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Police officer questions juvenile

The Potential Perils of the Youth PROMISE Act

Reintroduced in Congress this March, the Youth PROMISE Act has been advertised as a common-sense, cost-saving measure to reduce the U.S. prison population by focusing on youth violence prevention and intervention. But some juvenile justice experts express concern about the impact the Act could have on policing in black and Latino communities and how effective the bill could be in the absence of broader structural change.

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Juvenile boy crying

Therapy Helps Troubled Teens Rethink Crime

Late one night in November 2007, a student at the University of Chicago named Amadou Cisse was accosted by a young man named Demetrius Warren. Warren demanded Cisse's backpack and water bottle — at the point of a .22-caliber gun. When the bag and bottle were not forthcoming — or not forthcoming quickly enough — Warren shot Cisse at point-blank range, killing him. The 29-year-old Cisse was a month shy of completing his Ph.D. in chemistry. In 2011, Warren was sentenced to 120 years in prison.

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Fewer kids in Illinois prisons – sexual assault and other problems remain

During the late 1980s and 1990s, Illinois’ youth prisons began filling up rapidly. The tough-on-crime approach that began in the 1960s was at the peak of popularity, and state law reflected it in mandatory minimum sentences and other provisions. From 1985 to 2000, the state’s population of incarcerated youth more than doubled, from 1,534 to 3,074.

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Illinois: A Comeback State

The National Juvenile Justice Network has featured Illinois as a "Comeback State" for its dramatic decrease in juvenile incarceration. The number of youth incarcerated in Illinois peaked in 2000 at 3,074; sicne that time it has declined by over 35 percent to 1,949 in 2010. Illinois has accomplished this turnaround through evidence-based alternatives to incarceration, programs that divert youth youth from secure custody, facility closings, reduced incarceration for minor offenses, and statewide realignment and reinvestment within the juvenile justice system.

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