LRB-5802/1
EAW/EHS/FFK:all
2019 - 2020 LEGISLATURE
March 26, 2020 - Introduced by Representatives Goyke, Emerson, Crowley,
Doyle, Anderson, Bowen, Considine, Spreitzer, Ohnstad, Billings, Pope,
Neubauer, Zamarripa and C. Taylor, cosponsored by Senators Miller,
Larson
and Smith. Referred to Committee on Rules.
AB1036,3,2
1An Act to repeal 48.355 (4) (b) 3., 48.357 (6) (a) 3., 48.365 (5) (b) 3., 48.623 (1m)
2(b), 48.975 (3m) (b), 938.18 (1) (c), 938.31 (3) (c) 1., 938.31 (3) (c) 2., 938.31 (3)
3(c) 3., 938.355 (4) (am) 3., 938.357 (6) (a) 3. and 938.365 (5) (b) 3.;
to renumber
4938.245 (1) and 938.549 (2) (intro.), (b) and (c);
to renumber and amend
5938.195 (3), 938.245 (6) and 938.549 (2) (a);
to amend 48.02 (1d), 48.02 (2),
648.355 (4) (b) 4., 48.357 (6) (a) 4., 48.365 (5) (b) 4., 48.366 (1) (intro.), 48.366 (1)
7(a), 48.366 (2) (b) 4., 48.366 (3) (a), 48.366 (3) (c), 48.396 (1), subchapter IX (title)
8of chapter 48 [precedes 48.44], 48.44, 48.45 (1) (a), 48.45 (1) (am), 48.45 (3),
948.57 (3m) (a) 1. (intro.), 48.57 (3m) (a) 1. a., 48.57 (3m) (a) 1. b., 48.57 (3n) (a)
101. (intro.), 48.57 (3n) (a) 1. a., 48.57 (3n) (a) 1. b., 48.57 (3n) (am) 6. a., 48.623
11(1m) (intro.), 48.623 (1m) (a), 48.623 (1m) (c), 48.645 (1) (intro.), 48.645 (1) (a),
1248.645 (1) (b), 48.685 (1) (bm), 48.686 (1) (bm), 48.975 (3m) (intro.), 48.975 (3m)
13(a), 48.975 (3m) (c), 118.163 (4), 119.04 (1), 125.07 (4) (d), 125.07 (4) (e) 1.,
14125.085 (3) (bt), 165.83 (1) (c) 1., 165.83 (1) (c) 2., 301.12 (2m), 301.12 (14) (a),
1301.26 (4) (cm) 1., 302.31 (7), 938.02 (1), 938.02 (3m), 938.02 (10m), 938.067
2(6m), 938.12 (1), 938.12 (2), 938.13 (12), 938.18 (1) (a), 938.18 (1) (b), 938.18 (2),
3938.183 (1) (intro.), 938.183 (1) (am), 938.183 (3), 938.195 (title), 938.195 (1) (a),
4938.195 (2) (title), 938.195 (2) (a), 938.195 (2) (b), 938.195 (3) (title), 938.24 (2)
5(title) and (b), 938.245 (1m), 938.245 (2g), 938.255 (1) (intro.), 938.31 (3) (a) 1.,
6938.31 (3) (b), 938.31 (3) (c) (intro.), 938.31 (3) (c) 5., 938.32 (1x), 938.34 (4h) (a),
7938.34 (8), 938.343 (2), 938.344 (3), 938.35 (1m), 938.355 (4) (am) 4., 938.355 (4)
8(b), 938.355 (4m) (a), 938.357 (6) (a) 4., 938.365 (5) (b) 4., 938.366 (1) (intro.),
9938.366 (1) (a), 938.366 (2) (b) 4., 938.366 (3) (a), 938.366 (3) (c), 938.39, 938.396
10(1) (b) 5., subchapter IX (title) of chapter 938 [precedes 938.44], 938.44, 938.45
11(1) (a), 938.45 (3), 938.48 (4m) (title), 938.48 (4m) (a), 938.48 (4m) (b), 938.48
12(14), 938.52 (1) (d), 938.57 (3) (title), 938.57 (3) (a) (intro.), 938.57 (3) (a) 1.,
13938.57 (3) (a) 3., 938.57 (3) (b), 939.632 (1) (e) 1., 939.632 (1) (e) 3., 946.50
14(intro.), 948.01 (1), 948.11 (2) (am) (intro.), 948.40 (1), 948.40 (2), 948.45 (1),
15948.60 (2) (d), 948.61 (4), 961.455 (title), 961.455 (1), 961.455 (2), 961.46,
16961.573 (2), 961.574 (2), 961.575 (1), 961.575 (2), 961.575 (3), 990.01 (3) and
17990.01 (20); and
to create 20.437 (1) (be), 20.437 (1) (cL), 48.366 (1m), 48.5275,
1848.645 (1) (c), 118.256, 938.18 (1) (bm), 938.183 (1d), 938.195 (1m), 938.195 (3)
19(b), 938.24 (2) (ag) and (ar), 938.245 (1b), 938.245 (1g), 938.245 (6) (b), 938.366
20(1m), 938.532, 938.545, 970.032 (3) and 971.31 (13) (c) of the statutes;
relating
21to: juvenile court jurisdiction; the serious juvenile offender program; extending
22out-of-home care to 21 years of age for certain persons; juvenile interrogations;
23deferred prosecution agreements and diversion services for juveniles; the
24authority of school districts and school resource officers to respond to
25school-based behavior; providing an exemption from emergency rule
1procedures; providing an exemption from rule-making procedures; granting
2rule-making authority; and making an appropriation.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
This bill makes changes to the jurisdiction of the court assigned to exercise
jurisdiction under the Juvenile Justice Code (juvenile court), the jurisdiction of the
criminal court, procedures under the Juvenile Justice Code, dispositions available
in juvenile delinquency proceedings, and out-of-home care placements.
AGE OF JUVENILE court JURISDICTION
Under current law, a person 17 years of age or older who is alleged to have
violated a criminal law is subject to the procedures specified in the Criminal
Procedure Code and, on conviction, is subject to sentencing under the Criminal Code,
which may include a sentence of imprisonment in the Wisconsin state prisons.
Currently, subject to certain exceptions, a person under 17 years of age who is alleged
to have violated a criminal law is subject to the procedures specified in the Juvenile
Justice Code and, on being adjudicated delinquent, is subject to an array of
dispositions under that code including placement in a juvenile correctional facility.
This bill raises from 17 to 18 the age at which a person who is alleged to have violated
a criminal law is subject to the procedures specified in the Criminal Procedure Code
and, on conviction, to sentencing under the Criminal Code.
Similarly, under current law, a person 17 years of age or older who is alleged to
have violated a civil law or municipal ordinance is subject to the jurisdiction and
procedures of the circuit court or, if applicable, the municipal court, while a person
under 17 years of age who is alleged to have violated a civil law or municipal
ordinance, subject to certain exceptions, is subject to the jurisdiction and procedures
of the juvenile court. This bill raises from 17 to 18 the age at which a person who is
alleged to have violated a civil law or municipal ordinance is subject to the
jurisdiction and procedures of the circuit court or, if applicable, the municipal court.
The bill appropriates to the Department of Children and Families a sum
sufficient for youth aids-related purposes to reimburse counties, beginning on
January 1, 2021, for costs associated with juveniles who were alleged to have violated
a state or federal criminal law or any civil law or municipal ordinance at age 17. The
bill requires DCF to consult with county representatives to determine those
expenses that are eligible for reimbursement.
AGE OF DELINQUENCY
Under current law, a child age ten or over may be adjudged delinquent by the
juvenile court for an act that would be a crime if committed by an adult. Under this
bill, a child age 13 or over may be adjudged delinquent for an act that would be a
crime if committed by an adult.
ORIGINAL ADULT COURT JURISDICTION
This bill eliminates the original jurisdiction of a court of criminal jurisdiction
over a juvenile who is alleged to have 1) committed assault or battery while placed
in a juvenile correctional facility; 2) committed first-degree or second-degree
intentional homicide or first-degree reckless homicide on or after the juvenile's tenth
birthday; or 3) violated any state criminal law, if the juvenile has previously been
convicted of a crime either under the original jurisdiction of a court of criminal
jurisdiction or following a waiver of jurisdiction by the juvenile court. Under the bill,
a juvenile who is alleged to be delinquent on or after the effective date of the bill is
subject to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.
This bill also changes the procedure for requesting that the juvenile court waive
its jurisdiction over a juvenile, which, if granted, places the juvenile under the
criminal court's jurisdiction. Under current law, a petition may be filed requesting
waiver of the juvenile court's jurisdiction if the juvenile is at least 14 years old and
is alleged to have committed certain acts, or if the juvenile is at least 15 years old and
is alleged to have violated any state criminal law. This bill raises from 14 to 16 the
age at which waiver of juvenile court jurisdiction may be requested for the
commission of certain acts, but allows waiver for a juvenile who is at least 14 years
old and is alleged to have committed an act that would be a Class A or Class B felony
if committed by an adult. This bill also removes the current law provision allowing
waiver of juvenile court jurisdiction for a juvenile who is alleged to have violated any
state criminal law.
SERIOUS JUVENILE OFFENDER PROGRAM
This bill makes changes to eligibility for the Serious Juvenile Offender Program
(SJOP). Under current law, the juvenile court may order a juvenile to participate in
the SJOP if the juvenile has been adjudicated delinquent for committing certain
felony crimes. The SJOP provides a juvenile with supervision, care, and
rehabilitation that is more restrictive than ordinary supervision in the community
and includes component phases that are intensive, highly structured, and based on
public safety considerations and the participant's need for supervision, care, and
rehabilitation.
Under current law, in order to qualify for the SJOP, a juvenile must meet certain
age limits, must be adjudicated delinquent for the commission or attempted
commission of certain crimes, and must be found to be a danger to the public and to
be in need of restrictive custodial treatment. This bill increases the age limits for
participation in the SJOP.
EXTENDING OUT-OF-HOME CARE TO AGE 21
This bill permits a child to remain in a foster home, group home, or residential
care center for children and youth, in the home of a relative, or in a supervised
independent living arrangement (out-of-home care) until the child attains 21 years
of age if the child 1) is a full-time student at a secondary school or its vocational or
technical equivalent and is reasonably expected to complete the program before
reaching 21 years of age; 2) is enrolled in an institution that provides postsecondary
or vocational education; 3) is participating in a program or activity designed to
promote, or remove barriers to, employment; 4) is employed for at least 80 hours per
month; or 5) is incapable of doing any of those activities due to a medical condition,
which incapacity is supported by regularly updated information in the child's
permanency plan. The bill also permits a relative, guardian, or adoptive parent of
such a child to continue receiving kinship care payments, subsidized guardianship
payments, or adoption assistance for the care and maintenance of such a child until
the child attains 21 years of age.
Under current law, the federal Department of Health and Human Services
provides foster care and adoption assistance under Title IV-E of the Social Security
Act for the care of persons under 18 years of age and, at the option of a state, for
persons under 19, 20, or 21 years of age, as a state may elect, who are 1) completing
secondary education or a program leading to an equivalent credential; 2) enrolled in
an institution that provides postsecondary or vocational education; 3) participating
in a program or activity designed to promote, or remove barriers to, employment; 4)
employed for at least 80 hours per month; or 5) incapable of doing any of those
activities due to a medical condition, which incapacity is supported by regularly
updated information in the child's case plan. Currently, this state permits a person
to remain in out-of-home care until he or she has attained 19 years of age, if he or
she is is a full-time student at a secondary school or its vocational or technical
equivalent and is reasonably expected to complete the program before reaching 19
years of age, and permits a person to remain in out-of-home care until he or she has
attained 21 years of age, if he or she is a full-time student at a secondary school or
its vocational or technical equivalent and if an individualized education program,
which is a program under which special education and related services are provided
to a person with a disability, is in effect for the person.
CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION OF A JUVENILE
This bill changes the requirements for conducting a custodial interrogation of
a juvenile and limits the exceptions for admitting statements made during an
improper interrogation into evidence at a hearing. Under current law, when a law
enforcement officer conducts a custodial interrogation of a juvenile, the law
enforcement officer is required to record the interrogation. If the interrogation is not
recorded, a statement made during the interrogation is inadmissible as evidence at
the juvenile's hearing, unless one of the following exceptions applies:
1. The juvenile refused to respond or cooperate in the custodial interrogation
if an audio or audio and visual recording was made of the interrogation so long as a
law enforcement officer or agent of a law enforcement agency made a
contemporaneous audio or audio and visual recording or written record of the
juvenile's refusal.
2. The statement was made in response to a question asked as part of the
routine processing after the juvenile was taken into custody.
3. The law enforcement officer or agent of a law enforcement agency conducting
the interrogation in good faith failed to make an audio or audio and visual recording
of the interrogation because the recording equipment did not function, the officer or
agent inadvertently failed to operate the equipment properly, or, without the officer's
or agent's knowledge, the equipment malfunctioned or stopped operating.
4. The statement was made spontaneously and not in response to a question
by a law enforcement officer or agent of a law enforcement agency.
5. Exigent public safety circumstances existed that prevented the making of
an audio or audio and visual recording or rendered the making of such a recording
infeasible.
This bill requires a person who is conducting a custodial interrogation of a
juvenile, in addition to recording the interrogation, to notify the juvenile's parent,
guardian, legal custodian, or Indian custodian before conducting the interrogation,
to notify a juvenile who is being interrogated that the interrogation is being recorded,
and to notify a juvenile who is under the age of 16 that he or she is being interrogated.
Under the bill, if the parent, guardian, legal custodian or Indian custodian did not
receive notice of the interrogation, the juvenile did not receive the appropriate notice,
or the interrogation was not recorded, a statement made during the interrogation is
inadmissible as evidence at the juvenile's hearing, unless one of the following
exceptions applies:
1. The statement was made spontaneously and not in response to a question
by a law enforcement officer or agent of a law enforcement agency.
2. Exigent public safety circumstances existed that prevented the notification
of the parent, guardian, legal custodian, or Indian custodian or prevented the
making of an audio or audio and visual recording or rendered the making of such a
recording infeasible.
This bill also changes the definition of “custodial interrogation” for the purposes
of interrogating a juvenile to refer to a “reasonable juvenile of a similar age” instead
of a “reasonable person.”
JUVENILE CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM
Under current law, DCF, in consultation with the Department of Corrections,
must make available to all counties a juvenile classification system that includes a
risk assessment instrument for determining the probability that a juvenile who has
committed an offense will commit another offense, a needs assessment instrument
for determining the service needs of a juvenile who has committed an offense, and
a services and placement guide for integrating the risk and needs of a juvenile who
has committed an offense with other factors to determine an appropriate placement
and level of services for the juvenile. Under current law, a county may use the
juvenile classification system to determine, at the time of an intake inquiry, whether
to close a case, enter into a deferred prosecution agreement, or refer the case to the
district attorney; recommend, at the time of disposition, a placement and a plan of
rehabilitation, treatment, and care for the juvenile; and determine, after disposition,
the level or intensity of supervisory contacts required for a juvenile under county
supervision.
This bill requires an intake worker to use the juvenile classification system as
part of the intake inquiry with a juvenile after providing notice to the juvenile,
parent, guardian, and legal custodian, but only if the juvenile has not refused to
participate.
Deferred prosecution agreement
Under current law, when a juvenile is alleged to have violated a law or
municipal ordinance, he or she may be referred to the juvenile court for intake and
a determination of whether a petition should be filed in that court. An intake worker
provides intake services to the juvenile, such as screening and interviewing the
juvenile, determining whether and where the juvenile should be held, and whether
to close the case or request that a petition for delinquency be filed.
Under current law, as an alternative to closing a case or referring it to a district
attorney to file a petition, an intake worker may enter into a written deferred
prosecution agreement (DPA) with all parties if the intake worker has determined
that neither the interests of the juvenile nor of the public require the filing of a
delinquency petition; if the facts persuade the intake worker that the jurisdiction of
the juvenile court, if sought, would exist; and if the juvenile and his or her parent,
guardian, and legal custodian consent. The DPA may impose obligations on the
juvenile, parent, guardian, or legal custodian, such as treatment, counseling,
restitution, or a teen court program. If at any time during the period of a DPA the
intake worker determines that the obligations imposed under it are not being met,
the intake worker may cancel the agreement and request that a delinquency petition
be filed. If the obligations under the DPA are met, then no petition may be filed or
citation issued on the charges that brought about the agreement.
Under this bill, unless an intake worker decides to close a case, the intake
worker must enter into a DPA with all parties if all of the following apply:
1. The juvenile is referred because he or she is alleged to have committed a
status offense or an act that would be a misdemeanor if committed by an adult or
violated a civil law punishable by forfeiture or a county, town, or other municipal
ordinance.
2. The juvenile has no more than two prior adjudications.
3. The juvenile has no more than three prior unsuccessful deferred prosecution
agreement attempts.
4. The juvenile, parent, guardian, and legal custodian consent.
An exception to this requirement to enter into a DPA is that the intake worker
may instead refer the case to the district attorney if the results of the juvenile
classification system indicate the juvenile is high risk, or the results indicate the
juvenile is a moderate risk and the case arises out of an alleged act that would be a
Class A misdemeanor in violation of laws prohibiting crimes against life and bodily
security or crimes against health and safety if committed by an adult.
Under current law, a district attorney may terminate a DPA and instead file a
delinquency petition against the juvenile. With respect to the circumstance under
the bill in which a DPA is required, a district attorney may not terminate the
agreement or file a delinquency petition against the juvenile unless one of the
following applies:
The juvenile or his or her parent, guardian, or legal custodian fails to respond
to the intake worker's preliminary inquiry regarding eligibility for a DPA or an offer
of a DPA.
2. The juvenile or his or her parent, guardian, or legal custodian does not
consent to the DPA.
3. The juvenile fails to substantially comply with the conditions in the DPA.
4. The intake worker refers the case to the district attorney under the exception
based on the results of the juvenile classification system or the type of alleged act.