(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
114 out of 100,000 youth nationwide are held in juvenile facilities
Between 2000-2020, there has been a 77% decline in youth incarceration
Youth arrests and incarceration increased in the closing decades of the 20th century
Juvenile offenses are not called “crimes.”
In 2019, the white placement rate in juvenile facilities was 72 per 100,000 youth under age 18
The second kind of delinquent act is one that wouldn’t typically be a crime if an adult had done it, aka status offenses
There are deep disparities by gender, race, and ethnicity in both pre-adjudication detention and post-adjudication residential placement.
By the middle 19th century, following the creation of houses of refuge, new innovations such as cottage institutions, out-of-home placement, and probation were introduced
Sexual assault may warrant the child to be tried as an adult
The New York House of Refuge became the first movement in what was to later become the juvenile justice system
47% were physically abused
the New York House of Refuge, housed over 1,000 youth
In 2020, roughly one in four (26%) youths referred to juvenile court upon their arrest were initially detained
Houses of Refuge were large fortress
Since the 1990s, youth crime rates have plummeted
In CT Delinquents are persons who, prior to their eighteenth birthdays, have violated or attempted to violate any federal or state law, order of the Superior Court, or any local or municipal ordinance.
Houses of Refuge quickly confronted the same issues that plagued adult jail and prisons – overcrowding, deteriorating conditions, and staff abuse
There are two main categories of delinquent acts.
In 2020 youth were committed 35,900 times for delinquency offenses
Asian youth were the least likely to be held in juvenile facilities (19 per 100,000)
Certain offenses warrant the child to be tried as an adult.
51 percent of person offenses were adjudicated delinquent
Beginning the in the late 1990s the drive to increase rates of youth incarceration began to recede
Many youth in the juvenile justice system have a history of trauma and ensuing mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders
Adjudication refers to the juvenile court’s process that determines guilt.
In the 1990s this tough on crime trend accelerated
There are at least two possible outcomes for your child. A juvenile correctional facility placement or probation
Youth of color are much more likely than white youth to be held in juvenile facilities
An average of 53 percent of all petitioned cases that went to juvenile court were adjudicated delinquent in 201
79% witnessed violence in their homes regularly
Children under 14 are treated differently.
Given the potential length of commitment, it is not uncommon that DCF has juveniles in their custody and control beyond age eighteen.
Youth who are adjudicated as delinquent (the system’s equivalent of guilty) may be placed in facilities such as youth prisons, residential treatment facilities, group homes, or juvenile detention centers