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5 - Assessing children's competence to stand trial and to waive Miranda rights: new directions for legal and medical decision-making in juvenile courts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 August 2009

Thomas F. Geraghty
Affiliation:
Director of the Blum Legal Clinic, Northwestern University School of Law 357 E. Chicago Avenue Chicago, IL 60611-8576 USA
Louis J. Kraus
Affiliation:
Womans Board Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Chief Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Rush University Medical Center Marshal Field IV Building 1720 West Polk Street Chicago, IL 60612 USA
Peter Fink
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Rush University Medical Center Marshall Field IV Building 1720 West Polk Street Chicago, IL 60612 USA
Carol L. Kessler
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
Louis James Kraus
Affiliation:
Rush University, Chicago
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Summary

Introduction

This chapter discusses the distinct but related issues of a child's competence to stand trial, to understand and to waive Miranda rights, and to make a knowing and voluntary statement when interrogated by police and prosecutors.

We begin this chapter with a brief overview of the history of the law relevant to the issues of a child's competence to stand trial. We then discuss the legal and medical frameworks for assessing a child's competence to stand trial.

We go on to present and to analyze the legal and medical frameworks and methodologies for assessing a child's competence to waive Miranda rights. We then turn to the methods by which lawyers and medical personnel evaluate a child's competence in these areas. These assessments play a central role in determining the admissibility into evidence of children's statements to law enforcement.

Finally, we include a section on the interactions and relationships between the judges, lawyers, and medical experts who participate in the assessment process and in the process of adjudicating competence to stand trial and children's capacity to make a knowing, intelligent waiver of Miranda warnings. It is important for all involved in the assessment and adjudicative process to understand the role of each actor in the process, and the dynamics of relationships that can affect the quality of the judge's decision as to admissibility of a child's statement to law enforcement.

The issues discussed in this chapter are of central importance to the juvenile court's adjudicative process.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Mental Health Needs of Young Offenders
Forging Paths toward Reintegration and Rehabilitation
, pp. 79 - 121
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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