State about 1,000 times a year, placing 黑料吃瓜网 27th overall nationwide for the number of vehicle thefts with keys.
Eric George of the Insurance Association of 黑料吃瓜网 said keyless ignition technology gives thieves an easy getaway when drivers leave their key fobs inside.
鈥淵our key fob is as important as your driver鈥檚 license, is as important as your credit cards, as your Social Security card,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou should have it on you, or at least in your home.鈥
Some suburban police departments in 黑料吃瓜网 have posted yard signs throughout town telling people to lock their cars.
But critics call that victim blaming. They say the state should be tougher on youth crime.
Senate Republican Minority Leader Kevin Kelly said reforms enacted in the last several years have been 鈥減oorly implemented,鈥 turning the juvenile justice system into 鈥渕ore of a diversionary program than a rehabilitative program.鈥
鈥淲hat are the results in the streets?鈥 Kelly asked during a recent news conference outside the Capitol with other Republican lawmakers. 鈥淲hat we see every day when we wake up and open the newspaper is yet another crime, another victim, another bold and brazen crime occurring. And we can鈥檛 let that stand.鈥
Two other local observers, a representative from the ACLU and a former state lawmaker, told 黑料吃瓜网 the discourse around juvenile crime lacks important context and often perpetuates stereotypes about children of color.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 no surprise that sensational stories are likely to be the lead stories in the local TV news, and in all forms of media, because they鈥檙e very dramatic, and they鈥檙e scary to people,鈥 said Mike Lawlor, a former adviser to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy.
鈥淎nd so people see this stuff in the news, and they react to it,鈥 he said.
Read the rest of the "Juveniles, Joyrides, & Justice" series:
- Part 1: How the pandemic affected 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 juvenile justice system
- Part 2: How politics has shifted the narrative
- Part 3: What to do with repeat juvenile offenders?
- Part 4: Are police too constrained?
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