Juvenile offenders will not go to jail

Updated on society 2024-08-05
5 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-15

    Juvenile delinquents can also go to jail. The Code of Criminal Procedure includes a separate chapter in Title V of the Special Procedures, which specifically stipulates the procedures for juvenile criminal cases and provides special protection for juveniles, but this does not mean that juveniles do not need to go to prison if they commit crimes, except that juvenile offenders are not detained in prison together with adult offenders, and according to article 264 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, juvenile offenders shall be sentenced in juvenile correctional facilities.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-14

    Juvenile offenders are required to go to prison, but they shall be given a commuted or lighter punishment. However, if a juvenile under the age of 14 commits a crime, he does not need to be held criminally responsible. A person who has reached the age of 14 commits a specific crime and is subject to criminal liability.

    Minors who have reached the age of 16 commit any crime and need to be held criminally responsible. There are more and more cases of juvenile delinquency, and there are many factors that cause juvenile delinquency.

    Only when everyone is equal before the law can juvenile delinquency be effectively curbed.

    However, if a juvenile under the age of 14 commits a crime, he does not need to be held criminally responsible.

    A person who has reached the age of 14 commits a specific crime and is subject to criminal liability.

    Minors who have reached the age of 16 commit any crime and need to be held criminally responsible.

    Provisions of the People's Procuratorate on the Handling of Juvenile Criminal Cases.

    Article 46.

    "Juvenile criminal cases" as used in these Provisions refers to criminal cases in which the criminal suspect or defendant was already 14 years old but not yet 18 years old when they committed the suspected criminal conduct, but "juveniles" in the provisions on juvenile procedural rights and embodying special procedural protections for juveniles refers to persons who have reached the age of 14 but have not yet reached the age of 18 during the course of litigation.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    Juvenile delinquency, I think the first thing to look at is what kind of crime he has committed, and if the facts of the crime are relatively light, education is the main thing. If the situation is more serious, the sentence will still be imposed.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Hello! Juvenile delinquents, if they are young, let the supervisor manage them, and if they are older, they can go to the juvenile detention center to send them to education.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Whether or not a juvenile delinquent should go to jail depends on the actual circumstances of the case. If the juvenile offender is sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment or higher by the people's court, the juvenile offender shall be sentenced to a juvenile correctional facility.

    Legal basis: Criminal Procedure Law of the People's Republic of China

    Article 264:When convicts are transferred for enforcement of criminal punishments, the people's court that transferred them for enforcement shall send the relevant legal documents to the public security organs, prisons, or other enforcement organs within 10 days of the judgment taking effect.

    For convicts sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve, life imprisonment, or fixed-term imprisonment, the public security organs are to send the convict to prison to enforce their punishment in accordance with law. For convicts sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment, where the remaining sentence is less than three months before they are transferred for enforcement, the detention center is to enforce it on their behalf. Convicts sentenced to short-term detention are to be enforced by the public security organs.

    Juvenile offenders shall be sentenced in a juvenile correctional facility.

    The enforcement organs shall promptly take the convict into custody and notify the convict's family.

    Convicts sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment or short-term detention shall be issued a certificate of release at the completion of the enforcement period.

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