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MEDIA ADVISORY: Juvenile Justice Reentry Reform Task Force to Meet Wednesday in Raleigh

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WHAT: 

The task force that designed and is working to implement a comprehensive strategic plan to improve the successful reintegration of juveniles into the community following their contact with the juvenile justice system is  scheduled to meet in Raleigh on Wednesday.

The Juvenile Justice Reentry Reform Task Force was formed last year to fulfill a requirement of a grant North Carolina received from the federal Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention: the FY 2014 Second Chance Act, Comprehensive Statewide Juvenile Reentry Systems Reform Planning Program grant.

Additional information on juvenile justice reentry reform efforts and the task force, including the meeting agenda, can be found online.
 

WHERE:Wednesday, July 20, 2016; 10 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
 
WHEN: 3010 Hammond Business Place, Room 144, Raleigh
 

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Juvenile escapes from leave in Wilson

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A juvenile committed through the juvenile justice system to the custody of the Division of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice and placed at the Edgecombe Youth Development Center has failed to return from an 8-hour leave with his family. 
 
Juvenile Escapee Malik RThe juvenile identified as first name Malik last initial R failed to return Sunday. The juvenile's home county is Wilson.  The division has notified local law enforcement and is cooperating fully with the search and investigation.
 
Members of the public should report sightings of this juvenile to local law enforcement officials.  For additional information, please contact Keith Acree with the Department of Public Safety's Communications Office.  

Thursday Open House Scheduled at Western Area Multipurpose Juvenile Crisis and Assessment Center

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The Division of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice will host an open house at the Western Area Multipurpose Juvenile Crisis and Assessment Center in Asheville. This nine-bed center, operated as a state and private partnership with the Methodist Home for Children, will provide crisis intervention, assessment and service planning for adjudicated youth who require a temporary out-of-home placement to stabilize their behaviors. Four of the nine beds will serve secure-custody youth. The goal of this project is to develop an effective plan of care, reduce further court involvement, promote stronger families and to assure safer communities.

This center, which will begin serving juveniles from the Western area in mid-September, is located in the former Buncombe Juvenile Detention Center, which was renovated to meet the specific needs of this project.

WHEN:

Thursday, Aug. 25, 10:30 a.m.

WHO:

Commissioner W. David Guice, Division of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice; William Lassiter, Deputy Commissioner - Juvenile Justice; Rev. Bruce E. Stanley, President/CEO, Methodist Home for Children Inc.

WHERE:

20 Lees Creek Rd, Asheville, NC 28806 (Former Buncombe Juvenile Detention Center)

Department of Public Safety prepares to open juvenile justice center in Asheville

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Officials with the Division of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice today during an open house offered community leaders and elected officials their first view of the Western Area Multipurpose Juvenile Crisis and Assessment Center in Asheville. This nine-bed center, operated through a public-private partnership with the Methodist Home for Children, will provide crisis intervention, assessment and service planning for adjudicated youth who require a temporary out-of-home placement to stabilize their behaviors.

Located in the renovated former Buncombe Juvenile Detention Center, the center – one of three crisis and assessment centers to open within the past year in North Carolina – will begin serving juveniles from the 28 western counties in mid-September.

“Like our other centers, this center offers quick access to temporary crisis care, and assessment services to match the children with the treatment or services they need,” said W. David Guice, Commissioner of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice. “As part of our Juvenile Strategic Facilities Plan and in response to the latest research, our goal is to reserve detention for those juveniles who truly present a threat to the public or to themselves. These centers offer an alternative to detention for cases where we see a child and family may be in crisis, but where detention is not the correct answer.”

The Asheville center is set apart from the others with its multipurpose mission. “Four of the nine beds will serve secure-custody youth,” said William Lassiter, deputy commissioner for Juvenile Justice. “Time spent transporting youth under secure custody orders to and from detention and court hearings in western North Carolina skyrocketed following the 2013 closure of the Buncombe Juvenile Detention Center. The closest detention center is in Taylorsville, a one-way trip of four hours from some parts of this area. This new center in Buncombe County will help reduce time spent on the road, while keeping juveniles closer to home to encourage family engagement.”

The renovation of the former Buncombe Juvenile Detention Center began in March 2015 and was completed just more than a year later at a cost of approximately $1.44 million. Masters Gentry Architects, based in Asheville, designed the building; the DPS Central Engineering team led the project, and the DPS Inmate Construction Program was heavily involved in the building’s renovation.

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Juveniles Escape from Edgecombe Youth Development Center

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The Division of Adult Correction and Juvenile Justice reports that four juveniles are at large following an escape last night from a juvenile facility located in Rocky Mount. The juveniles ran from Edgecombe Youth Development Center, located at 78 Positive Way in Rocky Mount, following an assault on a staff member.

The escape occurred at approximately 9:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 21. The four juveniles at large following the escape are identified as: Dakota Y. from Guilford County; Joshua G. from Wake County; Justin M. from Carteret County; and Juan M. of New Hanover County. The division immediately notified local law enforcement and is cooperating fully with the investigation.

Division officials have a high degree of concern for the safety of both the juveniles and the public, due to the assaultive behavior exhibited by the juveniles during the escape and/or a prior history of unpredictable behavior.

The most recently taken photographs of the juvenile escapees are below. Members of the public should report sightings of these juveniles to local law enforcement officials.

For additional information, please contact Diana Kees with the Department of Public Safety’s Communications Office at 919-480-9868.

Dakota YJoshua GJustin MJuan M
Dakota Y.Joshua G.Justin M.Juan M.
 

Juvenile Escapees Apprehended, Returned to Secure Custody

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State and local law enforcement officials have apprehended four juveniles who last night escaped from the Edgecombe Youth Development Center.

Officials with the Spring Hope Police Department apprehended Dakota Y. from Guilford County; Joshua G. from Wake County; Justin M. from Carteret County; and Juan M. of New Hanover County in Spring Hope this morning at around 9:45 a.m. All four juveniles have been returned to secure custody.

Those assisting in the search for the juveniles were the Spring Hope Police Department, Edgecombe County Sheriff’s Office and the Rocky Mount Police Department.

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Juvenile Reentry Reform Task Force

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Event Description

we will hear from the leadership of each of our four subcommittees (Education and Workforce Development, Family Engagement and Strengthening, Service Planning and Service Matching, and Evaluation) on the work accomplished to date for your review and input. We will also hear a progress report from our partners at SAS on their work to develop a directory of services and programs that will serve as the basis for data analytics in the near future.

Juvenile Justice Reentry Reform Task Force to Meet Monday in Raleigh

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The task force that designed and is working to implement a comprehensive strategic plan to improve the successful reintegration of juveniles into the community following their contact with the juvenile justice system is scheduled to meet in Raleigh on Monday.

The Juvenile Justice Reentry Reform Task Force was formed last year to fulfill a requirement of a grant North Carolina received from the federal Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention: the FY 2014 Second Chance Act, Comprehensive Statewide Juvenile Reentry Systems Reform Planning Program grant.

Additional information on juvenile justice reentry reform efforts and the task force, including the meeting agenda, can be found online.

                                 

WHEN:                 Monday, Oct. 17, 2016; 10 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

               

WHERE:              3010 Hammond Business Place, Room 144, Raleigh

 

                                                              

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