On April 9, 2014, students experienced a violent epidemic in their school days. This disaster occurred in Marysville near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The accused of this evil act was Alex Herribal of 16 years old. A rewarding carnival took place at a local high school in Franklin High School, Murrysville where Hribal was a sophomore. When Hribal entered the corridor of the school, two knives were disappeared and the massacre began just before the course started.
This announcement is part of a series of national reports on juvenile offenders and victims. A nationwide report comprehensively counts juvenile delinquency, response to violence and damage, and correspondence of the juvenile justice system. During each interim period, the National Report Series announcement provides up-to-date information on juvenile arrests, litigation, juvenile detainees and other topics of interest. Each announcement in the series is at the forefront of juvenile justice policy development and allows readers to centralize access to statistics on some of the most important issues. A nationwide report and this series of documents together will provide a fact baseline for juvenile justice experts, policy makers, media, and related citizens.
The violent crime rate and juvenile crime rate have declined steadily over the past two decades, but the reform that restored the system of the Juvenile Court to its original idea was not so rapid. The US Justice Department, Juvenile Justice Crime Prevention Bureau considers adolescents as adults: an analysis of state transfer laws and reports (juvenile offenders and victims, National Report Series Bulletin, September 2011). If the aim of the juvenile court is to prevent and restore the youth to be able to succeed just like an adult, it is important to evaluate the success of the mission when the juvenile is condemned as an adult in the criminal justice system.
A new report released today - "Fraud: The collapse of the youth and criminal justice system could lead to default of the LGBT Q youth," there is a risk that up to 3.2 million LGBT Q youth will fall into adolescence and the criminal justice system I am investigating. Indeed, youths in LGBTQ are being held at twice the rate of minors; 20% of juveniles in juvenile justice think LGBT or gender is ineligible, but young people usually receive 7-9% I am occupying. Family rejection, discrimination in our local society, discriminatory law enforcement, poor school environment, all are factors. But let's take a look at how the climate of our national school makes the many young LGBTQs at high risk of being convicted. We all know that bullying at school is likely to be devastating. Students in LGBTQ not only have an imbalance in the proportion of damage based on schools, they also do not receive support or support from school officials.