Yahoo Answers is shutting down on 4 May 2021 (Eastern Time) and the Yahoo Answers website is now in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

? asked in Politics & GovernmentLaw & Ethics · 2 months ago

Why are USA under 18 year olds sentenced differently for the same crime(compared to adults)?

They get lesser sentences than the adults

9 Answers

Relevance
  • 2 months ago
    Favourite answer

    They are legally children.  A child, in law, means that they lack the capability to make proper decisions, which is why (among other things), the parents can be held responsible for what a child does, even if only in civil law.

    It takes a court judgement to declare that an under-age individual can be judged as an adult and can be assumed to have had the mental capacity to decide for themselves.  Many teens are capable of making adult decisions about some things and not others.  Children, for the most part, are not seen to have that ability.  Full adults are presumed to have that ability whether or not they do, and an adult can be found to lack such a capability due to some mental/cognitive disorder, but it is up to the adult to prove that incapacity (or that adult's representatives, really).

    The basic idea is that children are like household animals ("pets").  Whatever they do is because of faulty supervision.  The prosecution has to prove that they should have, and could have, and thus likely did, know better.  Otherwise, they are treated as if this is time to teach that lesson so they will know better the next time.  The idea is to stop future criminal behavior, supposedly.  Clearly, the parents have failed, so now it is up to the court to teach the lesson.

  • 2 months ago

    Depends on the crime.   A minor can indeed be trialed and sentenced as an adult for serious crimes.

    For lesser crimes, the aim is to rehabilitate the minor so they don't become criminals as adults.

  • Anonymous
    2 months ago

    i didn't realize they were sentenced "differently."   In my state, a thirteen-year old was charged with intentional first-degree murder for killing her grandmother.   She was sentenced with life in prison.

  • 2 months ago

    not always.  the DA is allowed to petition the court to have a juvenile tried as an adult.  This is usually reserved for repeat, violent offenders.

  • 2 months ago

    It depends on the crime.   It depends on the location.   It depends on the judge.   

    There can be many variables.  

    Source(s): life
  • ?
    Lv 7
    2 months ago

    Generally true, because they have different laws applicable to them [minors]. However, for certain crimes, the minors are charged as adults.  

  • ?
    Lv 7
    2 months ago

    They are children so not considered so guilty as knowing what they do. Anyway they will often be tried as adults so they can be given the chair. George Stinney was electrocuted in South Carolina at the age of 14, after the bodies of two children were found close to his home.

  • 2 months ago

    Because they are juveniles.  They are often tried as adults though.

  • Murzy
    Lv 7
    2 months ago

    The courts think they can be rehabilitated.

Still have questions? Get answers by asking now.