While the Violent and Dangerous Remain Incarcerated,
Nearly 63% of Cases Are Now Steered to Educational Programs
Nearly
two-thirds of all troubled juveniles referred to the Harris County
District Attorney’s Office are now diverted into rehabilitative
educational programs and away from
incarceration, District Attorney Kim Ogg announced today.
In
a news conference with some of Harris County’s top juvenile justice
officials this morning, Ogg noted recent figures that show nearly 15,000
cases, most involving non-violent
or misdemeanor charges, have been diverted away from the juvenile court
system in the past six years. Ogg said that nearly 63% of all cases
referred to her office last year alone resulted in diversions.
“Our
juvenile diversion programs, most of which are less than 3 years old,
are working exactly as we envisioned when we began them,” Ogg said. “We
are separating out Harris
County’s most violent and dangerous juveniles and taking them to court
and locking them up. But the remainder – many of whom are merely kids
struggling with school frustrations and family problems – are receiving
the individualized attention they need to keep
them from falling back into trouble.”
Ogg
praised John Jordan and the prosecutors in his Juvenile Division for
working with Henry Gonzales and his Harris County Juvenile Probation
Department to design and implement
six juvenile diversion programs that now enjoy successful completion
rates of between 71% and 91%.
“These
children are now sitting in classrooms instead of jail cells,” Ogg
said. “I’m enormously proud of them and of the prosecutors and juvenile
probation officials that
made that possible.”