When Did Making Adults Mad Become A Crime

[Music]

foreign

[Applause]

when did make an adults mad become a

crime

not too long after i assumed the

juvenile court bench in 1999

i had what i call uh an emotional pause

you know when you experience something

or you hear

something that shocks your conscience it

overwhelms your senses seeming like

life has come to a standstill and then

as the surreal begins to transform back

into reality

the questions begin to form like how did

this happen

why did this happen how did we get to

this place in the road

well for me that moment occurred when my

i.t folks handed me some data that

confirmed my

anecdotal fears and that was that my

core was complicit in helping the police

and the school system criminalize

normal teenage behavior now i knew from

day one

you know i saw you know

you know that what looked like an

extraordinary number of kids in front of

me

charged with minor school offenses but

before i went running off to the school

system

in the police to complain i went to my i

t

folks and i said look and can you break

these numbers down for me

can i need to confirm whether or not

what i’m

seeing isn’t indeed reality and they did

and what they handed me shocked me

so much it put me into that emotional

pause

and this is what the data said number

one

that one-third of all the filings

delinquent filings

in my court came from the school system

the school system was by

far the largest feeder of delinquent

cases in my court

the data also showed that since putting

police on campus

that the number of kids arrested

increased by 2 700 percent

but that wasn’t the worst of it the

worst of it was that 92 percent

of those filings involve typical

normal teenage behaviors okay

i mean things that i did when i was a

teenager and i’m sure that most of you

did as well

i mean i disrupted the classroom from

time to time

you know acting like a class clown

wadding up paper throwing across the

classroom thinking i was funny

i got into school fights defending my

sister

a couple friends who were being bullied

and

on a serious note i did something that

caused the police and the fire

department to come out to the school

well that’s a story for another day but

here’s the thing

none of those things landed me in front

of a judge

none did so

what’s important is that

given the fact that the studies show

that

students who are arrested on campus are

twice as likely to drop out of school

and if they appear in court they’re four

times as likely

to drop out of school then it should not

surprise you

that our data revealed that as the

arrests on campus increase

the graduation rates fail and that by

the year 2003

they fell to an all-time low of 58

look how go the overuse of suspensions

expulsions and arrests so go graduation

rates

i mean who would ever think that keeping

kids in school

would increase graduation rates right

you know

you would think that this is not a novel

concept in education but the rest of the

story

is really what happened to the kids who

got kicked out of school or dropped out

you see there’s a simple algorithm in

the world of delinquency

prevention how go graduation rates

so go juvenile crime rates that’s why

education to us

folks in juvenile justice is so

important who would have thought that

the more kids we graduate the fewer kids

committing crimes

now this phenomena years ago came to be

called the school of prison pipeline the

pipeline works like this

zero tolerance policies push kids out of

school

into the streets and then into criminal

activity

now this phenomena was happening

obviously in my county

and my it folks showed me a graph with a

line

that showed graduation rates that were

dropping okay

all right while the juvenile crime rates

were going up

forming an x okay on the graph

now when you get an x on the graph that

strongly

suggests that there is a correlation

between those variables in this case

graduation graduation rates and juvenile

crime rates

but the truth in these numbers is that

our school systems harsh disciplinary

policies was contributing to the

increase in our crime rates

think about that paradox for a moment

let me put it to you another way that i

think my resume better

our school system whose mission it is of

course is to improve the quality of life

of its citizens

was implementing policies that victimize

those citizens

sadly the kids that were affected the

most were kids of color

see at the peak of our zero tolerance

system before we acted to dismantle it

a kid of color was 12 times more likely

to be arrested

on campus than his white peers and for

the same offense

the idea that zero tolerance policies is

racial neutral it’s a myth

it’s a lie but i knew i had to do

something about it

i mean everyone was cry intercepting

right there at the juvenile court

and so what i did is i gathered the

chiefs of police the school

superintendent

uh social services mental health i i

called upon the local chapter of the

naacp to come to the table because they

had to be there because it

was the people uh the the community of

color that was getting

hurt the most and so what we did is we

hammered out agreement took us nine

months that said

these particular delinquent offenses

we’re no longer going to rest kids on

this and we’re going to replace them

with positive interventions

this agreement is called the school

justice partnership

all right and it was the first of its

kind in this country

but within six months of implementing it

the number of school arrests fell

by 54 and today the number of arrests

are down

95 and no school safety hasn’t been

compromised

in fact it’s improved and not only that

but so has the community at large

because the juvenile crime rate has

fallen

80 percent but most importantly is our

felony finance you know the serious ones

that involve guns and

robberies and car thefts and burglaries

well they’re down 64 percent

and why did this happen well i’ll repeat

it again how go graduation rates so go

crime rates

you see when we got rid of those zero

tolerance policies that were pushing

kids out of school

our graduation rates began to climb

and between starting the school justice

partnership to 2011 they increased by 24

percent i say

2011 because that’s when the department

of education changed the

reporting formula for graduation rates

but since 2011

our graduation rates have continued to

climb increasing another 23 percent

and you know who’s benefiting from this

are kids of color

because today uh you know

our kids of color are just as likely as

a white kid to be arrested on campus not

two or three or whatever more times

likely just as likely

we have more kids of color graduating

high school today

and moving onward to a positive future

and not a prison

you know folks i’m convinced that the

most significant factor to prevent and

reduce delinquency

in any community is in how we treat our

kids

it was maslow who said if all you have

is a hammer

then everything looks like a nail and i

have found throughout my 22 years on the

juvenile court bench that

what worked to turn kids around was what

looked soft on crime

not what is considered tough on crime

why is it that america

incarcerates more children than any

other country in the world

what is it about our culture that we see

kids as nails and we go right for the

hammer

and i’m not going to attempt to answer

these questions they’re deep and

complicated

but rest assured we must change our

culture by adopting practices that are

empirically proven to work

even if they look soft on crime we must

pass laws and policies that are smart on

crime

not practices that look tough for the

sake of looking tough

and because they have no impact on crime

look

if reducing school arrests by 95 percent

leads to

decreasing juvenile crime how is that

soft on crime

we need to reframe in this country what

it means to be tough on crime

by measuring what we do by its impact

on crime does it create fewer victims

but i think the good news is that at

least as far as

school systems are concerned the school

justice partnership

is making a a difference because this

model has been replicated

with similar outcomes in jurisdictions

throughout about 41 states

in fact the state of north carolina just

recently passed legislation mandated my

school justice partnership model

so let me explain a little bit more as

to

how this works when it it involves

juveniles you have to understand

teenagers first of all begins with their

brains

the prefrontal lobe cortex which is

right there okay

is what translates emotion into logic it

is what helps us to resolve conflict

without resorting to physical

altercations

but get this it’s not developed till age

this teen brain science is so powerful

that it convinced the united states

supreme court

to abolish the death penalty in life

without the possibility parole for

teenagers you see we cannot hold

teenagers to the same standards as

adults

because they’re neurologically wired to

do stupid things despite the fact

that during the lifespan of a human the

time when our brains are functioning

at its maximum intellectual capacity

which is during the teen years

look i point to mark zuckerberg who by

the age of 20 created facebook

or in the brain of a 16 year old were

the first thoughts of the concept of law

of relativity

albert einstein and i even point to

taylor swift

yes taylor swift who left home at age 14

to go to nashville to start a music

career

but despite their intelligence and their

creativity

the three of them could not purchase

alcohol until age 21

and that’s because of the pre-frontal

cortex

so normal teens are prone to risk-taking

behaviors and making poor decisions

that’s the bottom line

but what about those kids who live in

poverty and struggle almost every day

with

with home and food clothing and other

insecurities

and who witness family violence and

violence in their neighborhoods

these are our children who suffer

adverse childhood experiences or

also known as childhood trauma while the

vast majority of students

in our system that were diverted away

from arrest

and they were placed in restorative

practices and educational workshops

okay there were still the 11 percent

that reoffended

a small number but still 11

and we want to know why so we

asked the parents of these 11 percent if

we could

administer the adverse childhood

experiences survey which measures the

level

of childhood trauma in people and we

found

that among the 11 percent 86

of them suffered from serious childhood

trauma in other words

they needed more than just restorative

practices in educational workshops

they needed clinical help and so we

didn’t want to give up on them

and by 2010 we created a non-profit

that assessed and treated those 11

so they too could graduate from high

school

that system we called the system of care

and it represented

they represented a shift from targeted

reactions to population-based prevention

and intervention in other words it was a

public health approach specifically

employing the epidemiology

model which because there’s two basic

facts

in the epidemiology approach number one

diseases don’t occur by chance

and number two they’re not randomly

distributed now i’m not saying

that disruptive behaviors of delinquent

behaviors are diseases of course they’re

not

but they do behave like diseases

like diseases delinquent behaviors and

disruptive behaviors don’t occur by

chance

they’re not randomly distributed which

means they can be studied to determine

their underlying causation look it was

my father who

who retired from cdc many years ago he

worked in

immunization once said to me he said son

the problem with you people in criminal

justice is that you punish the symptom

instead of treating the cause you see he

explained to me

that delinquent behaviors are a symptom

of something affecting the child

emotionally mentally

environmentally in other ways

he says so long as you respond to the

behaviors which are mere symptoms

you will never reduce recidivism and

this conversation led me to reframe how

we view juvenile delinquency

and how to reconfigure our system to be

smarter

and how to approach our kids who find

themselves in trouble

so in closing i want to share this

anecdotal story

that really captures how we changed our

system

jane is 15 years old she’s sitting in

school in class

and a boy i’ll call him johnny leans

over and says to her what he wants to do

to her sexually

well she gets upset shouts at him

the teacher miss jones admonishes

jane well she didn’t hear what johnny

said

but jane loses it and starts throwing

chairs at her

the sro which is for school resource

officer that is a uniform officer

who’s placed on campus goes running in

there

and has to restrain jane now in the old

days before the partnership

she would have been placed in the back

of patrol car after being handcuffed

and taken down to juvenile intake

likelihood of detainer for aggravated

assault on the teacher

but today we don’t we’ve included a

pause button

we ask why remember the epidemiology

approach

determining causation behavior is the

symptom

what caused the behavior and after about

an hour

by using crisis intervention skills that

he’s been trained in

jane confided in the school resource

officer that

her mother’s living boyfriend willie was

raping her every week

and worse yet she told the mom

and the mom didn’t believe her now you

can understand in jane’s world now

when johnny leaned over and said what he

wanted to do to her sexually given

what’s going on in her life

every week and you can understand why

she lost it with the teacher not that it

was the teacher’s fault but in

jane’s world there was not a single

adult that was helping her all she heard

the teacher

do was just admonish her and that was

enough

to trigger somebody with trauma but

here’s the rest of the story

jane did not go to detention she was

placed in protective custody

initially placed in foster care shortly

after i placed with the maternal

grandparents who did not like willie

and that i knew they could protect her

and guess what else

willie gets arrested and he’s now

in a state penitentiary serving 25 years

for aggravated child molestation

i ask you which system

is truly tough on crime is it mine that

looks soft

or the one that likes to punish the

symptom

really quick where there’s no time to

hit the pause button

and ask why you see folks today

we understand that when kids are hurting

their behavior becomes their language

like jane they’re talking to us adults

don’t you think it’s time that we simply

start listening

thank you

[音乐]

外国

[掌声]

什么时候让成年人疯狂成为

犯罪

1999 年我担任少年法庭法官后不久,

我有一种我称之为 uh 的情绪停顿

你知道当你经历一些事情

或听到

一些让你震惊的事情时 良心它

压倒你的感觉,好像

生活已经停止了,然后

随着超现实开始转变

现实,问题开始形成,比如

这是

怎么发生的 为什么

会发生 我的那一刻发生了,当我的

IT 人员交给我一些数据时,这些数据

证实了我的

轶事恐惧,那就是我的

核心同谋帮助警察

和学校系统将

正常的青少年行为定为犯罪,现在我从第一天就知道

你知道我看到你知道

你 知道

在我面前似乎有很多孩子

被指控犯有轻微的学校罪行,但

在我跑到警察局的学校

系统去抱怨之前 在我去找我的

人时,我说看,你能帮我分解这些数字吗?

我需要确认

我所

看到的是否真的不是现实,他们做到

了,他们交给我的东西让我非常震惊

这让我陷入了情绪的

停顿

,这就是数据

显示的第一点,

在我的法庭上,三分之一的拖欠申请来自学校

系统 学校系统是迄今为止

我法庭上最大的拖欠案件

的提供者 数据还显示,自从

警察进入校园以来

,被捕的儿童

人数增加了 2700%,

但这还不是最糟糕的,

最糟糕的是,92%

的申请涉及典型的

正常青少年行为,好吧,

我的意思是 我十几岁的时候就做过

,我相信你们中的大多数人也

做过

去学校打架保护我的

妹妹几个被欺负的朋友

,严肃地说,我做了一些

导致警察和消防

部门出来到学校

的事情,这是另一天的故事,

但事情

不是这些事情 让我

站在法官面前

没有人这样

做 重要的是,

鉴于研究

表明,

在校园内被捕的学生

辍学的可能性是其两倍

,如果他们出庭,他们的可能性是四倍

辍学,

那么我们的数据显示,随着

校园逮捕人数的

增加,毕业率失败,

到 2003 年,

他们跌至 58 人的历史最低点

看看过度使用停学

开除的情况如何 和逮捕所以毕业

我的意思是,谁会认为让

孩子留在学校

会提高毕业率,

你知道

你会认为这不是

教育中的一个新概念,而是 故事的其余部分

真的是那些被赶出学校或辍学的孩子身上发生的事情,

你看,在预防犯罪的世界里有一个简单的算法,

毕业

率如何,青少年犯罪率如何,这就是为什么

要对我们

这些青少年进行教育 正义是如此

重要 谁会想到

我们毕业的孩子越多,犯罪的孩子就越少

现在这种现象几年前被

称为监狱管道学校

管道就像这样

零容忍政策将孩子们从学校推

到街头, 然后进入犯罪

活动,

现在这种现象

在我的县显然正在发生

,我的 IT 人员向我展示了一个图表,其中有一条

线

显示毕业率正在

下降,

而青少年犯罪率

正在上升

,现在在图表上形成一个 x 好

当您在图表上得到一个 x 时,

强烈

表明

在这种情况下这些变量之间存在相关性

毕业 化率和

青少年犯罪率,

但这些数字的真相是,

我们的学校系统严厉的纪律

政策

导致我们的犯罪率上升

想一想这个悖论,

让我用另一种方式告诉你,我

认为我的简历更好

我们的学校系统,其使命

当然是提高其公民的生活质量,

正在实施使这些公民受害的政策,

不幸的是,受影响

最大的孩子是有色人种的孩子,

在我们采取行动之前,我们的零容忍制度达到顶峰 拆除它

一个有色人种的孩子在校园内

被捕的可能性是

他的白人同龄人的 12 倍

,同样的罪行

是零容忍政策是

种族中立的想法这是一个神话

这是一个谎言但我知道我必须做点什么

我的意思是每个人

都在少年法庭上拦截

,所以我所做的就是召集

警察局长学校

负责人

呃社会服务 心理健康 ii

呼吁全国

有色人种协进会的地方分会坐到谈判桌前,因为他们

必须在那里,因为

受伤害最严重的是人民,嗯,有色人种社区,所以我们所做的是我们

敲定了协议 我们

九个月说

这些特殊的违法行为

我们不再让孩子们休息

,我们将

用积极的干预措施取而代之

这个协议被称为学校

司法伙伴关系

,它是第一个

此类协议 这个国家,

但在实施它的六个月内,

学校逮捕人数减少

了 54 人,而今天逮捕

人数减少了

95 人,没有任何学校安全受到

影响

,事实上它得到了改善,不仅

如此,整个社区也是如此

因为青少年犯罪率

下降了

80%,但最重要的是我们的

重罪金融,你

知道涉及枪支和

抢劫、汽车盗窃和入室盗窃

的严重罪行 你下降了 64%

,为什么这种情况发生得很好,我

会再重复一遍,毕业率如何,

犯罪率

如何,当我们摆脱那些

让孩子们辍学的零容忍政策时,你会看到

我们的毕业率开始攀升

从开始学校司法

伙伴关系到 2011 年,他们增加了 24

% 我说是

2011 年,因为那时

教育部改变

了毕业率的报告公式,

但自 2011 年以来,

我们的毕业率继续

攀升,又增加了 23%

,你知道谁受益 这

是有色人种的孩子,

因为今天你知道

我们的有色人种孩子和

白人孩子一样有可能在校园里被捕,而不是

两三次,或者更多次

,就像

我们今天有更多的有色人种孩子

高中毕业一样

并迈向积极的未来,

而不是监狱,

你们知道,伙计们,我相信,

预防和减少任何犯罪行为的最重要因素是

社区是我们对待

孩子的方式

,马斯洛说,如果你

只有一把锤子,

那么一切看起来都像钉子,

我在少年法庭的 22 年中发现,

能让孩子们转变的东西

看起来很柔软 关于犯罪

不是什么被认为是严厉打击犯罪

为什么美国

监禁的儿童比

世界上任何其他国家

都多 试图回答

这些问题,它们既深奥又

复杂,

但请放心,我们必须

通过采用经经验证明有效的做法来改变我们的文化,

即使它们看起来对犯罪很软我们必须

通过对犯罪聪明的法律和政策,而

不是看起来的做法

为了看起来强硬

而强硬,因为它们对犯罪没有影响,

如果将学校逮捕人数减少 95%

会导致

青少年犯罪减少,那么

我们需要重新定义对犯罪的软弱程度如何? e 在这个国家,

通过衡量我们对犯罪的影响来衡量我们所做的事情,严厉打击犯罪意味着什么,它

是否会减少受害者,

但我认为好消息是,

至少就

学校系统而言,学校

司法伙伴

关系正在 一个差异,因为这种

模式已经在大约 41 个州的

司法管辖区复制,并产生了类似的结果,

事实上,北卡罗来纳州

最近刚刚通过了立法,授权我的

学校司法伙伴关系模式,

所以让我再解释一下

它是如何运作的 涉及

青少年 你必须了解

青少年首先从他们的

大脑开始 前额叶皮层

就在那里 可以

将情感转化为逻辑 它

可以帮助我们在不诉诸肢体冲突的情况下解决冲突

但要做到这一点 它直到年龄才发展

这种青少年脑科学是如此强大

,以至于它说服了美国

最高法院废除 d 在

没有可能为青少年假释的情况下受到生命中的惩罚

你看,我们不能让

青少年达到与成年人相同的标准,

因为他们在神经系统上会

做愚蠢的事情,

尽管在人类的一生中,

当我们的大脑运作

时 它的最大智力

能力是在青少年时期,

我指的是马克扎克伯格,他

在 20 岁时创建了 Facebook,

或者在 16 岁的大脑中

是相对论

阿尔伯特爱因斯坦概念的第一个想法,我什至指出

泰勒斯威夫特

是的,泰勒斯威夫特 14 岁离家

去纳什维尔开始音乐

生涯,

但尽管他们的智慧和

创造力,他们三个人

直到 21 岁才能购买酒精

,这是因为前额叶

皮层

非常正常 青少年倾向于冒险

行为并做出错误的决定

,这是底线,

但那些生活在

贫困中并几乎每天都在挣扎的孩子呢? 每天

都有家庭和食品 衣服和其他

不安全感

,并且在他们的社区目睹家庭暴力和

暴力

这些是我们的孩子,他们遭受

不良童年经历或

也被称为童年创伤,而

我们系统中的绝大多数学生被转移

离开 被捕

,他们被安置在恢复性

实践和教育讲习班

好吧,仍然有 11% 的人

再次冒犯

了一小部分人,但仍然是 11 人

,我们想知道为什么,所以我们

询问这 11% 的父母

是否可以

进行不良童年

经历调查 它衡量

人们童年创伤的程度,我们

发现在 11% 的人中,有

86 人遭受了严重的童年

创伤,换句话说,

他们需要的不仅仅是

在教育研讨会上进行恢复性实践,

他们需要临床帮助,所以我们

不想 放弃他们

,到 2010 年,我们创建了一个非营利组织

,评估和对待这些人 e 11

所以他们也可以从高中毕业

,我们称之为护理系统

,它代表着

他们代表了从有针对性的

反应到基于人群的预防

和干预的转变,换句话说,这是一种

专门

采用流行病学

模型的公共卫生方法 因为流行病学方法中有两个基本

事实

,第一是

疾病不是偶然发生的

,第二是它们不是随机

分布的

表现得像疾病

一样的疾病 不良行为和

破坏性行为并非偶然发生

它们不是随机分布的,这

意味着可以对其进行研究以确定

其潜在因果关系 看起来这是

我父亲

多年前从疾病预防控制中心退休 他从事

免疫工作 有一次对我说,他说儿子

,你们在刑事

司法方面的问题是你们惩罚你们 mptom

而不是治疗你看到的原因,他

向我解释

说,犯罪行为

是某种影响孩子

情绪心理

环境的症状,

他说只要你对

这些仅仅是症状的行为做出反应,

你就永远不会减少累犯,

这 谈话让我重新定义了

我们如何看待青少年犯罪

以及如何重新配置我们的系统以变得

更聪明

以及如何接近我们发现

自己陷入困境的孩子

所以最后我想分享这个

轶事故事

,它真正捕捉到我们如何改变我们的

系统

简是 15 岁,她坐在

学校上课

,一个我叫他的男孩约翰尼

俯身对她说他想对她做些什么,

她很不高兴对

他大喊大叫 琼斯小姐告诫

简,她没有 听到约翰尼

了什么,但简失去了它,开始向

她扔椅子 n 校园跑在

那里

,现在必须约束简在

过去的合伙人之前,

她会

在被戴上手铐

并被带到少年

收容所后被安置在巡逻车的后面,可能会因严重

袭击老师

而被拘留但今天 我们没有我们已经包括了一个

暂停按钮

我们问为什么要记住流行病学

方法

确定因果关系行为

是导致行为的症状大约

一个小时后

通过使用

他接受过培训的危机干预技能

简向学校资源官倾诉

她母亲的男友威利

每周都在强奸她

,更糟的是,她告诉妈妈

,妈妈不相信她现在你

可以理解简

的世界了 每周都在她的生活中

,你可以理解为什么

她和老师失去了它,不是因为这

是老师的错,而是在

简的世界里 这里没有一个

成年人在帮助她,她听到

的老师

所做的只是告诫她,这

足以触发一个有创伤的人,

但故事的其余部分,

简没有被拘留,她最初被

置于保护性拘留中

我安置在不喜欢威利的外祖父母那里后不久,我就被寄养了

,我知道他们可以保护她

猜猜威利还会被捕什么,他现在

因严重猥亵儿童而在州立监狱服刑 25 年

我问你哪个系统

对犯罪确实很严厉

就像简他们在和我们说话一样大人

你不认为是时候我们

开始倾听了

吗谢谢