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Arresting Repeat Teen Crime and Making Schools Bully-Free
In the next hour, Ohio's law enforcement officers will arrest approximately five teens,
nearly 46,000 teens in a year. National youth-gang related homicides are up over 40 percent from 1999 to 2003,
the latest year for which data are available. Law enforcement leaders recommend a one-two punch to address teen
and gang crime: tough and close supervision combined with research-tested interventions that pull kids away
from violence. This "carrot and stick" police and community collaboration closely tracks high-risk kids
and swiftly prevents future gang violence and links offenders to neighborhood services so kids get off
drugs, stay in school and find a job. In Boston, a citywide effort like this resulted in a two-thirds
cut in youth homicides. The second punch is a successful program such as Multidimensional Treatment
Foster Care (MTFC), which provides structure, discipline, and support for chronic teen offenders and
their families. It works on an individual basis with teenaged offenders to change their behavior,
break the negative peer connections that lead to crime and move them back into classrooms and jobs.
Parents are also coached to better manage their teenager's behavior. Studies found the program cuts
repeat arrests by as much as half and saves the public an estimated $24,000 in future costs and less
earnings.
Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Ohio Calls on Congress to:
Reports
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"The reality dawned on me that no kids are safe until they're all
safe. I believe that Joseph might be alive today if Antonio had had intervention, if Antonio
had been cared for, or in a program and doing something positive. And it's not just Antonio,
all of the kids in the juvenile justice system, they have a history of abuse, gangs. If their
parents had just had options."
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| Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Ohio |
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