The Roundtable Discussion Pertaining to Juveniles
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The Roundtable Discussion Pertaining to Juveniles
Once monthly the Project Alliance team meets to discuss students whose behaviors have put them into contact with the criminal justice system. The goal of the project is to collaboratively find the best approach to effect a change in behavior, prevent a repeat of that behavior and avoid a return to the system. Project Alliance was founded in 1997 with the passage of Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 12 § 32 which charges the district attorneys office with coordinating these meetings with school administrators and other agencies invested in the effort.
Representatives from these Participating Agencies Attend
Cape & Islands District Attorneys Office - Juvenile Justice Unit
The District Attorney is charged with holding the roundtable meeting. The meeting is held at D-Y High School. Several members of the DAs team attend representing:
Juvenile Court Prosecutor
Community Outreach Unit - Keep them Coming Truancy Prevention Program
Juvenile Diversion Coordinator
Dennis-Yarmouth Regional Schools
High School Administrators, Social Worker and School Psychologist
Intermediate Middle School Administrators and Social Worker
A Joint Unit of the Yarmouth Police and Dennis Police Departments. The School Resource Officer from both the High School and the Intermediate Middle school attend and often anchor the meetings.
Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 12 § 32
The Roundtable Discussion Law
Pertaining to Juveniles
The district attorneys in the Suffolk, Middlesex, Essex, Worcester, Hampden, Hampshire/Franklin, Norfolk, Plymouth, Bristol, Cape and Islands and Berkshire counties shall operate community based juvenile justice programs in order to coordinate efforts of the criminal justice system in addressing juvenile justice through cooperation with the schools and local law enforcement representatives, probation and court representatives and, where appropriate, the department of children and families, department of youth services and department of mental health.
(b) A district attorney's community based juvenile justice program shall identify cases in which juvenile offenders are among those most likely to pose a threat to their community. The program shall treat the identified cases as priority prosecution cases and impose individualized sanctions designed to deter the offender from further criminal or delinquent conduct. The office of the district attorney shall work with the schools and community representatives on development of violence prevention and intervention programs, identification, protocol and curricula.
(c) The offices of the district attorneys shall conduct weekly working sessions focusing on specific events and particular individuals whose conduct poses a threat to schools, neighborhoods and communities. The district attorneys shall be responsible for creating, managing and updating a priority prosecution list of individuals identified as the community's most serious violent youths and repeat offenders and shall update the list as events may happen and the individual is moved through the criminal justice system.
(d) The district attorneys shall assign prosecutors to the community based juvenile justice program who shall treat the identified cases as their priority cases and shall work with the school, courts and other agencies to deter violent, criminal or delinquent conduct. The offices of the district attorneys shall be responsible for managing the lists, compiling and publishing statistics, coordinating meetings with the assistant district attorneys assigned to the program and local law enforcement agencies, schools, probation and court representatives and, where appropriate, the department of social services, department of youth services and department of mental health.
(e) The district attorneys operating such programs shall participate in a community based juvenile justice program task force for the purpose of sharing information on the practices and developments of violence prevention and prosecution in their particular programs and such task force shall submit an annual report on each program, including statistics and findings, to the house and senate committees on ways and means on or before February 1 each year.