Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Bonus
100

Nebraska age of majority

19

100

Provide examples of specialized courts

drug court, veteran court, mental health court, etc

100

Basic requirement to be a federal judge?

law degree, political connections

100

Provide an example of a status offense

truancy, uncontrollable, runaway

200

Where and what year was the first juvenile court established?

1899, Illinois

200

What is therapeutic jurisprudence?

Focusing on offender accountability and victim safety, while taking into account benefits and consequences


200

Average age of most federal judges

49

200

In 1932, defendants were allowed to have _____; this made prosecutors work harder.

Defense Attorneys

200

What is Nebraska Statute 43-247 (2)

Felony

300

What is the Poor Law Act and when was it enacted

enacted 1601; it was designed to create work for kids. it started out with good intention, but ended up forcing kids to work as slaves

300

Are there more male or female judges on the federal bench?

male

300

The county attorneys first duty is to represent who?

The government

400

What is parens patriae similar to in modern day courts

It's similar to the government stepping in to be guardians for kids who have experienced abuse or neglect

400

Who screens candidates for the U.S. Supreme Court?

U.S. Attorney General

400
At what age are juveniles typically charged as an adult?

16

500

What was the child accused of in the reGault case?

A child made a prank call to the neighbor.

500

The U.S. Attorney general heads what department?

Department of Justice (DOJ)

500

The three parts of juvenile court are: 

Intake, Adjudication, Disposition

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