Rita Kramer's "Juvenile justice is a juvenile criminal" This is a well-described argument explaining how juvenile offenders have changed, and now almost all they do is not strictly punished. Kramer clearly wrote the reader to make her articles understood. Mr. Kramer said the juvenile system is very similar to the New York family court. The New York Family Court was originally designed to protect children who are still in trouble because of their age and believe that those children are still considered to be babies.
Rita Kramer, "Juvenile justice is a juvenile criminal," is a well written thesis paper lacking concrete cases and cases. Kramer succeeded in proving his opinion and showing his own opinion in his paper by presenting the obvious problem of the juvenile justice system and using statistical data to support the thesis. However, if she refers to at least one juvenile case she faced in the past year, this article gives more influence and further attracts the reader's attention. One incredible story, eccentric headline, news coverage helps Kraemer prove how serious and how serious the adolescent violence is.
"Juvenile justice" written by Rita Kramer is a good example of a good example of increasing the number of violent crimes committed by young offenders (usually under 17). Kramer cited examples of how the children committed crimes such as rape, murder, robbery, but they have not received any punishment or punishment at all. In the 1950s, juvenile offenders rarely committed violent crimes, often cheating. In order to rehabilitate young offenders, New York statues were born; it was created to help young offenders by restoring them. If a young criminal recovers from punishment or recovers under the guidance of a social worker, he is considered to be a responsible and considerate adult. The court system sealed the record of a young criminal and believed that he would not be insulted in the life he had adult because of immature action.