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WHAT HAPPENS WHEN I "PLEAD
OUT"?
You are
in Juvenile Court because you have been charged with committing
a crime. Today, you and your attorney are trying to work out a solution
to your case without having a trial.
That solution is called a Plea.
What is a Plea??
A plea is a "deal" that your attorney works out with
the prosecutor. After you agree on a plea, your attorney fills out
a Tender of Plea Form. The Tender of Plea Form explains to the judge
what your attorney and the prosecutor think is a good solution for
your case. They will list all the "terms" that they are
proposing. The terms listed on the form are the things that you
will have to do if you want to resolve your case without going to
trial. You will be asked to read that form and then you and your
parent or guardian must sign the form.
Does the Judge have to Agree to the Plea?
No, the judge does not have to accept the solution your attorney
or the prosecutor suggests on the Tender of Plea form. But, if the
judge does not accept your plea, you have the right to take back
the plea and have a trial.
What happens if the Judge Accepts the Plea?
Before the judge can accept the plea, the judge must make sure
you are agreeing to the "deal" written on the Tender of
Plea Form because YOU want to do it, not because anyone has forced
you or threatened you to make you accept the deal. The judge must
also be sure that you understand that you are giving up the right
to a trial when you offer a plea. In order to make sure you understand
what you are doing today, the judge will ask you some questions
such as:
" What is your name?
" How old are you?
" What grade are you in at school? (if you don't go to school,
you may tell the judge the last grade you were in when you were
going to school.)
" Have you taken any drugs, alcohol or medicine in the last
24 hours (that is since yesterday morning)? If you have taken any
medicine, drugs, or alcohol since yesterday, does it interfere with
you ability to understand what is happening here today?
" Do you understand the charges against you?
" Has your attorney explained the charges to you and the consequences
that could result from those charges?
" Have you had enough time to talk to your attorney?
" Has anyone promised you anything, threatened you, or forced
you to offer this plea today?
What else happens when the Judge accepts my
plea?
Then the judge needs to make sure that you know what rights
you are giving up when you want to have a plea. The judge will explain
these rights to you.
What rights am I giving up when I take a plea?
When you take a plea, you must give up your right to a trial
and your right to remain silent.
What is a trial?
At a trial the prosecutor will have to prove that you are guilty
of the charges. There are two types of trials: a jury trial and
a jury-waived trial.
" A jury trial means that adults from the community who do
not know anyone involved in the case come to court, listen to the
evidence, and then decide if you are guilty or not.
" A jury-waived trial is a trial that is only before a judge
and the judge listens to the evidence and then decides if you are
guilty or not.
When you give up the right to a trial, you give
up all the things that go along with a trial, including the right
to hear what the witnesses against you would say in court. You are
also giving up the right to have your attorney cross-examine the
witnesses against you. Cross-examination means your attorney would
question the witnesses who are against you in the case. You are
also giving up the right to tell your side of the story by having
your own witnesses come in to court.
When you take a plea you also give up your right
to remain silent. This is your right not to say anything in court
if you decide to go to trial. In a trial, it is the prosecutor's
job to prove that you did what is charged. The prosecutor must prove
the charges beyond a reasonable doubt without making you say anything
in court. That means, the judge or the jury, after listening to
the witnesses, would have to be certain that you did what was charged
before they could find you guilty.
After the judge explains the rights that you
are giving up, s/he will try to make sure that you are giving up
your rights voluntarily, of your own free will.
Will the judge explain anything else?
Yes. If you agree that you still want to give up your right
to a trial, the judge will then tell you that, if you are not a
United States citizen, taking this plea may affect whether you can
stay in the United States, whether you can come back into the United
States if you visit another country, or may prevent you from becoming
a United States citizen in the future.
Will I have to admit anything to the judge?
Yes. After the judge believes that you want to give up your
rights, the judge will ask the prosecutor to read the police report
out loud. After hearing the police report, the judge will ask you
whether there are enough correct facts in the police report that
the court could find you delinquent of the charges against you.
If you say yes, the judge can accept the plea you and your attorney
have offered or the judge may suggest other terms that the judge
is willing to accept. If the judge wants to change any of the "terms"
you and your attorney have suggested on the Tender of Plea Form,
you will have the right to decide whether or not you want to accept
those new terms.
Remember that if you do not want to accept
what the judge is suggesting, you can take back your plea and have
a trial.
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