logo
‘This is not a good trajectory': Juvenile detention reaches highest level since 2018, prompting warning from youth advocates

‘This is not a good trajectory': Juvenile detention reaches highest level since 2018, prompting warning from youth advocates

Boston Globe27-04-2025

Advertisement
'This is not a good trajectory,' said Leon Smith, executive director of the Boston-based advocacy group Citizens for Juvenile Justice. 'I remember growing up [at a time] when every fight on the playground was not considered a police matter.'
The harsh approach of the 1990s had a profound effect on area youth and their families, according to advocates, researchers, and personal accounts. Worcester native Jinazean Ball was in fourth grade the first time he was locked up, his mother, Alice Ball, said in an interview. Jinazean Ball, now 37 years old, spent hours in a holding cell after a scuffle with a classmate, until his mom could leave work to pick up him.
'That's something he never got over,' she told the Globe. 'It really messed up his head.'
Advertisement
The Balls told their story in a
Ball was found guilty of simple assault on his classmate and ordered to complete weekly drug tests — from ages 10 to 15.
'That was a rough moment in our life right there,' Alice Ball said.
Jinazean Ball got a hug from his mother, Alice Ball, in their home in Worcester.
Suzanne Kreiter/Globe Staff
'The effects are life altering,' said chris bijoux, a deputy director at Georgetown University's Center for Juvenile Justice Reform who helped produce the film.
The increase in recent years brought detention referrals to their highest level since 2018, according to the report, despite efforts by state agencies, child advocates, and prosecutors to divert juveniles away from the criminal justice system. In 2018, the state passed a criminal justice bill barring prosecution for kids under 12 years old, decriminalized nonviolent disturbances at schools, and authorized judges to divert juvenile cases before arraignment.
The state's Department of Youth Services said in a statement that the 2018 law led to a major drop in the number of youths held for low-level offenses, and it is too early to draw conclusions from post-pandemic data showing an increase in detentions. The agency also highlighted its ongoing expansion of diversion programs.
'DYS recognizes that evidence-based, data-driven diversion programming is a proven strategy for intervention in and prevention of further justice system involvement and is committed to ensuring that all young people across the Commonwealth have equitable opportunities for access,' said DYS Commissioner Cecely Reardon.
Advertisement
Jay Blitzman, the former first justice of the Massachusetts Juvenile Court in Middlesex County, described the findings as 'disconcerting' and 'surprising.'
'If we are detaining young people, they're being disconnected from their community and the socially connective tissue they need for positive youth development,' Blitzman said.
State Senator Brendan Crighton, who co-chairs the Senate's committee on juvenile justice, said
'I was taken aback a bit that despite some really strong efforts by a lot of major stakeholders, we are still seeing these pretrial detentions,' Crighton said.
The report's findings are dispiriting and tough to understand, said Migdalia Iris Nalls, head of the Suffolk district attorney's juvenile division.
'What I've been trying to do is essentially the opposite,' Nalls said. 'Within Suffolk, we've been working to reduce the number of kids in pretrial [detention.]'
The COVID-19 pandemic sent shockwaves through the Massachusetts' juvenile justice system. Case numbers first plummeted during lockdowns, then skyrocketed as schools, courts, and other public spaces reopened throughout 2021 and 2022.
Nalls, a former juvenile public defender, joined the DA's office that year, with a mandate to stem the tide.
Yet as the office has assigned more juveniles accused of low-level crimes to diversion programs, many more are often accused of more serious crimes.
Advertisement
Before the pandemic, Suffolk usually saw around 400 juvenile gun cases per year, Nalls said. Since then, case numbers have roughly doubled and the kids involved have gotten younger, she said.
'More and more young children have access to firearms in the city,' Nalls said.
Essex County held the highest number of juvenile dangerousness hearings last year, where prosecutors ask a judge to detain defendants who are alleged threats to public safety. Essex District Attorney Paul F. Tucker attributed those numbers to a spike in young people committing serious, gang-related crimes. But he said his office does not try to lock up kids accused of minor offenses, and has embraced diversion programs for those cases.
'We try to do it outside of the system, because we know the longer we can keep somebody out of the system age-wise, the better chance of success we have,' he said.
The number of kids in detention continued to increase even as overall case numbers plateaued last year, according to data from the Juvenile Justice Policy and Data Board. Pretrial detentions jumped 17 percent last year, driven largely by misdemeanor charges — many of which were later dismissed, according to the data. Just 14 percent of pretrial detentions occurred because a child was found too dangerous to release. In a quarter of detentions, juveniles were held because they could not pay their cash bail.
And that burden is not equally distributed. Cases and arrests increased for Black and Hispanic minors last year, while decreasing for white juveniles. That trend has worsened existing disparities in the system, according to the board. Black youth were more than five times likelier to be arrested than white youth — a disparity Smith described as 'absolutely jarring.'
Advertisement
Studies have found that youth detained pretrial are less likely to graduate high school and more likely to be arrested again in the future, even when accounting for demographic differences.
Kids in detention are isolated from the people they love and the support systems they rely on, said Duci Goncalves, director of the Youth Advocacy Division at the Committee for Public Counsel Services.
'Having those supports ripped from you and being put in a detention center where they don't know anyone — that is very traumatizing for a young person," Goncalves said.
Dan Glaun can be reached at

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hearing set June 12 in CARD Clinic seizure; sheriff's sale set for July 2
Hearing set June 12 in CARD Clinic seizure; sheriff's sale set for July 2

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Hearing set June 12 in CARD Clinic seizure; sheriff's sale set for July 2

Jun. 6—A federal judge in Missoula will hear arguments next week dealing with BNSF's attempts to seize the assets of Libby's CARD Clinic. The hearing is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Thursday, May 12, in the Russell Smith Federal Courthouse. Judge Dana L. Christensen will hear the case. Also, Lincoln County Sheriff Darren Short signed a notice Thursday, June 5, giving notice to a sheriff's sale July 2 to the highest bidder to satisfy the judgment for the plaintiff, BNSF, with interest and costs. While the date is subject to change pending an order from the court, the sale is currently set for 10 a.m. Wednesday, July 2. According to Montana code, the sheriff's office has 120 days from the day it received the writ to conduct the sale. The sale will include the real property as well as office equipment, furnishings, and other machinery, fixtures and equipment. For more information, contact the sheriff's office at 406-293-4112, ext. 1232. The non-profit clinic, which has served thousands of patients afflicted with asbestosis and other deadly ailments, has been closed since May 7 when the Lincoln County Sheriff's Office served a Writ of Execution on the Center for Asbestos Related Disease, Inc. to satisfy a $3.1 million judgment. A writ of execution is a court order directing a sheriff to seize and sell property to satisfy a judgment. The judgment stems from a lawsuit won in 2023 by Texas-based BNSF, owned by billionaire Warren Buffett, that accused the clinic of filing hundreds of fraudulent claims over several years. Federal jurors ruled two years ago that the clinic made or presented false claims 337 times, including 91 violations after November 2015. CARD filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in August 2023, allowing it to continue operations. But the United States intervened in the bankruptcy proceeding and determined that the judgment should not be paid, so the bankruptcy was settled and dismissed in spring 2024. In September 2024, CARD lost an appeal to a jury's 2023 judgment. In the meantime, CARD officials recently found another location to serve its patients. It is located at 118 West 3rd Street. It will be open the same hours as the clinic, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Wednesday. "We are still receiving grant money and we have a mission to fulfill so we're pleased we can still offer some services," McNew said. "Patients are welcome to stop in and we'll work to answer their questions." McNew said they are able to answer emails from patients and send test results to patients. She also hopes that they will be able to continue outreach education. Another hope is that the new location will have working phones next week. McNew said since the seizure of the clinic, BNSF has taken at least $100,000 from the clinic's operating account. In a May 9 court filing, Billings-based Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mark Smith and Lynsey Ross filed a motion in Lincoln County District Court to quash the court's writ on the CARD Clinic. In the motion, the attorneys said it contacted BNSF attorney Cole Anderson and requested the company withdraw the application. But the company declined and objected to the motion. "In 2023, a Montana jury found that the CARD clinic had submitted false asbestos claims costing taxpayers millions of dollars. The judge determined the amount of damages to be repaid, and the process for recovery is set by law," said Kendall Sloan, BNSF Director of External Communicatons. According to a declaration by CARD Executive Director Tracy McNew filed with the motion to quash, she reported that all CARD employees were compelled to vacate the clinic May 7 following the seizure and the sheriff's office replaced all of the locks. Thursday, May 8, following a request, certain CARD employees were allowed to enter the clinic to access the CARD Quickbooks accounting program. McNew said sheriff's office officers monitored CARD employees activities and once they were done using the accounting program, they left the office and haven't returned. In a May 20 filing in federal court in Missoula, CARD's attorney, James A. Patten of Patten, Peterman, Bekkedahl and Green, a Billings firm, sought to join the federal motion to quash the writ and sought a preliminary injunction and temporary restraining order. CARD argues that the railway's writ violates bankruptcy proceedings and applicable law. It is seeking the injunction and restraining order to prevent further harm upon CARD and the wrongful interference with the clinic due to its status as a federal grant recipient. In 2011, CARD was chosen by the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry for a four-year grant for a screening program for environmental health hazards, including asbestosis, pleural thickening and pleural plaques, caused by exposure to hazardous substances at Libby's Superfund sites. The federal grants continued with the most recent reward in September 2024. It will run through August 2029. The argument also includes the harm the clinic will suffer because it cannot screen patients, provide education, monitor diagnosed patients and provide follow up of testing results and respond to patient requests. In another declaration by McNew, she said the clinic had to cancel about 50 appointments per week since the May 7 closure. It also said the clinic's pulmonary function testing equipment, the only of its kind in Lincoln County, has sat unused as a result of BNSF's seizure. "CARD has on several occasions identified patients in need of emergency care and/or serious treatment for previously undiagnosed malignancies as part of our routine screenings," McNew wrote. BNSF replied to the clinic's filings in a 53-page document filed May 30 in federal court. Among its arguments, railway attorneys Knight Nicastro MacKay maintain because the federal government didn't intervene in the original lawsuit, it doesn't have a right to stop BNSF from recovering money from the judgment. "The Government begins by claiming that litigation in which the United States is a party is reserved to the officers of the Department of Justice, under the direction of the Attorney General, citing U.S. statute. But BNSF attorneys say federal attorneys left out a relevant portion of the statue which directly applies. It reads, "Except as otherwise authorized by law, the conduct of litigation in which the United States, an agency, or officer thereof is a party, or is interested, and securing evidence therefor, is reserved to officers of the Department of Justice, under the direction of the Attorney General." They also say because CARD has mixed its grant income with non-grant income that it must prove its bank accounts and property represent only grant money. During the 2023 trial, a number of donations from plaintiff attorneys were revealed. From 2012 to 2017, the clinic received $81,000 from attorneys and $30,000 for a mortality study. Dr. Brad Black, CARD's former medical director, testified to $116,000 in donations from Montana plaintiff attorneys. The list didn't include two $10,0000 donations from a national plaintiffs' law firm or a $24,381.94 donation for the clinic's new parking lot. BNSF also believes CARD has received its most significant non-grant income in the form of Medicare payments for treating its patients. "This is the equivalent of personal income for CARD and the amount of this income what property it was used to buy is still unknown to BNSF," the attorneys argued. Railway attorneys also said they do not intend to use grant funds to satisfy the judgment or ask to liquidate CARD assets pending the federal court's review of whether grant funds were mixed with non-grant funds to secure the assets. Gold miners discovered vermiculite in Libby in 1881. In the 1920s, the Zonolite Company formed and began mining the vermiculite. In 1963, W.R. Grace bought the Zonolite mining operations. The mine closed in 1990. In 2002, the Environmental Protection Agency placed the site on the Superfund program's National Priorities List and cleanup work continues to this day. Fibers from the asbestos tied to vermiculite mining that began in the 1920s can embed in lung tissue and cause fatal lung disease. No one knows how many people in the region have died from the effects of asbestosis, mesothelioma or other cancers linked to exposure to asbestos-containing vermiculite mined, processed and shipped from Lincoln County and Libby. BNSF's involvement relates to asbestos-contaminated vermiculite in the rail yard that a 2024 federal jury said was a considerable factor in the negligent deaths of former Libby residents Thomas Wells and Joyce Walder. Both Wells and Walder lived near the railyard and were both diagnosed with mesothelioma and died in 2020. Hundreds of people died and more than 3,000 were sickened from asbestos exposure in the Libby area, according to researchers and health officials. BNSF faces accusations of negligence and wrongful death for failing to control clouds of contaminated dust that used to swirl from the rail yard and settle across Libby's neighborhoods. The vermiculite was shipped by rail from Libby for use as insulation in homes and businesses across the U.S.

Flying cars and supersonic flights? Trump turns on boosters for new-age tech
Flying cars and supersonic flights? Trump turns on boosters for new-age tech

USA Today

time18 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Flying cars and supersonic flights? Trump turns on boosters for new-age tech

Flying cars and supersonic flights? Trump turns on boosters for new-age tech President Donald Trump's newest executive orders aim to speed development of aviation tech, including high-speed flights and flying cars. Show Caption Hide Caption Watch this $300,000 flying car prototype takeoff California flying car company, Alef, debuted their flying car prototype which will cost about $300,000. WASHINGTON − Flying cars. Drone deliveries. Supersonic flights. President Donald Trump is aiming to speed up commercial development of new-age aviation tech by reducing regulations administration says have hindered testing and production. "This year, flying cars are not just for the Jetsons. They are also for the American people in the near term," Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, told reporters. Trump in an executive order directed the Federal Aviation Administration to expedite approval for routine commercial drone operations that retailers such as Amazon have said are crucial to expanding airborne deliveries. Orders that Trump signed will also allow manufacturers to begin testing flying cars and removed regulatory barriers his administration says are preventing supersonic over land passenger flights from being introduced in the United States. The changes will also allow drones to be used to be used in emergency response situations, including responding to wildfires, and long-distance cargo and medical delivery, the administration says. Trump's order establishes a pilot program for electrical vertical take-off and landing aircraft, known as eVTOLs, a type of flying car, that his administration hopes will lead to public private partnerships across the country. It is based on a 2017 program from the first Trump administration and will apply to emergency medical services, air taxis and cargo deliveries among other areas. The administration says the program will allow companies that are already conducting this type of testing, such as Joby's air taxi service, to partner with state, local and tribal governments. The California-based company plans to begin flight testing in Dubai within months and aims to launch passenger services on the aircraft in late 2025 or early 2026. Flying cars are coming! Here's how they could change the way you travel. Another order instructs the FAA to establish a standard for noise certification and lift a ban on overland supersonic flight. Kratsios said that advances in aerospace engineering and noise reduction have made over land supersonic flight safe, sustainable and commercially viable but federal regulations have grounded the speedy passenger flights and weakened U.S. companies' competitiveness. "The reality is that Americans should be able to fly from New York to LA in under four hours," Kratsios said. Trump separately established a federal task force to review and propose solutions to threats to America's airspace from personal unmanned aircraft and directed his administration to step up enforcement of civil and criminal laws against drone operators who endanger the public or violate airspace restrictions. The directives were issued with the 2026 FIFA World Cup and 2028 Summer Olympics on the horizon.

Acting ICE Director calls Mayor Wu's neo-Nazi comparison 'disgusting' amid increase in agent assaults
Acting ICE Director calls Mayor Wu's neo-Nazi comparison 'disgusting' amid increase in agent assaults

Fox News

time34 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Acting ICE Director calls Mayor Wu's neo-Nazi comparison 'disgusting' amid increase in agent assaults

Acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Director Todd Lyons slammed Boston Mayor Michelle Wu and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries on "Fox & Friends" on Friday for their "disgusting" rhetoric about the department, which he felt put him and his agents in danger. Wu compared ICE agents wearing masks to members of the neo-Nazi group the Nationalist Social Club-131 (NSC-131) during a press conference on Wednesday, amid government claims that ICE agents have faced a 413% increase in assaults. "I don't know of any police department that routinely wears masks," Wu said on Wednesday. "NSC-131 routinely wears masks." When someone asked Wu whether she was comparing ICE to a neo-Nazi group, the mayor replied, "What I said is that Boston police, and no police department that I know of at the local level, routinely wears masks." Jeffries declared on Tuesday that all ICE agents who perpetrate "aggressive overreach" and attempt to conceal "their identities from the American people, will be unsuccessful in doing that." They will all be identified "no matter what it takes, no matter how long it takes," he asserted, saying that is what the law requires. Lyons expressed his outrage over Wu and Jeffries' "disgusting" comments to Fox News' Lawrence B. Jones. "I used to say I was pretty disheartened by the political rhetoric, but I've totally changed to it's outright disgusting," he asserted. "What Mayor Wu said is completely disgusting. She actually compared us to a neo-Nazi group. And here I am on [June] 6 where many of the men of ICE —brave men and women that were veterans — on the great day in military history when we defeated the Germans and the Nazi Party, we have elected officials comparing the brave men and women in law enforcement to Nazis. It's completely disgusting." The acting director claimed the rhetoric being used by Wu and Jeffries is leading to violence against him and his agents, with his own home being targeted by masked protesters at 3:00 a.m. after his address was leaked. "They may not like it, but what the men and women of ICE are doing in Massachusetts and all over this country is making communities safer," he declared. "And under Secretary [Kristi] Noem, she is giving her vision, her leadership to go out there and make these communities safer and that's what ICE is doing." After being asked how many agents he suspects to have been doxxed so far, Lyons estimated that "if not hundreds, thousands" have already had their identities involuntarily revealed. "Look at Massachusetts alone, we had an officer — his photo went viral everywhere. One of the best officers, the most mild-mannered, nicest human beings on the planet, yet he was described in the worst way, with his photo taped to every street corner — to telephone poles identifying him," Lyons said. "Just for doing his job." Wu and Jeffries didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store