- Young Offenders Act
The Young Offenders Act ( YOA ) was an act of the
Parliament of Canada passed in 1982 by the government of then-prime ministerPierre Trudeau and enacted in 1984, that regulated the criminal prosecution of Canadianyouth s.cite web|url=http://www.justicemonitor.ca/youthoffenders.htm|title=Youth Justice in Canada|publisher=Justice Canada Monitor|accessdate=2008-02-05] The act was repealed in 2003 with the passing of theYouth Criminal Justice Act .The act established the national age of criminal responsibility at 12 years old, and said that youths can only be prosecuted if they break a law of the
Criminal Code (previously, youths could be prosecuted or punished solely on the grounds that it was in the youth's "best interests").The act also indicated that the rights established in the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms apply to youths as well.Controversy dogged the act for many years. Many felt that the act's limit on a three-year detention sentence for youths was overly lax, and allowed youths to get unreasonably light sentences for
murder orsexual assault . This maximum was repeatedly increased, until in 1996 it was extended to a maximum of 10 years. That same year a provision was also made to allow 16-year-olds to be tried as adults in certain cases. Critics contended that this was "too harsh," as it made youths possible victims oflife sentence s.The act also drew much criticism from the public for not charging young offenders under the age of 12 years, and for banning publication of the identities of youths who commit criminal acts, contending that the number of violent crimes committed by youths has dramatically increased, as have the number of repeat young offenders, since the act was passed. The demands by the Canadian public for changes for the better in dealing with youth crime, particularly in the wake of the beating and attempted murder in 1999 of then-15-year-old Jonathan Wamback in North York, Ontario by a gang of teenagers,cite web|url=http://www.carleton.ca/jmc/cnews/03112000/n6.htm|title=Young Offenders Act beyond fixing, say critics
publisher=Capital News Online|accessdate=2008-02-05] led to the introduction of the Youth Criminal Justice Act to replace the YOA.cite web|url=http://www.fazeteen.com/summer2000/crime.htm|title=Crime and Punishment: Toughening the Young Offenders Act|publisher=Faze Magazine|accessdate=2008-02-05]Related Laws
The YOA replaced the earlier
Juvenile Delinquents Act enacted in 1908.Other laws linked to YOA include:
*
Criminal Code of Canada References
ee also
*
Juvenile Delinquents Act
*Youth Criminal Justice Act
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