PASCO COUNTY JUVENILE CRIME

December 8, 2010
By Pawuk & Pawuk on December 8, 2010 11:28 AM |

I handle alot of juvenile cases.  Almost every time a parent calls me about their child who has been arrested they say that the crime will be erased from their records when they turn 18.  The parents have been told this by the police when the child is arrested, by the teachers in a school, and by other parents.  This is not true - never has been - never will be.  And the worst part is, that if the kid has a prior record and is over 14 years old, the State has the discretion to file the charges in adult court.  Which means the kid can go to PRISON.  And if there's a gun involved in the crime, the kid almost always does. 

bart simpson.jpgLast week in Dade City, a 15 year old boy was sentenced to 4 years in prison for the 2008 burglary of a convenience store and shooting a Pasco County deputy. His name is Robert Green.  I was in court several weeks ago when he was also there, and his mother was sitting in the courtroom.  She was clearly worried and distraught and her voice shook when she spoke. Green was charged as an adult and was looking at 15 years in prison.  After trial, he was acquitted of the attempted murder charge but not of the burglary. 

When the boy was sentenced, there were other juveniles sititng in the courtroom awaiting their fates on various criminal charges. If you sit in the courtroom, you might be surprised at how uninterested these other kids are in the proceedings. Most of the time they don't appear to be listening.  Perhaps the judges realize this too. 

Circuit Judge Pat Siracusa, after sentencing Mr. Green to four years in prison, asked him to talk to another kid in the back of the courtroom who seemed to be following a similar path.  This did two very important things:  It woke up the other kids in the courtroom who were definitely paying attention when a boy their own age was allowed to talk - and it gave Green a voice, showing the judge respected him enough to give him a voice, even when he was seemingly unworthy of it.