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      • Inmate status means when an individual sentenced to the Department of Corrections is on parole, work release, completes a sentence, is transferred to a half -way house, is on furlough, is transferred to another facility, is deceased, is issued a travel permit, or is discharged.
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  1. Jul 20, 2017 · If you are facing incarceration, or if you have a family member or friend who is in prison or jail, you should know about inmates' rights. The rights of inmates include the following: The right to humane facilities and conditions. The right to be free from sexual crimes. The right to be free from racial segregation.

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  3. The Turner Rule: Under the First Amendment, a prison regulation that stops you from speaking, expressing yourself, or interacting with other people must be reasonably related to a legitimate government interest.

  4. A status offense is an action that is prohibited only to a certain class of people, and most often applied only to crimes committed by minors. In the United States, the term status offense also refers to an offense such as a traffic violation where motive is not a consideration in determining guilt.

    • What Are sta­tus Offenses?
    • Do Young peo­ple Go to Court For Juve­Nile sta­tus Offenses?
    • What’s The Best Response to Young peo­ple with sta­tus Offenses?
    • What’s The Worst That Can hap­pen to Juve­Nile sta­tus Offenders?
    • Relat­Ed Resources on Juve­Nile sta­tus Offenses

    The five most com­mon juve­nile sta­tus offense exam­ples include: 1. skip­ping school, 2. drink­ing while underage; 3. run­ning away; 4. vio­lat­ing cur­few; and 5. act­ing out (also known as ungovern­abil­i­ty, incor­ri­gi­bil­i­ty or being beyond the con­trol of one’s parents). Most youths who engage in sta­tus and oth­er minor offens­es nev­er ...

    In some juris­dic­tions, sta­tus offense cas­es are referred to social ser­vice agen­cies or fam­i­ly cri­sis units that can offer young peo­ple guid­ance and sup­port. Oth­er juris­dic­tions rely on the juve­nile jus­tice sys­tem, despite evi­dence that puni­tive respons­es to these types of behav­iors are inef­fec­tive. In 2016, the most recent y...

    The Annie E. Casey Foun­da­tion makes the case for address­ing pre­dictable ado­les­cent mis­be­hav­ior out­side of the court sys­tem in its report Trans­form­ing Juve­nile Pro­ba­tion: A Vision for Get­ting It Right. Young peo­ple with sta­tus offens­es should be held account­able for their mis­be­hav­ior by par­ents, teach­ers and oth­ers in the ...

    Since 1974, the fed­er­al Juve­nile Jus­tice and Delin­quen­cy Pre­ven­tion Act has dis­cour­aged states from plac­ing youth with juve­nile sta­tus offens­es in secure deten­tion or locked con­fine­ment. States that do hold large num­bers of these youths in secure deten­tion risk los­ing a sig­nif­i­cant por­tion of their juve­nile jus­tice block g...

  5. Title 18 of the United States Code, § 1521, establishes a criminal offense for filing, attempting to file, or conspiring to file, a false lien or encumbrance against the real or personal property of a federal judge or federal law enforcement officer.

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  6. In February 2010, the ABA House of Delegates approved a set of ABA Criminal Justice Standards on Treatment of Prisoners. These Standards supplant the previous ABA Criminal Justice Standards on the Legal Status of Prisoners and, in addition, new Standard 23-6.15 supplants Standards 7-10.2 and 7-10.5 through 7-10.9 of the ABA Criminal Justice ...

  7. Inmates are persons confined in prison, jails, and other correctional facilites that house those convicted of crimes. Even the most chronic or hardened inmates have basic rights that are protected by the U.S. Constitution.

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