In October 1997, a 16 - year - old man from Pearl City, Michigan, first killed her mother and went to school and gave nine students. Two of them were fatal. In December 1997, a 14 year old student went. The school in West Paducah, Kentucky killed three students and the other five were injured; in March last year two boys aged 11 and 13 went to four outside the school in Jonesborough, Arkansas Killed. A 14 - year - old science teacher, a woman and a teacher, next month, a science teacher was dancing at a school in Edinborough, Pennsylvania, an elderly student at a Fayetteville in Tennessee on 18th, a classmate at a school parking lot Two days later, a 15-year-old student living in Springfield, Oregon
The Juvenile Offenses Act (H.R.3) in 1997 is federal law. Its purpose is to use strict juvenile crime prevention measures and comprehensive preventive efforts. For adults over the age of 14 years, it is more likely that federal violence or federal drug trafficking will occur. The bill also allows the Department of Justice to indict a 13-year-old adult in violation of these laws. These adolescents are equivalent to being kept for the same period as the adults who committed a felony, if they are regarded as felonies as adults. The record does not change. Normally, teen records are only used when children are teenagers. The bill will allow these records to be used in the future.
Part of the solution to juvenile delinquency is to find alternatives to suppressing gun control / gang control methods against juvenile violence. After first analyzing the narrow problem of planting a responsible attitude towards firearms, a wide range of topics of early childhood education and its role in preventing children from becoming criminals were discussed. The most important factor affecting the way young people deal with guns is how to teach them. A survey of 675 elementary school 9th graders and 6th grader 675 people in Rochester, New York compared the children shot with their families and the children gathered with their guns by their colleagues. For families teaching the legitimate use of firearms, children are more at risk of committing crime, gangsters or drugs than children who are not exposed to firearms. These young people often have rifles and shotguns.
One of the most concerned issues in dealing with gun control is juvenile violence. Most of the offenses committed by guns are being committed by children. No one knows the exact cause of such a terrible crime committed by a child. Many experts believe that the risk factors associated with juvenile gun crime are poverty, drugs, easy access to guns and unstable family life. All these problems have played an important role in increasing juvenile delinquency. Probably the most important of all these problems is family dedication. Many of these children were not raised in the good environment of their homes. (Buman) When child's family life is unstable, this adverse effect can cause anxiety and it may be felt that it is his or her own fault. Feeling that there is no escape path, the child turns his attention to the last resort without thinking thoroughly. That's why most gun crimes are related to children.