Orange County NC Website
I <br /> I <br /> Y <br /> 1 <br /> The diversity of conference attendees and speakers was incredible. There were people there <br /> from as far away as Iceland and New Zealand and it was interesting to hear about how their <br /> criminal and juvenile justice systems are structured and operated. <br /> I <br /> Guest Speakers 1 <br /> Kim Newsome & James Turner, Oasis — Local mental health agency in Hillsborough that <br /> provides mental health services for children and adolescents, outpatient therapy, psychological <br /> testing, comprehensive clinical assessments, and substance abuse services . <br /> Starting adolescent SAIOP groups this coming week and is open to young people to come as <br /> they need. They provide screening services, comprehensive clinical assessments, and will meet <br /> teens and families where they are . They like to have parent involvement and will offer Saturday <br /> and evening sessions to accommodate their work schedules . <br /> Cait Fenhagen & Kate Giduz, Misdemeanor Diversion Program — Started in April 2016 and was <br /> modeled after the program in Durham . It is located within the Orange County Criminal Justice <br /> Resource Center. The goal of MDP is to keep 16 and 17 year olds out of the criminal justice <br /> system and avoid the collateral consequences of adult charges . <br /> Currently the program serves 16 and 17 year olds but may consider moving the age up to 21 as <br /> the program becomes more established. North Carolina is one of only two states that still <br /> charges 16 and 17 year olds as adults despite recognition that this population are not adults and <br /> that if they can be diverted on misdemeanor charges and avoid the adult criminal justice system <br /> they can avoid the collateral consequences — future employment, housing, financial, etc. Even <br /> charges that end up in dismissal, they don' t ever go away without time and money for <br /> expungement. <br /> Most of the major law enforcement agencies are on board and outreach is still being done with a <br /> few of the smaller agencies (UNC Dept. of Public Safety, Park Police) . The goal is to have <br /> 100% of eligible MDP cases into the program. Eligibility criteria include : 16 or 17 at time of the <br /> offenses no prior charges in adult court (not even pending) ; youth with a juvenile record ARE <br /> eligible ; misdemeanor offenses only — no firearm offenses, sex offenses, traffic citations, or <br /> undisciplined. <br /> The MDP process begins by giving the 16 or 17 year old a card instructing them to contact Cait, <br /> Program Administrator, within 72 hours ; an incident report is completed, but not entered into any <br /> public database; a referral form along with the incident report is submitted to the law <br /> enforcement liaison, the liaison confirms that the referred is an eligible participant and sends the <br /> information to Cait within 48 hours ; Cait meets with the referred and does an intake interview; <br /> they are placed on a 90-day diversion plan, which includes 10- 15 hours of programming and a <br /> mandatory educational court information session (educates them on the collateral consequences <br /> of the adult criminal justice system) . <br /> If the youth is compliant with the requirements, Cait will contact the liaison and the officer who <br /> originally referred the case and the case will be closed completely. If they are not compliant, the <br /> liaison and referring officer has the decision to make on whether or not to file formal charges . It <br /> is important to note that the officers have the ultimate discretion on whether to refer cases to <br /> MDP or send to district court. Right now the program is trying to make sure that the officers <br /> remember that they have the option of referring to MDP . <br /> To date MDP has seen 22 referrals , more males than females, more white than African American <br /> and Latino, 15 successful completions, and 2 referrals that had to be turned down for insufficient <br />