Legal Docket

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Date
11 - 20 of 443 resultsReset
Extended Foster Care
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit •
This brief was filed in support of Plaintiffs to affirm the district court’s ruling that the Younger abstention should extend no further than the three exceptional circumstances set forth by the Supreme Court. The brief explains that the affirmance of the district court’s order will permit Plaintiffs, youth poised to transition out of the foster care system, to redress serious injuries caused by Defendants’ failure to provide safe and suitable foster care placements for youth.
Youth Interrogations & Access to Counsel
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit •
The brief emphasized that children have the right to meaningfully participate in immigration proceedings and dedicated legal counsel is necessary to facilitate that participation. Moreover, the brief argued that legal counsel is vital to protect children from the well-documented, severe physical and emotional mistreatment children suffer while in custody and to mitigate the detrimental impact of ongoing separation from their families. Finally, the brief highlighted research that shows appointing counsel saves the government money because lawyers expedite case resolution, shorten the time children spend in care, and reduce more costly case outcomes.
Juvenile Life Without Parole (JLWOP)
Colorado Supreme Court •
Our brief presented substantial research demonstrating that older adolescents, including 19-year-olds like Mr. Hazard, share the same developmental characteristics the Supreme Court relied on in Miller to hold that mandatory life without parole is unconstitutional for youth under 18 and urged the court to o follow the lead of state supreme courts in Michigan, Massachusetts, and Washington, which have all recently found that mandatory life without parole is unconstitutional for youth under 21.
Juvenile Life Without Parole (JLWOP)
Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals •
We argued that Mr. Daniel did not receive an individualized sentencing hearing to assess his youth and its attendant characteristics, as required by Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S. 460 (2012) and State v. Booker, 656 S.W.3d 49 (Tenn. 2022). We further argued that Mr. Daniel’s youth was likely used against him due to the racist “superpredator” myth that led to the disproportionate punishment of Black youth like Mr. Daniel in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Extended Foster Care
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit •
Amici argued that the district court’s order has far-reaching consequences that will deprive youth of systemwide remedies for violations of their constitutional rights and that institutional reform litigation is necessary to secure constitutional protections, particularly for historically marginalized groups, and has delivered meaningful, long-lasting results.
Keeping Kids in the Community
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit •
The brief argued that the fundamental right to family integrity extends to children and that in order to protect children’s right to family integrity, it is essential to protect children’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from warrantless “emergency” removals by requiring agencies to take a narrowly tailored approach in their interventions and applying a rigorous and strict standard of review when evaluating those interventions. Additionally, the brief emphasized that children suffer long-term emotional and psychological harm that negatively impact them in adulthood when they are unnecessarily separated from their parents.
Extended Foster Care
New York Court of Appeals •
The brief was filed in the appeal of a ruling which found a father neglected his child by failing to prevent the child’s mother from using drugs. The brief emphasizes how rulings like this violate non-birthing parents’ and children’s fundamental right to family integrity and causes tremendous psychological and emotional harm to children. Finally, the brief outlines how this ruling will likely discourage non-birthing parents from being involved in the pregnancy because the ruling ultimately punishes the involvement.
Extended Foster Care
Michigan Court of Appeals •
Our brief highlighted the unique and devastating harms that youth in the foster system suffer when they are banned from visiting their incarcerated parents in person, including the perspectives of Juvenile Law Center’s youth advocates with experience navigating these harms. Our brief further argued that in-person visits with incarcerated parents are critical to the wellbeing of children in the foster system, especially because visitation is crucial to the goal of family reunification. Finally, we discussed the ways in which St. Clair County Jail’s ban on in-person family visits entrenches racial and economic disparities. Our brief details the foster system’s disproportionate separation of Black, Latine, and Indigenous families.
Juvenile Life Without Parole (JLWOP)
Michigan Supreme Court •
We argued that current research supports affording 20-year-olds the same sentencing protections that the Michigan Supreme Court previously extended to 18-year-olds because 20-year-olds share essentially the same developmental characteristics as 18-year-olds and are equally less culpable than older adults.
Keeping Kids in the Community
Pennsylvania Supreme Court •
Our brief explained that attendance records are often incorrect and unreliable and should not, alone, support a finding of dependency. We emphasized that school records should be subject to the same indicia of reliability and rigorous interrogation as other business records – as required by the rules of evidence. The brief also argued that truancy does not justify the trauma and harm associated with subjecting a family to ongoing oversight or separating children from their families. Furthermore, the brief highlighted that the racial disparities in the Child Welfare system are exacerbated by dependency adjudications based on truancy alone and described the United States’ long legacy of systematically devaluing and dismantling Black families and discussed the ways in which Black children are disproportionately subject to punishment for truancy and placement in dependent care.