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JUVENILE
REVIEW BOARDS
The material provided on the
211 eLibrary is for informational purposes
only. It is not intended to be and should not
be construed as legal advice.
The following information is
summarized from the Connecticut
General Assembly Office of Legislative
Research, Report #2004-R-0941.
WHAT IS A JUVENILE REVIEW
BOARD
Juvenile review boards (JRBs)
are diversionary and prevention programs
designed to help local police departments deal
with juvenile offenders. They are usually
composed of representatives of local youth
service agencies, police departments, and the
juvenile court. Because JRBs are entirely local,
there is no state agency that oversees them or
keeps track of their existence or operation.
Although they are basically the same, there is
no single model that JRB’s must all follow, so
they can be tailored to meet the needs of the
particular community. They can be created
totally at the discretion of the municipality
and the key to starting one is to have the local
police and the local youth agency, usually a
youth service bureau, agree on how the board
will be structured and how it will work.
TO FIND INFORMATION ON JUVENILE
REVIEW BOARDS IN
CONNECTICUT'S COMMUNITY RESOURCES DATABASE:
Search by service name: Juvenile
Diversion
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SOURCES: Connecticut
General Assembly Office of Legislative
Research, Report #2004-R-0941
PREPARED BY: 211/kq
CONTENT LAST REVIEWED: January2012
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