Chapter 419A —
Juvenile Code: General Provisions and Definitions
ORS sections in this chapter were
amended or repealed by the Legislative Assembly during its 2012 regular
session. See the table of ORS sections amended or repealed during the 2012
regular session: 2012 A&R Tables
2011 EDITION
JUVENILE CODE: GENERAL PROVISIONS AND
DEFINITIONS
HUMAN SERVICES; JUVENILE CODE;
CORRECTIONS
GENERAL PROVISIONS
419A.004 Definitions
COUNTY JUVENILE DEPARTMENT
419A.010 Appointment
of counselors and director; juvenile director oversight committee
419A.012 Duties
of director or counselor
419A.014 Reports
by juvenile department
419A.015 Reports
to school administrators concerning youth offenders on probation
419A.016 Powers
of director or counselor
419A.018 Juvenile
department is county agency
419A.020 County
responsibility for expenses of juvenile department
419A.022 Responsibility
of counties over 400,000 population
COURT SERVICES
419A.045 Policy
and purpose
419A.046 Definition
for ORS 419A.046 to 419A.048
419A.047 Financial
aid to counties for court services
419A.048 Court
to comply with fiscal reporting procedures
DETENTION AND SHELTER FACILITIES
419A.050 Authority
to acquire, equip and maintain detention and shelter facilities
419A.052 Specifications
of facilities
419A.055 Examination
of facilities; capacity limits; standards for release; notice
419A.057 Payment
of maintenance expenses; admission of youth offenders
419A.059 Designation
of detention and shelter facilities
419A.061 Inspection
of detention facilities
419A.063 Requirements
for detention facilities
LOCAL CITIZEN REVIEW BOARDS
419A.090 Local
citizen review boards
419A.092 Membership;
training
419A.094 Additional
boards; creation
419A.096 Duties
of Judicial Department in administering boards
419A.098 Rules
419A.100 Confidentiality
of information; penalty
419A.102 Access
to confidential information by boards; procedure
419A.104 Report
on children and wards in substitute care
419A.106 Review
of cases generally
419A.107 Review
of cases of youth offenders
419A.108 Procedure
for conflicts of interest
419A.109 Review
of cases of wards for whom guardian has been appointed; rules
419A.110 Immunity
of participants in case review
419A.112 Disclosure
of information to participants in case review; confidentiality
419A.114 When
presence of agency personnel at board hearings required
419A.116 Findings
and recommendations; judicial review
419A.118 Records;
disclosure of findings and recommendations
419A.120 Court
use of findings and recommendations
419A.122 Use
of findings and recommendations by Department of Human Services
419A.124 Policy
and procedure recommendations
419A.128 State
Citizen Review Board Operating Account
JUVENILE COURT REFEREES
419A.150 Appointment;
qualifications; hearings; orders; rehearings
COURT APPOINTED SPECIAL ADVOCATES
419A.170 Appointment;
duties; immunity; access to information; CASA Fund; rules
Note Court
Appointed Special Advocate Task Force--2011 c.725 §§1,2
CONTEMPT
419A.180 Power
of court to enforce orders by contempt order
FORMER JEOPARDY
419A.190 Effect
of adjudicatory hearing or admission
APPEALS
419A.200 Who
may appeal; time limitations; procedure; effect of filing appeal; record on
appeal; disclosure
419A.205 Judgments
described; jurisdiction of juvenile court during pendency of appeal;
disposition
419A.208 Orders
subject to appeal by state; effect of appeal of preadjudicatory order
419A.211 Appointment
of counsel
FINGERPRINTING AND PHOTOGRAPHING
419A.250 Authority;
segregation of records; access; when records may be kept with those of adults;
destruction of records; missing children
RECORDS
419A.253 When
information in report or material considered by court must be identified in
record
419A.255 Maintenance;
disclosure; providing transcript; exceptions to confidentiality
419A.256 When
transcript of proceeding is part of record of case; disclosure
419A.257 Disclosure
to district attorney and other state and county entities
419A.260 Expunction;
definitions
419A.262 Expunction
proceeding; notice to victim; effect of expunction; confidentiality; penalties
MISCELLANEOUS
419A.300 Reports
to school districts concerning young persons on conditional release
419A.305 Notice
to school administrators concerning students subject to juvenile court
petitions
419A.002 [1993
c.33 §1; 1993 c.546 §1; 1997 c.873 §1; repealed by 2003 c.396 §143]
GENERAL
PROVISIONS
419A.004 Definitions.
As used in this chapter and ORS chapters 419B and 419C, unless the context
requires otherwise:
(1)
“CASA Volunteer Program” means a program approved or sanctioned by the juvenile
court to recruit, train and supervise volunteer persons to serve as court
appointed special advocates.
(2)
“Child care center” means a residential facility for wards or youth offenders
that is licensed under the provisions of ORS 418.240.
(3)
“Community service” has the meaning given that term in ORS 137.126.
(4)
“Conflict of interest” means a person appointed to a local citizen review board
who has a personal or pecuniary interest in a case being reviewed by that
board.
(5)
“Counselor” means a juvenile department counselor or a county juvenile
probation officer.
(6)
“Court” means the juvenile court.
(7)
“Court appointed special advocate” or “CASA” means a person appointed by the
court pursuant to a CASA Volunteer Program to act as special advocate pursuant
to ORS 419A.170.
(8)
“Court facility” has the meaning given that term in ORS 166.360.
(9)
“Department” means the Department of Human Services.
(10)
“Detention” or “detention facility” means a facility established under ORS
419A.010 to 419A.020 and 419A.050 to 419A.063 for the detention of children,
wards, youths or youth offenders pursuant to a judicial commitment or order.
(11)
“Director” means the director of a juvenile department established under ORS
419A.010 to 419A.020 and 419A.050 to 419A.063.
(12)
“Guardian” means guardian of the person and not guardian of the estate.
(13)
“Indian child” means any unmarried person less than 18 years of age who is:
(a)
A member of an Indian tribe; or
(b)
Eligible for membership in an Indian tribe and is the biological child of a
member of an Indian tribe.
(14)
“Juvenile court” means the court having jurisdiction of juvenile matters in the
several counties of this state.
(15)
“Local citizen review board” means the board specified by ORS 419A.090 and
419A.092.
(16)
“Parent” means the biological or adoptive mother and the legal father of the
child, ward, youth or youth offender. As used in this subsection, “legal father”
means:
(a)
A man who has adopted the child, ward, youth or youth offender or whose
paternity has been established or declared under ORS 109.070 or 416.400 to
416.465 or by a juvenile court; and
(b)
In cases in which the Indian Child Welfare Act applies, a man who is a father
under applicable tribal law.
(17)
“Permanent foster care” means an out-of-home placement in which there is a
long-term contractual foster care agreement between the foster parents and the
department that is approved by the juvenile court and in which the foster
parents commit to raise a ward in substitute care or youth offender until the
age of majority.
(18)
“Planned permanent living arrangement” means an out-of-home placement other
than by adoption, placement with a relative or placement with a legal guardian
that is consistent with the case plan and in the best interests of the ward.
(19)
“Public building” has the meaning given that term in ORS 166.360.
(20)
“Reasonable time” means a period of time that is reasonable given a child or
ward’s emotional and developmental needs and ability to form and maintain
lasting attachments.
(21)
“Records” means any information in written form, pictures, photographs, charts,
graphs, recordings or documents pertaining to a case.
(22)
“Resides” or “residence,” when used in reference to the residence of a child,
ward, youth or youth offender, means the place where the child, ward, youth or
youth offender is actually living or the jurisdiction in which wardship or
jurisdiction has been established.
(23)
“Restitution” has the meaning given that term in ORS 137.103.
(24)
“Serious physical injury” means:
(a)
A serious physical injury as defined in ORS 161.015; or
(b)
A physical injury that:
(A)
Has a permanent or protracted significant effect on a child’s daily activities;
(B)
Results in substantial and recurring pain; or
(C)
In the case of a child under 10 years of age, is a broken bone.
(25)
“Shelter care” means a home or other facility suitable for the safekeeping of a
child, ward, youth or youth offender who is taken into temporary custody
pending investigation and disposition.
(26)
“Short-term detention facility” means a facility established under ORS 419A.050
(3) for holding children, youths and youth offenders pending further placement.
(27)
“Sibling” means one of two or more children or wards related:
(a)
By blood or adoption through a common legal parent; or
(b)
Through the marriage of the children’s or wards’ legal or biological parents.
(28)
“Substitute care” means an out-of-home placement directly supervised by the
department or other agency, including placement in a foster family home, group
home or other child caring institution or facility. “Substitute care” does not
include care in:
(a)
A detention facility, forestry camp or youth correction facility;
(b)
A family home that the court has approved as a ward’s permanent placement, when
a private child caring agency has been appointed guardian of the ward and when
the ward’s care is entirely privately financed; or
(c)
In-home placement subject to conditions or limitations.
(29)
“Surrogate” means a person appointed by the court to protect the right of the
child, ward, youth or youth offender to receive procedural safeguards with
respect to the provision of free appropriate public education.
(30)
“Tribal court” means a court with jurisdiction over child custody proceedings
and that is either a Court of Indian Offenses, a court established and operated
under the code of custom of an Indian tribe or any other administrative body of
a tribe that is vested with authority over child custody proceedings.
(31)
“Victim” means any person determined by the district attorney, the juvenile
department or the court to have suffered direct financial, psychological or
physical harm as a result of the act that has brought the youth or youth
offender before the juvenile court. When the victim is a minor, “victim”
includes the legal guardian of the minor. The youth or youth offender may not
be considered the victim. When the victim of the crime cannot be determined,
the people of Oregon, as represented by the district attorney, are considered
the victims.
(32)
“Violent felony” means any offense that, if committed by an adult, would
constitute a felony and:
(a)
Involves actual or threatened serious physical injury to a victim; or
(b)
Is a sexual offense. As used in this paragraph, “sexual offense” has the
meaning given the term “sex crime” in ORS 181.594.
(33)
“Ward” means a person within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court under ORS
419B.100.
(34)
“Young person” means a person who has been found responsible except for
insanity under ORS 419C.411 and placed under the jurisdiction of the
Psychiatric Security Review Board.
(35)
“Youth” means a person under 18 years of age who is alleged to have committed
an act that is a violation, or, if done by an adult would constitute a
violation, of a law or ordinance of the United States or a state, county or
city.
(36)
“Youth care center” has the meaning given that term in ORS 420.855.
(37)
“Youth offender” means a person who has been found to be within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court under ORS 419C.005 for an act committed when
the person was under 18 years of age. [1993 c.33 §2; 1993 c.546 §2; 1995 c.422 §65;
1997 c.130 §11; 1997 c.696 §2; 1997 c.873 §4; 1999 c.59 §116; 1999 c.109 §3;
1999 c.577 §11; 1999 c.859 §6; 1999 c.1095 §17; 2001 c.485 §3; 2001 c.900 §122;
2001 c.904 §12; 2001 c.910 §2; 2003 c.396 §1; 2003 c.576 §446; 2005 c.160 §1;
2005 c.517 §2; 2005 c.843 §1; 2007 c.609 §§7,8; 2007 c.806 §§1,2; 2009 c.178 §31]
COUNTY JUVENILE DEPARTMENT
419A.010 Appointment of counselors and
director; juvenile director oversight committee.
(1)(a) Subject to paragraph (b) of this subsection, the governing body of any
county, after consultation with the judges of the juvenile court in that
county, shall appoint or designate one or more persons of good moral character
as counselors of the juvenile department of the county, to serve at the
pleasure of and at a salary designated by the governing body of the county.
(b)
The governing bodies of two or more contiguous counties may, pursuant to an
agreement between the counties concerned, and after consultation with the
judges of the juvenile courts in those counties, jointly appoint one or more
persons of good moral character as counselors of the juvenile departments of
the counties, to serve at the pleasure of and at a salary designated by the
governing bodies of the counties concerned.
(c)
When more than one person is appointed under this subsection, the appointing
authority may designate one as director of the juvenile department or
departments and the others to serve as juvenile counselors or staff members.
(d)
Additional qualifications for a person appointed director of a juvenile
department of a county under this subsection may be established by the
governing body of a county, subject to the approval of such qualifications by
the judge of the juvenile court in that county.
(e)
When the chairperson of the governing body of the county is also the judge of
the juvenile court under ORS 5.020, only the judge shall make the decisions
described in this subsection.
(2)
The director shall be the administrator of the juvenile department or
departments for the county or counties, including any juvenile detention
facilities maintained by the county or by the counties jointly, and the
supervisor of the staff of the juvenile department or departments and detention
facilities, subject to the direction of the appointing authority.
(3)
Notwithstanding subsection (2) of this section, if the county has entered into
a written agreement under ORS 190.010 with any other unit or units of local
government to coordinate juvenile detention facilities established under ORS
419A.010 to 419A.020 and 419A.050 to 419A.063 for the detention of children,
wards, youths or youth offenders pursuant to a judicial commitment or order, a
juvenile director oversight committee may assume the duties and powers
described in subsection (2) of this section and ORS 419A.012, 419A.014,
419A.015 and 419A.016 if the following requirements have been met:
(a)
The agreement to coordinate juvenile detention facilities provides for the
formation and operation of a juvenile director oversight committee;
(b)
A juvenile director oversight committee consisting of the juvenile director of
each county that has entered into the agreement has been formed; and
(c)
Each juvenile director has an equal vote on the juvenile director oversight
committee. [1993 c.33 §4; 1993 c.546 §3; 2009 c.580 §1]
419A.012 Duties of director or counselor.
The director of a juvenile department or one of the counselors shall:
(1)
Make or cause to be made an investigation of every child, ward, youth or youth
offender brought before the court and report fully thereon to the court.
(2)
Be present in court to represent the interests of the child, ward, youth or
youth offender when the case is heard.
(3)
Furnish such information and assistance as the court requires.
(4)
Take charge of any child, ward, youth or youth offender before and after the
hearing as may be directed by the court. [1993 c.33 §5; 2003 c.396 §2]
419A.014 Reports by juvenile department.
The juvenile department of a county shall report annually to the Oregon
Criminal Justice Commission the frequency with which runaway children held
under ORS 419C.156, youths and youth offenders are held in preadjudicative
detention and the duration of the detention. [1993 c.33 §6; 2001 c.904 §2; 2001
c.905 §3; 2003 c.396 §3]
419A.015 Reports to school administrators
concerning youth offenders on probation. (1)(a) Once
each month, a county juvenile department shall provide to school administrators
of schools or of school districts in the county a list of all youth offenders
enrolled in a school in the county who are on probation by order of the
juvenile court in the county. The department shall include in the list the name
and business telephone number of the juvenile counselor assigned to each case.
(b)
When a youth offender who is on probation transfers from one school or school
district to a different school or school district, the juvenile counselor
assigned to the case shall notify the school administrator of the school or of
the school district to which the youth offender has transferred of the youth
offender’s probation status. The juvenile counselor shall make the notification
no later than 72 hours after the juvenile counselor knows of the transfer.
(2)
Upon request by the school administrator, the juvenile department shall provide
additional information, including the offense that brought the youth offender
within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court and such other information that
is subject to disclosure under ORS 419A.255 (5).
(3)
In addition to the general notification required by subsection (1) of this
section, the juvenile department shall notify the school administrator of the
specific offense if the act bringing the youth offender within the jurisdiction
of the juvenile court involved a firearm or delivery of a controlled substance.
(4)
When a school administrator receives any notice under this section, the school
administrator may disclose the information only to school personnel, as defined
in ORS 339.326, who the school administrator determines need the information in
order to safeguard the safety and security of the school, students and staff. A
person to whom personally identifiable information is disclosed under this
subsection may not disclose the information to another person except to carry
out the provisions of this subsection.
(5)
Except as otherwise provided in ORS 192.490, a juvenile department, school
district or school administrator, or anyone employed or acting on behalf of a
juvenile department, school district or school administrator, who sends or
receives records under this section is not civilly or criminally liable for
failing to disclose the information under this section.
(6)
As used in this section, “school administrator” has the meaning given that term
in ORS 419A.305. [1997 c.765 §2; 1999 c.620 §9; 1999 c.963 §1a; 2005 c.517 §3;
2008 c.50 §8; 2009 c.447 §7]
Note:
419A.015 was added to and made a part of ORS chapter 419A by legislative action
but was not added to any smaller series therein. See Preface to Oregon Revised
Statutes for further explanation.
419A.016 Powers of director or counselor.
Any director or counselor has the power of a peace officer as to any child,
ward, youth or youth offender committed to the care of the director or
counselor. Any director or counselor may, in the discretion of the director or
counselor and at any time, bring a child, ward, youth or youth offender
committed to the custody and care by the juvenile court before the court for
any further action the court considers advisable. [1993 c.33 §7; 2003 c.396 §4]
419A.018 Juvenile department is county
agency. Except as provided in ORS 419A.010, the
juvenile department of a county is and shall be considered a county agency for
all purposes. [1993 c.33 §15]
419A.020 County responsibility for expenses
of juvenile department. (1) The cost of maintaining a
juvenile department and all expenditures incidental thereto, including
traveling expenses, and necessarily incurred in supplying the immediate
necessities of children, wards, youths or youth offenders while committed to the
charge of a director or counselor, and all salaries for the personnel of a
juvenile department and of any detention facilities maintained in the county,
are payable upon the order of the board of county commissioners or county court
of the county from county funds budgeted and levied for that purpose in any
manner provided by law.
(2)
When two or more counties have counselors appointed to serve the counties
jointly, each county shall provide funds to pay its share of the costs and
expenses of the employment of counselors and maintaining juvenile departments.
The method of determining the portion of such costs and expenses each county is
to bear must be provided in the agreement made between the counties under ORS
419A.010 (1)(b). [1993 c.33 §16; 2003 c.396 §5]
419A.022 Responsibility of counties over
400,000 population. The board of county
commissioners or county court of counties having more than 400,000 inhabitants,
according to the latest federal decennial census, shall provide proper
accommodations for detention rooms and hospital wards, as may be necessary for
the care, custody and discipline of children, wards, youths or youth offenders.
The expense of the same shall be audited and paid in the same manner as other
bills in such county are audited and paid. [1993 c.33 §17; 2003 c.396 §6]
419A.044
[Formerly 423.310; repealed by 2001 c.904 §9 and 2001 c.905 §11]
COURT SERVICES
419A.045 Policy and purpose.
It is declared to be the legislative policy of the State of Oregon to recognize
county juvenile courts and departments as a basic foundation for the provision
of services to children, wards, youths, youth offenders and their families and,
with the limited amount of funds available, to assist counties in financing
certain juvenile court-related services on a continuing basis. The purpose of
ORS 419A.045 to 419A.048 is to provide basic grants to juvenile departments to
assist them in the administration of court services as defined in ORS 3.250. [Formerly
423.315; 2003 c.396 §7]
419A.046 Definition for ORS 419A.046 to
419A.048. As used in ORS 419A.046 to 419A.048, “state
contribution” means the amount of money to which each county is entitled from
the funds appropriated for the purposes of carrying out the provisions of ORS
419A.046 to 419A.048. [Formerly 423.330]
419A.047 Financial aid to counties for
court services. (1) The state shall provide
financial assistance to the counties for the implementation of local
coordinated comprehensive plans from funds appropriated for that purpose for
court services, as defined in ORS 3.250.
(2)
The Oregon Youth Authority shall determine each county’s estimated percentage
share of the amount to be appropriated for the purposes of this section. Such
determination must be based upon each county’s respective share of residents
under the age of 18.
(3)
The numbers of residents under the age of 18 for each county must be certified
to the Oregon Youth Authority by January 1 of each odd-numbered year by the
Portland State University Population Research Center. [Formerly 423.340; 2001
c.904 §3; 2001 c.905 §4; 2003 c.396 §8; 2007 c.71 §110]
419A.048 Court to comply with fiscal
reporting procedures. Any court with juvenile court
jurisdiction that receives financial assistance under ORS 419A.045 to 419A.048
shall comply with fiscal reporting procedures developed and approved by the
Oregon Youth Authority. [Formerly 423.350; 2001 c.904 §4; 2001 c.905 §5]
DETENTION AND SHELTER FACILITIES
419A.050 Authority to acquire, equip and
maintain detention and shelter facilities. (1)
Any county may acquire in any lawful manner, equip and maintain within the
county suitable facilities for the shelter or detention of children, wards,
youths and youth offenders confined pursuant to a judicial commitment or order
pending final adjudication of the case by the juvenile court.
(2)
When two or more counties have entered into an agreement under ORS 419A.010,
the counties jointly may acquire in any lawful manner, equip and maintain, at a
suitable site or sites in the counties, facilities suitable for the shelter or
detention of children, wards, youths and youth offenders confined pursuant to
judicial commitment or order pending final adjudication of the case by the
juvenile court.
(3)
Any county may designate, equip and maintain a short-term detention facility
for children, youths and youth offenders in transit. The facility may house up
to a total of five children, youths and youth offenders in transit for a period
not to exceed four continuous days pending further placement. Short-term detention
facilities:
(a)
May not be located with detention facilities established under subsection (1)
or (2) of this section; and
(b)
Are subject to the standards and specifications found in ORS 169.740 and
419A.052. Upon written request of the county, the Department of Corrections may
approve waivers and variances from the standards and specifications as long as
the waivers or variances are consistent with the safety and welfare of detained
children, youths and youth offenders. [1993 c.33 §8; 1993 c.546 §4; 1997 c.696 §1;
2003 c.396 §9]
419A.052 Specifications of facilities.
(1) Suitable detention facilities must be of Class I construction and comply
with the State of Oregon Structural Specialty Code and Fire and Life Safety
Code. In addition, the facilities must provide:
(a)
Sanitary drinking water in living units and dayrooms;
(b)
Toilets and washbasins accessible to detainees in all housing and activity
areas;
(c)
At least one shower for every 10 detainees;
(d)
A heating system and all equipment required to ensure healthful and comfortable
living and working conditions, and that maintains a temperature no lower than
64 degrees;
(e)
Lighting at 20 footcandles density; and
(f)
Verbal or mechanical communications from sleeping rooms to staff.
(2)
New or major renovated facilities must conform to the requirements of
subsection (1) of this section and must also provide:
(a)
That any single sleeping rooms located therein are at least 70 square feet and
that any dormitories located therein are at least 50 square feet per detainee
and house no more than five detainees each;
(b)
At least one toilet and washbasin for every five detainees;
(c)
Corridors of at least six feet in width;
(d)
Thirty square feet of dayroom space per detainee;
(e)
Heating units capable of maintaining 68 to 85 degrees temperature;
(f)
Tamper-proof lighting with capability of 20 footcandles;
(g)
Air circulation of 10 cubic feet of fresh air per minute, per detainee;
(h)
Sleeping rooms’ water valves accessible for staff control;
(i)
Rooms provided for classes, library, arts and crafts; and
(j)
Indoor and outdoor recreation and exercise areas. [1993 c.33 §9; 1999 c.59 §117;
2003 c.396 §10]
419A.055 Examination of facilities;
capacity limits; standards for release; notice.
(1) As used in this section:
(a)
“Contracting county” means a county that contracts with another county or a
regional juvenile detention correctional facility to place youths and youth
offenders in a detention facility in another county or in a regional juvenile
detention correctional facility.
(b)
“County court” has the meaning given that term in ORS 174.100.
(2)
The county court of a county may:
(a)
Institute an examination of the county’s detention facility and establish its
capacity in accordance with constitutional standards; and
(b)
Issue an order establishing the capacity of the county’s detention facility.
(3)(a)
A county court of a county may adopt standards for releasing youths and youth
offenders when the capacity of the detention facility is exceeded.
(b)
A county court of a contracting county may adopt standards for releasing youths
and youth offenders when the number of youths or youth offenders requiring
placement in a detention facility in another county or in a regional juvenile
detention correctional facility exceeds the number of youths and youth
offenders for whose placement the contracting county has contracted.
(4)
If a county court issues an order establishing the capacity of the detention
facility and that capacity is exceeded, the county court, through the juvenile
department director of that county, may release a sufficient number of youths
or youth offenders to reduce the population of the detention facility to the
established capacity.
(5)
If the number of youths and youth offenders requiring placement in a detention
facility in another county or in a regional juvenile detention correctional
facility exceeds the number for whose placement the contracting county has
contracted, the county court of the contracting county, through the juvenile
department director of the contracting county, may release a sufficient number
of youths or youth offenders who have been placed in a detention facility in
another county or in a regional juvenile detention correctional facility to
reduce the number of youths and youth offenders to the number for whose
placement the contracting county has contracted.
(6)(a)
The county court of a county, through the juvenile department director of the
county, shall immediately notify the judge of the juvenile court of the county
of the release of the youths or youth offenders.
(b)
The county court of a contracting county, through the juvenile department
director of the contracting county, shall immediately notify the judge of the
juvenile court of the contracting county of the release of the youths or youth
offenders.
(7)
This section does not create a cause of action and may not be asserted as the
basis for a per se negligence claim. [1993 c.33 §10; 2003 c.396 §11; 2009 c.293
§1]
419A.057 Payment of maintenance expenses;
admission of youth offenders. (1) All
expenses incurred in the maintenance of the facilities for detention and the
personnel required for the facilities, except as otherwise provided in
subsection (2) of this section, shall be paid upon order of the board of county
commissioners or county court from county funds duly levied and collected in
any manner provided by law. When joint detention facilities are maintained as
provided in ORS 419A.050 (2), each county shall pay its share of the costs and expenses
of acquiring, equipping and maintaining the joint detention facilities, to be
determined pursuant to an agreement between the counties. Counties may accept
gifts or donations of property, including money, for the use of detention
facilities to be expended and used as directed by the board of county
commissioners.
(2)
When a county operates a combined facility to provide both care and
rehabilitation services, under ORS 420.855 to 420.885, and detention
facilities, the county may also receive state support for the care and
rehabilitation services as permitted by ORS 420.880.
(3)
When a county operates a combined facility as described in subsection (2) of
this section, only youth offenders may be admitted to the youth care center of
the facility and only following court review of the admission. [1993 c.33 §11;
1993 c.546 §5; 2003 c.396 §12; 2005 c.159 §2]
419A.059 Designation of detention and
shelter facilities. The juvenile court of each
county shall designate the place or places in which children, wards, youths or
youth offenders are to be placed in detention or shelter care when taken into
temporary custody. If the county is adjacent to another state, the court may
designate a place or places in the adjoining state where children, wards,
youths or youth offenders, pursuant to an agreement between such place or
places and the juvenile department of the county, may be placed in detention or
shelter care when taken into custody. A county juvenile department may not
enter into an agreement with an out-of-state place for placement in detention
as provided in this section, unless the place or places conform to standards of
this state for such a place and unless the agreement includes a provision that
the place be subject to inspection by officers of this state under ORS
419A.061. [1993 c.33 §12; 2003 c.396 §13]
419A.061 Inspection of detention
facilities. Inspection of juvenile detention
facilities, including jails or lockups, and enforcement of the juvenile
detention standards contained in ORS 419A.059 or otherwise established by
statute, must be conducted in the same manner as provided in ORS 169.070 and
169.080. [1993 c.33 §13; 2003 c.396 §14]
419A.063 Requirements for detention
facilities. (1) The juvenile court may not place a
youth offender in a detention facility under ORS 419C.453 unless the facility:
(a)
Houses youth offenders in a room or ward screened from the sight and sound of
adults who may be detained in the facility; and
(b)
Is staffed by juvenile department employees.
(2)
In no case may the court order, pursuant to ORS 419C.453, that a youth offender
under 14 years of age be placed in any detention facility in which adults are
detained or imprisoned.
(3)
As used in this section, “adult” does not include a person who is 18 years of
age or older and is alleged to be, or has been found to be, within the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court under ORS 419C.005. [1993 c.33 §14; 2003
c.396 §15; 2003 c.442 §6]
LOCAL CITIZEN REVIEW BOARDS
419A.090 Local citizen review boards.
Subject to the availability of funds, the Judicial Department shall establish
local citizen review boards. There shall be at least one local citizen review
board in each county with a population of 5,000 or more, except that for two or
more contiguous counties, each with a population of fewer than 100,000, there
may be joint local citizen review boards. [1993 c.33 §18]
419A.092 Membership; training.
(1) Each local citizen review board shall be composed of at least three and not
more than seven members appointed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of
the State of Oregon. If more than five members are appointed to a local citizen
review board, the additional members serve as alternate members. Each member
appointed shall be sworn in by a judge of the court to which the member is to
be appointed to serve. The Chief Justice shall appoint local citizen review
boards according to the following guidelines:
(a)
Members of each local citizen review board shall be recruited from groups with
special knowledge or interest in foster care, child welfare and juvenile
corrections, which may include but are not limited to adoptive parents and
members of the professions of law, medicine, psychology, social work, law
enforcement, corrections and education;
(b)
As far as practicable, members of each local citizen review board shall
represent the various socioeconomic and ethnic groups of the area served;
(c)
A person providing child protective services employed by the Department of
Human Services, by any private agency regulated, certified, directed or
licensed by or contracting with the department or by any juvenile court may not
serve on any local citizen review board reviewing cases under ORS 419A.106;
(d)
A person employed by the Oregon Youth Authority, by any private agency
regulated, certified, directed or licensed by or contracting with the Oregon
Youth Authority or by any juvenile court may not serve on any local citizen
review board reviewing cases under ORS 419A.107;
(e)
The appointment of any individual member of a local citizen review board may be
made only from a list approved by the presiding judge of the court to which the
individual member is to be appointed to serve; and
(f)
Members of local citizen review boards must be domiciled or employed within the
counties of the court that they are appointed to serve.
(2)
Prior to reviewing cases, all persons appointed to serve as local citizen
review board members must participate in a 16-hour orientation training program
established and approved by the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon. In
addition, each local citizen review board member must receive eight hours of
training annually. [1993 c.33 §19; 1993 c.412 §1; 2001 c.241 §1; 2003 c.442 §8]
419A.094 Additional boards; creation.
Local citizen review boards shall be added when the number of cases requiring
review by existing boards exceeds a number per month established by rule under
ORS 419A.096, as the maximum number that may be reviewed by a single board. [1993
c.33 §20]
419A.096 Duties of Judicial Department in
administering boards. (1) Subject to the availability
of funds, the Judicial Department, in accordance with the direction of the
Supreme Court of the State of Oregon, shall:
(a)
Establish and approve policies and procedures for the operation of local
citizen review boards;
(b)
Approve and cause to have conducted training programs for local citizen review
board members;
(c)
Provide consultation services on request to local citizen review boards;
(d)
Establish reporting procedures to be followed by the local citizen review
boards to provide data for the evaluation of ORS 419A.090 to 419A.128,
419B.470, 419B.473, 419B.476, 419B.500 and 419B.502; and
(e)
Employ staff and provide for support services for the local citizen review
boards.
(2)
The Supreme Court shall establish requirements and procedures necessary for
compliance with subsection (1) of this section and shall direct the State Court
Administrator to carry out duties prescribed by the Supreme Court relating to
the administration of the local citizen review board program established under
this section and ORS 419A.090, 419A.092, 419A.094 and 419A.098. [1993 c.33 §21]
419A.098 Rules.
The Chief Justice, in consultation with the Supreme Court, shall adopt rules
under ORS 1.002 that may include any procedures for the administration of the
local citizen review board program regarding:
(1)
Removal of members of local citizen review boards;
(2)
The time, content and manner in which case plans and case progress reports
shall be provided by the Department of Human Services or other agency or
individual directly responsible for the care of the child or ward to the local
citizen review board. These rules may require that such information be provided
in shorter time periods than those contained in ORS 419B.443, and that
information in addition to that specified by ORS 419B.443 be provided;
(3)
Procedures for providing written notice of the review to the department, any
other agency directly responsible for the care or placement of the child or
ward, the parents or their attorneys, foster parents, surrogate parents, mature
children and wards or their attorneys, the appointed attorney or court
appointed special advocate of any child or ward, any district attorney or
attorney general actively involved in the case and other interested persons.
The notice shall include advice that persons receiving a notice may participate
in the hearing and be accompanied by a representative;
(4)
Procedures for securing or excusing the presence at the review of caseworkers
and other employees of the department or other agencies directly responsible
for the care of the child or ward;
(5)
Procedures by which boards can remove cases from review when such review is not
required under federal law;
(6)
Grounds for removal of members;
(7)
Terms of board members; and
(8)
Organization of individual boards. [1993 c.33 §23; 1993 c.546 §6; 2001 c.962 §95;
2003 c.396 §§16,17]
419A.100 Confidentiality of information;
penalty. (1) Before beginning to serve on a
local citizen review board, each member shall swear or affirm to the court that
the member shall keep confidential the information reviewed by the board and
its actions and recommendations in individual cases.
(2)
The members and staff of a local citizen review board are not subject to
subpoena to appear in court to testify regarding information reviewed by the
board or actions taken or recommendations made by the board in individual
cases.
(3)
A member of a local citizen review board who violates the duty imposed by
subsection (1) of this section commits a Class A violation. [1993 c.33 §27;
1993 c.412 §3; 1999 c.1051 §179]
419A.102 Access to confidential information
by boards; procedure. (1) Notwithstanding the
provisions of ORS 40.225 to 40.275, 412.074, 419B.035, 419B.045, 419B.440,
419B.443, 419B.446, 419B.449, 419B.452 and 419B.460, each local citizen review
board shall have access to:
(a)
Any records of the court which are pertinent to the case; and
(b)
Any records of the Department of Human Services that would be admissible in a
permanency hearing conducted under ORS 419B.470, 419B.473 and 419B.476,
including school records and reports of private service providers contained in
the records of the department or other agency.
(2)
All requested records not already before the local citizen review board shall
be submitted by the department within five working days after receipt of the
request. The following provisions apply:
(a)
Copies may be sent in lieu of originals.
(b)
Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, the local citizen review boards
and the staff provided for the boards must return all records and copies
received from the department to the department within seven working days after
completion of the review. The staff of a local citizen review board may retain
a reference copy of case materials used by the local citizen review board to
make its recommendation if the following apply:
(A)
The material is necessary for the ongoing work of the board with regard to the
particular case or to work of the board; and
(B)
The confidentiality of the material is continued and protected in the same
manner as other materials received from the department. Materials thus retained
by the local boards are exempt from disclosure under the public records law.
(3)
If a local citizen review board is denied access to requested records, it may
request a court hearing. The court may require the organization in possession
of the records to show cause why the records should not be made available as
provided by this section. [1993 c.33 §28; 1993 c.546 §91; 1999 c.859 §17]
419A.104 Report on children and wards in
substitute care. Within seven working days after
the first of each month, the Department of Human Services shall send to the
citizen review board state administrative office the federally required report
listing all children and wards in substitute care. The report must include the
dates of placement and the dates by which a review must be conducted. [1993
c.412 §5 (enacted in lieu of 1993 c.33 §29); 2003 c.396 §18]
419A.106 Review of cases generally.
(1) Except for cases removed from review under procedures established under ORS
419A.098, the local citizen review board shall review the case of each child
and ward in substitute care which is assigned by the court. The following
provisions apply:
(a)
The review shall take place at times set by the board, the first review to be
no more than six months after the child or ward is placed in substitute care
and subsequent reviews to take place no less frequently than once every six
months thereafter until the child or ward is no longer within the jurisdiction
of the court, no longer in substitute care or until an adoption proceeding
becomes final.
(b)
The court, by rule of the court or on an individual case basis, may relieve the
local citizen review board of its responsibility to review a case if a complete
judicial review has taken place within 60 days prior to the next scheduled
board review. A complete judicial review is a hearing that results in a written
order that contains the findings required under ORS 419B.476 or includes
substantially the same findings as are required under ORS 419A.116.
(c)
The court shall notify the local citizen review board of a denial of a petition
to terminate parental rights within 10 days of the denial. As soon as practical
but no later than 45 days after the denial, the board shall review any case
where a petition to terminate parental rights has been denied.
(2)
The local citizen review board may hold joint or separate reviews for groups of
siblings.
(3)
At any review conducted under this section or at a court hearing conducted in
lieu of that review, the court or local citizen review board shall inquire of
those present as to the parent’s current address and telephone numbers and, if
the parent has a contact person, the name, current address and telephone number
of the contact person. When appropriate, the court may enter a protective order
limiting disclosure of information obtained under this subsection. [1993 c.33 §30;
1993 c.412 §6; 2001 c.686 §§19,19a; 2003 c.396 §19]
419A.107 Review of cases of youth
offenders. (1) Subject to the availability of
funds, a local citizen review board shall review cases of youth offenders in
the custody of the Oregon Youth Authority and placed in substitute care. The
local citizen review board shall focus on public safety, youth offender
accountability and reformation in conducting the reviews.
(2)
The Judicial Department and the Oregon Youth Authority shall enter into an
intergovernmental agreement regarding the reviews conducted under subsection
(1) of this section. The intergovernmental agreement must outline the:
(a)
Timing of the reviews;
(b)
Participants to be invited to the reviews; and
(c)
Process to be followed in conducting the reviews.
(3)
The local citizen review board shall forward findings and recommendations
generated at a review under subsection (1) of this section to the court and any
other parties designated in the agreement under subsection (2) of this section.
The court shall cause the findings and recommendations to become part of the
juvenile court file for consideration by the juvenile court judge. [1999 c.187 §1;
2001 c.241 §2]
Note:
419A.107 was added to and made a part of ORS chapter 419A by legislative action
but was not added to any smaller series therein. See Preface to Oregon Revised
Statutes for further explanation.
419A.108 Procedure for conflicts of
interest. Whenever a member of a local citizen
review board has a potential conflict of interest in a case being reviewed, the
member shall declare to the local citizen review board the nature of the
potential conflict prior to participating in the case review. The following
apply as described:
(1)
The declaration of the member shall be recorded in the official records of the
board.
(2)
If, in the judgment of the majority of the local board, the potential conflict
of interest may prevent the member from fairly and objectively reviewing the
case, the local board may remove the member from participation in the review. [1993
c.33 §32]
419A.109 Review of cases of wards for whom
guardian has been appointed; rules. (1) Subject
to the availability of funds and upon request of a court under ORS 419B.367, a
local citizen review board shall review the case of a ward for whom a guardian
has been appointed under ORS 419B.365 or 419B.366. In the request for review,
the court shall notify the local citizen review board of the names and
addresses of the parties.
(2)
The review shall take place within 45 days, or as soon as is practicable given
the schedule of the local citizen review board, after the local citizen review
board receives the request for review by the court.
(3)
The local citizen review board shall send notice of the review to all parties.
(4)
The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, in consultation with the Supreme Court,
shall adopt rules under ORS 1.002 that may include any procedures for the
administration of the local citizen review board program regarding:
(a)
The time, content and manner in which the guardian must provide reports to the
local citizen review board; and
(b)
The process to be followed in conducting the reviews.
(5)
The local citizen review board shall forward findings and recommendations
generated at a review under subsection (1) of this section to the court and all
parties. The court shall cause the findings and recommendations to become part
of the juvenile court file for consideration by the juvenile court judge. The
court shall give the local citizen review board written notice if the court
modifies, alters or takes action on a case as a result of the recommendations
of the local citizen review board. [2003 c.229 §8; 2005 c.84 §2; 2007 c.333 §6]
Note:
419A.109 was added to and made a part of ORS chapter 419A by legislative action
but was not added to any smaller series therein. See Preface to Oregon Revised
Statutes for further explanation.
419A.110 Immunity of participants in case
review. Anyone participating in a case review
by a local citizen review board shall have:
(1)
Immunity from any liability, civil or criminal, for defamation for statements
made in good faith by the participant, orally or in writing, in the course of
such case review.
(2)
The same immunity with respect to participating in any judicial proceeding
resulting from the review or recommendation of a local board to the juvenile
court. [1993 c.33 §35]
419A.112 Disclosure of information to
participants in case review; confidentiality. (1)
The local citizen review board may disclose records disclosed to the local
board under ORS 419A.102 to:
(a)
Parents and their attorneys;
(b)
Foster parents;
(c)
Mature children;
(d)
Mature wards;
(e)
The attorneys for children and wards; and
(f)
Other persons authorized by the local board to participate in the case review.
(2)
Before participating in a local citizen review board case review, each
participant, other than parents, children and wards, shall swear or affirm to
the board that the participant shall keep confidential the information
disclosed by the board in the case review and to disclose it only as authorized
by law. [1993 c.33 §34; 1997 c.328 §2; 1999 c.92 §5; 2003 c.396 §20; 2005 c.159
§3]
419A.114 When presence of agency personnel
at board hearings required. (1) Unless excused from doing so
by the local citizen review board, the Department of Human Services and any
other agency directly responsible for the care and placement of the child or
ward shall require the presence of any employees having knowledge of the case
at local board meetings.
(2)
The local citizen review board may require the presence of specific employees
of the department or agency at local board meetings. If an employee fails to be
present at such a meeting, the local review board may request a court hearing.
The court may require the employee to be present and show cause why the
employee should not be compelled to appear before the local citizen review
board.
(3)
As used in this section, “presence” includes telephone participation except
that the caseworker on the case at the time of the meeting must be physically
present if required. [1993 c.33 §37; 2003 c.396 §21]
419A.116 Findings and recommendations;
judicial review. (1) After reviewing each case,
the local citizen review board shall make written findings and recommendations
with respect to:
(a)
Whether reasonable efforts were made prior to the placement, to prevent or
eliminate the need for removal of the child or ward from the home;
(b)
If the case plan at the time of the review is to reunify the family, whether
the Department of Human Services has made reasonable efforts or, if the Indian
Child Welfare Act applies, active efforts to make it possible for the child or
ward to safely return home and whether the parent has made sufficient progress
to make it possible for the child or ward to safely return home;
(c)
If the case plan at the time of the review is something other than to reunify
the family, whether the department has made reasonable efforts to place the
child or ward in a timely manner in accordance with the case plan, including,
if appropriate, placement of the child or ward through an interstate placement,
and to complete the steps necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the
child or ward;
(d)
The continuing need for and appropriateness of the placement;
(e)
Compliance with the case plan;
(f)
The progress which has been made toward alleviating the need for placement;
(g)
A likely date by which the child or ward may be returned home or placed for
adoption;
(h)
Other problems, solutions or alternatives the board determines should be
explored; and
(i)
Whether the court should appoint an attorney or other person as special
advocate to represent or appear on behalf of the child or ward under ORS
419B.195.
(2)
The local citizen review board may, if the case plan has changed during the
period since the last review by a local citizen review board or court hearing,
make written findings and recommendations with respect to:
(a)
Whether the Department of Human Services has made reasonable efforts or, if the
Indian Child Welfare Act applies, active efforts to make it possible for the
child or ward to safely return home and whether the parent has made sufficient
progress to make it possible for the child or ward to safely return home, if a
plan to reunify the family was in effect for any part of the period since the
last review or hearing; or
(b)
Whether the department has made reasonable efforts to place the child or ward
in a timely manner in accordance with the case plan, including, if appropriate,
placement of the child or ward through an interstate placement, and to complete
the steps necessary to finalize the permanent placement of the child or ward,
if a case plan other than to reunify the family was in effect for any part of
the period since the last review or hearing.
(3)
In determining whether the Department of Human Services has made reasonable
efforts or, if the Indian Child Welfare Act applies, active efforts to make it
possible for the child or ward to safely return home, the local citizen review
board shall consider the child or ward’s health and safety the paramount
concerns.
(4)
No later than 10 days after receiving the findings and recommendations of the
local citizen review board, a party adversely affected by the findings and
recommendations may request judicial review. [1993 c.33 §31; 2001 c.686 §20;
2003 c.396 §22; 2007 c.611 §3]
419A.118 Records; disclosure of findings
and recommendations. The local citizen review board
shall keep accurate records and retain these records on file. The local citizen
review board shall send copies of its written findings and recommendations to
the following:
(1)
The court;
(2)
The Department of Human Services; and
(3)
Other participants in the review. [1993 c.33 §33]
419A.120 Court use of findings and
recommendations. Upon receipt of findings and recommendations
from the local citizen review board, the court shall:
(1)
Review the findings and recommendations of the local citizen review board
within 10 days after the findings and recommendations are received by the
court. If the court finds it appropriate, the court may on its own motion
schedule a review hearing.
(2)
Cause the findings and recommendations of the local citizen review board to
become part of the juvenile court file.
(3)
Give the local citizen review board written notice if the court modifies,
alters or takes action on a case as a result of the board’s recommendations. [1993
c.33 §38]
419A.122 Use of findings and
recommendations by Department of Human Services.
Upon receipt of findings and recommendations from the local citizen review
board, the Department of Human Services shall:
(1)
Review the findings and recommendations of the local citizen review board
within 10 days after the findings and recommendations are received by the
department. The recommendations shall be implemented and the case plan modified
as the department deems appropriate and resources permit.
(2)
Give the local citizen review board written notice of such intent within 17
days of receipt of the report if the department does not intend to implement
the recommendations.
(3)
Cause the findings and recommendations of the local citizen review board to
become part of the case file of the department. [1993 c.33 §39; 1993 c.412 §7]
419A.124 Policy and procedure
recommendations. In addition to reviewing
individual cases of children and wards in substitute care, local citizen review
boards may make recommendations to the court and the Department of Human
Services concerning substitute care services, policies, procedures and laws. [1993
c.33 §36; 2003 c.396 §23]
419A.128 State Citizen Review Board
Operating Account. (1) There is created a State
Citizen Review Board Operating Account in the General Fund which is
continuously appropriated to the State Court Administrator to pay the expenses
incurred under ORS 419A.090 to 419A.128, 419B.470, 419B.473 and 419B.476. Such
expenses shall be paid only from funds specifically appropriated for the
purposes of ORS 419A.090 to 419A.128, 419B.470, 419B.473 and 419B.476 and no
other moneys appropriated to the State Court Administrator shall be used for
these purposes.
(2)
The State Court Administrator may accept funds and assistance from public and
private sources for carrying out the purposes of ORS 419A.090 to 419A.128,
419B.470, 419B.473 and 419B.476 and may agree to conditions on the funds and
assistance that are not inconsistent with ORS 419A.090 to 419A.128, 419B.470,
419B.473 and 419B.476. Such funds shall be credited to the State Citizen Review
Board Operating Account. [1993 c.33 §42; 2003 c.442 §9]
JUVENILE COURT REFEREES
419A.150 Appointment; qualifications; hearings;
orders; rehearings. (1) The judge of the juvenile
court may appoint one or more persons as referee of the juvenile court. A
referee shall be appointed in every county in which there is no resident
juvenile court judge. A person appointed referee must be qualified by training
and experience in the handling of juvenile matters, must have such further
qualifications as may be prescribed by law and holds office as referee at the
pleasure of the judge. The state shall pay the compensation of a referee
appointed by the judge of a circuit court from funds available for the purpose.
The county shall pay the compensation of a referee appointed by the judge of a
county court.
(2)
The judge may direct that any case, or all cases of a class designated by the
judge, be processed or heard in the first instance by a referee in the manner
provided for the hearing of cases by the court. Upon conclusion of the hearing
in each case, the referee shall transmit to the judge the findings,
recommendations or order in writing of the referee.
(3)
When the referee conducts a hearing, the persons entitled to request rehearing
as provided in subsection (7) of this section must be notified of the referee’s
findings, recommendations or order, together with a notice to the effect that a
rehearing may be had before a judge if requested within 10 days. A rehearing
before a judge of the juvenile court may be determined on the same evidence
introduced before the referee if a stenographic transcript of the proceedings
was kept, but, in any case, additional evidence may be presented.
(4)
All orders of a referee become immediately effective, subject to the right of
review provided in this section, and continue in full force and effect, unless
stayed by order of the referee or by a juvenile court judge, until vacated or
modified upon rehearing by order of a judge of the juvenile court. Any order
entered by a referee becomes a final order of the juvenile court upon
expiration of 10 days following its entry, unless a rehearing is ordered or
requested.
(5)
The judge of the juvenile court or, in counties having more than one judge of
the juvenile court, the presiding judge of the juvenile court may establish
requirements that any or all orders of referees must be expressly approved by a
judge of the juvenile court before becoming effective.
(6)
A judge of the juvenile court may, on the judge’s own motion, order a rehearing
of any matter heard before a referee.
(7)
At any time prior to the expiration of 10 days after the entry of the order and
findings of a referee into the court register, a child, ward, youth, youth
offender, the parent, guardian, district attorney, Department of Human
Services, juvenile department or other party affected by the order may request
rehearing. The request for rehearing must be served upon all parties by the
party requesting the rehearing.
(8)
All rehearings of matters heard before a referee shall be heard expeditiously
by a judge of the juvenile court within 30 days after the filing of the
request, unless the court orders a continuance. In no event may the rehearing
occur later than 45 days after the date of the filing of the request. The
rehearing is conducted de novo.
(9)
Notwithstanding subsection (7) of this section, when a referee finds that a
youth is not within the jurisdiction of the court in a proceeding brought under
ORS 419C.005, the district attorney may not request a rehearing. [1993 c.33 §43;
1993 c.546 §7; 2003 c.396 §24]
COURT APPOINTED SPECIAL ADVOCATES
419A.170 Appointment; duties; immunity;
access to information; CASA Fund; rules. (1) In every
case under ORS chapter 419B, the court shall appoint a court appointed special
advocate. The court appointed special advocate is deemed a party in these
proceedings, and in the furtherance thereof, may be represented by counsel,
file pleadings and request hearings and may subpoena, examine and cross-examine
witnesses. If the court appointed special advocate is represented by counsel,
counsel shall be paid from funds available to the Court Appointed Special
Advocate Volunteer Program. No funds from the Public Defense Services Account
or Judicial Department operating funds may be used for this purpose.
(2)
Subject to the direction of the court, the duties of the court appointed
special advocate are to:
(a)
Investigate all relevant information about the case;
(b)
Advocate for the child or ward, ensuring that all relevant facts are brought
before the court;
(c)
Facilitate and negotiate to ensure that the court, Department of Human
Services, if applicable, and the child or ward’s attorney, if any, fulfill
their obligations to the child or ward in a timely fashion; and
(d)
Monitor all court orders to ensure compliance and to bring to the court’s
attention any change in circumstances that may require a modification of the
court’s order.
(3)
If a juvenile court does not have available to it a CASA Volunteer Program, or
a sufficient number of qualified CASA volunteers, the court may, in fulfillment
of the requirements of this section, appoint a juvenile department employee or
other suitable person to represent the child or ward’s interest in court
pursuant to ORS 419A.012 or 419B.195.
(4)
Any person appointed as a court appointed special advocate in any judicial
proceeding on behalf of the child or ward is immune from any liability for
defamation or statements made in good faith by that person, orally or in
writing, in the course of the case review or judicial proceeding.
(5)
Any person appointed as a court appointed special advocate, CASA Volunteer
Program director, CASA Volunteer Program employee or member of the board of
directors or trustees of any CASA Volunteer Program is immune from any
liability for acts or omissions or errors in judgment made in good faith in the
course or scope of that person’s duties or employment as part of a CASA
Volunteer Program.
(6)
Whenever the court appoints a court appointed special advocate or other person
under subsections (1) to (3) of this section to represent the child or ward, it
may require a parent, if able, or guardian of the estate, if the estate is
able, to pay, in whole or in part, the reasonable costs of CASA services
including reasonable attorney fees. The court’s order of payment is enforceable
in the same manner as an order of support under ORS 419B.408.
(7)
Upon presentation of the order of appointment by the court appointed special
advocate, any agency, hospital, school organization, division, office or
department of the state, doctor, nurse or other health care provider, psychologist,
psychiatrist, police department or mental health clinic shall permit the court
appointed special advocate to inspect and copy, and may consult with the court
appointed special advocate regarding, any records relating to the child or ward
involved in the case, without the consent of the child, ward or parents.
(8)
All records and information acquired or reviewed by a court appointed special
advocate during the course of official duties are deemed confidential under ORS
419A.255.
(9)
For the purposes of a Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (42 U.S.C. 5101
et seq.) grant to this state under Public Law No. 93-247, or any related state
or federal legislation, a court appointed special advocate or other person
appointed pursuant to subsections (1) to (3) of this section is deemed a
guardian ad litem to represent the interests of the child or ward in
proceedings before the court.
(10)
There is created a Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) Fund in the General
Fund. The fund consists of all moneys credited to it. Moneys in the Court
Appointed Special Advocate Fund are continuously appropriated to the State
Commission on Children and Families and may be used only to carry out the
purposes of this section. The commission may apply for and receive funds from
federal and private sources for carrying out the provisions of this section.
(11)
The state commission may expend moneys from the Court Appointed Special
Advocate Fund directly or indirectly through contracts or grants for the
creation, supervision and operation of CASA Volunteer Programs statewide. The
commission may also expend moneys from the Court Appointed Special Advocate
Fund to pay the reasonable costs of its administration of the Court Appointed
Special Advocate Fund. The commission shall adopt rules for carrying out its
responsibilities under this section. [1993 c.33 §44; 1993 c.546 §92; 1993 c.676
§41; 1997 c.130 §12; 2001 c.962 §91; 2003 c.396 §§25,26; 2005 c.755 §35; 2011
c.190 §1]
Note:
Sections 1 and 2, chapter 725, Oregon Laws 2011, provide:
Sec. 1. Court Appointed Special Advocate
Task Force. (1) There is established the Court
Appointed Special Advocate Task Force consisting of nine members appointed as
follows:
(a)
The President of the Senate shall appoint one member from among members of the
Senate.
(b)
The Speaker of the House of Representatives shall appoint one member from among
members of the House of Representatives.
(c)
The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court shall appoint four members as follows:
(A)
Two members representing CASA Volunteer Programs; and
(B)
Two members from the Judicial Department with expertise in juvenile dependency
cases.
(d)
The Governor shall appoint three members as follows:
(A)
Two members from the Oregon State Bar with expertise in juvenile justice cases
involving court appointed special advocates; and
(B)
One member from among members of the Oregon Volunteers Commission for Voluntary
Action and Service established under ORS 458.555.
(2)
The task force shall study and make recommendations on the appropriate
structure and operation for funding and administration of the CASA Volunteer
Programs in this state.
(3)
A majority of the members of the task force constitutes a quorum for the
transaction of business.
(4)
Official action by the task force requires the approval of a majority of the
members of the task force.
(5)
The task force shall elect one of its members to serve as chairperson.
(6)
If there is a vacancy for any cause, the appointing authority shall make an
appointment to become immediately effective.
(7)
The task force shall meet at times and places specified by the call of the
chairperson or of a majority of the members of the task force.
(8)
The task force may adopt rules necessary for the operation of the task force.
(9)
The task force shall make a report, and may include recommendations for
legislation, to interim committees of the Legislative Assembly related to the
provision of court appointed special advocate services no later than January
15, 2012.
(10)
The Legislative Administrator selected under ORS 173.710 shall staff the task
force.
(11)
The task force may accept donations of staff support, office space and
equipment from advocacy or service provider organizations to assist the task
force in the performance of its functions.
(12)(a)
Notwithstanding ORS 171.072, members of the task force who are members of the
Legislative Assembly are not entitled to mileage expenses or a per diem and
serve as volunteers on the task force.
(b)
Members of the task force who are not members of the Legislative Assembly are
not entitled to compensation, but may be reimbursed for actual and necessary
travel and other expenses incurred by them in the performance of their official
duties in the manner and amounts provided for in ORS 292.495. Claims for
expenses incurred in performing functions of the task force shall be paid out
of funds appropriated to the State Commission on Children and Families for the
operation of the CASA Volunteer Programs. [2011 c.725 §1]
Sec. 2.
Section 1 of this 2011 Act is repealed on June 30, 2012. [2011 c.725 §2]
CONTEMPT
419A.180 Power of court to enforce orders
by contempt order. In case of failure to comply
with any order of the juvenile court, the court may proceed for contempt of
court against the person failing to comply. [1993 c.33 §45]
FORMER JEOPARDY
419A.190 Effect of adjudicatory hearing or
admission. Except as provided in ORS 153.108 (1),
proceedings in adult criminal court and other juvenile court adjudicatory
proceedings based on an act alleged in a petition or citation to have been
committed by a child, ward, youth or youth offender or allegations arising out
of the same conduct are barred when the juvenile court judge or referee has
begun taking evidence in an adjudicatory hearing or has accepted a child, ward,
youth or youth offender’s admission or answer of no contest to the allegations
of the petition or citation. This section does not prevent appeal of any
preadjudicatory order of the court that could be appealed in a criminal case,
including, but not limited to, an order suppressing evidence. [1993 c.33 §46;
1999 c.1051 §134; 2003 c.396 §27]
APPEALS
419A.200 Who may appeal; time limitations;
procedure; effect of filing appeal; record on appeal; disclosure.
(1) Except as provided in ORS 419A.190, any person or entity, including, but
not limited to, a party to a juvenile court proceeding under ORS 419B.875 (1)
or 419C.285 (1), whose rights or duties are adversely affected by a judgment of
the juvenile court may appeal therefrom. An appeal from a circuit court must be
taken to the Court of Appeals, and an appeal from a county court must be taken
to the circuit court.
(2)
If the proceeding is in the circuit court and no record of the proceedings was
kept, the court, on motion made not later than 15 days after the entry of the
court’s judgment, shall grant a rehearing and shall direct that a record of the
proceedings be kept. However, the court may not grant a rehearing in a case
barred by ORS 419A.190 without the consent of the child, ward, youth or youth
offender affected by such case. If a rehearing is held, the time for taking an
appeal runs from the date of entry of the court’s judgment after the rehearing.
(3)(a)
The appeal may be taken by causing a notice of appeal, in the form prescribed
by ORS 19.250, to be served:
(A)
On all parties who have appeared in the proceeding;
(B)
On the trial court administrator or other person serving as clerk of the
juvenile court; and
(C)
On the juvenile court transcript coordinator, if a transcript is designated in
connection with the appeal.
(b)
The original of the notice with proof of service must be filed with:
(A)
The Court of Appeals if the appeal is from a circuit court; or
(B)
The circuit court if the appeal is from a county court.
(c)
The notice must be filed not later than 30 days after the entry of the court’s
judgment. On appeal from the county court, the circuit court shall hear the
matter de novo and its judgment is appealable to the Court of Appeals in the
same manner as if the proceeding had been commenced in the circuit court.
(4)
The counsel in the proceeding from which the appeal is being taken shall file
and serve those documents necessary to commence an appeal if the counsel is
requested to do so by the party the counsel represents. If the party requesting
an appeal is represented by court-appointed counsel, court-appointed counsel
may discharge the duty to commence an appeal under this subsection by complying
with policies and procedures established by the office of public defense
services for appeals of juvenile court judgments.
(5)(a)
Upon motion of a person, other than the state, entitled to appeal under
subsection (1) of this section, the appellate court shall grant the person
leave to file a notice of appeal after the time limits described in subsection
(3) of this section if:
(A)
The person shows a colorable claim of error in the proceeding from which the
appeal is taken; and
(B)
The person shows that the failure to file a timely notice of appeal is not
personally attributable to the person.
(b)
A person other than the state is not entitled to relief under this subsection
for failure to file timely notice of cross-appeal when the state appeals
pursuant to ORS 419A.208.
(c)
The request for leave to file a notice of appeal after the time limits
prescribed in subsection (3) of this section must be filed no later than 90
days after entry of the judgment being appealed and must be accompanied by the
notice of appeal sought to be filed. A request for leave under this subsection
may be filed by mail and is deemed filed on the date of mailing if the request
is mailed as provided in ORS 19.260.
(d)
The court may not grant relief under this subsection unless the state has
notice and opportunity to respond to the person’s request for relief.
(6)
An appeal to the Court of Appeals must be conducted in the same manner as an
appeal under ORS chapter 19 except that the court shall advance the appeal on
the court’s docket in the same manner as appeals in criminal cases.
(7)(a)
Except as provided in ORS 419A.208 (2), or when otherwise ordered by the
appellate court, the filing of an appeal does not suspend an order or judgment
of the juvenile court nor discharge the ward or youth offender from the custody
of the person, institution or agency in whose custody the ward or youth
offender may have been placed nor preclude the juvenile court after notice and
hearing from entering such further orders relating to the ward or youth
offender’s custody pending final disposition of the appeal as it finds
necessary by reason only of matters transpiring subsequent to the order or
judgment appealed from. The trial court administrator shall immediately file
certified copies of any such order or judgment with the Court of Appeals.
(b)
Notwithstanding the filing of an appeal from a jurisdictional or dispositional
judgment or an order entered pursuant to ORS 419B.449 or 419B.476, the juvenile
court may proceed with the adjudication of a petition seeking termination of
the parental rights of a parent of the ward who is subject to the judgment from
which the appeal is taken.
(c)
The appeal of any judgment entered in a termination of parental rights
proceeding under paragraph (b) of this subsection must be consolidated, if
appropriate, with any pending appeal of an order or judgment entered under ORS
419B.325, 419B.449 or 419B.476. The consolidated appeal must be conducted and
advanced on the court’s docket in the same manner as termination of parental
rights cases.
(8)
On appeal of a judgment or final order, the appellate court may review any
interlocutory order that:
(a)
Involves the merits or necessarily affects the judgment or final order appealed
from; and
(b)
Was made after entry of the last appealable judgment or final order preceding
entry of the judgment or final order being appealed.
(9)
The district attorney or Attorney General shall represent the state in the
appeal.
(10)(a)
The court from which an appeal is taken shall prepare and transmit a record on
appeal in the manner provided in ORS 19.365, except that, when the appeal is to
the circuit court from a county court, the record on appeal shall be prepared
and transmitted by the county court to the circuit court.
(b)
The court to which an appeal is taken under this section shall keep a record of
the case on appeal that includes but is not limited to notices of appeal,
briefs, motions, orders of the court and other papers filed with the court on
appeal.
(c)
The record on appeal prepared and transmitted under paragraph (a) of this
subsection, when it is in the custody of the court to which the appeal is
taken, and the record of the case on appeal kept under paragraph (b) of this
subsection are subject to the same limitations on inspection, copying and
disclosure of records, reports and materials as those set forth under ORS
419A.255 and 419A.257.
(d)
The court on appeal may consent to disclosure of:
(A)
Records described in paragraph (a) of this subsection, while in the custody of
the court to which the appeal is taken, in the same manner and under the same
circumstances as the juvenile court consents to disclosure under ORS 419A.255
and 419A.257; or
(B)
Records described in paragraph (b) of this subsection.
(e)
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any decision, as that term is
defined in ORS 19.450, issued by the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court, on
appeal or review of a juvenile court decision, is not confidential and is not
exempt from disclosure. [1993 c.33 §47; 1995 c.79 §214; 1995 c.422 §66; 1997
c.389 §10; 1997 c.761 §5; 1999 c.263 §1; 1999 c.859 §15a; 2001 c.480 §§3,3a;
2001 c.910 §3; 2003 c.396 §28; 2007 c.58 §1; 2009 c.231 §6; 2009 c.484 §12]
419A.205 Judgments described; jurisdiction
of juvenile court during pendency of appeal; disposition.
(1) For the purpose of being appealed, the following are judgments:
(a)
A judgment finding a child or youth to be within the jurisdiction of the court;
(b)
A judgment disposing of a petition including, but not limited to, a disposition
under ORS 419B.325 or 419C.411;
(c)
Any final disposition of a petition; and
(d)
A final order adversely affecting the rights or duties of a party and made in a
proceeding after judgment including, but not limited to, a final order under
ORS 419B.449 or 419B.476.
(2)
An appeal from a judgment finding a child or youth to be within the
jurisdiction of the court does not deprive the juvenile court of jurisdiction
to proceed with a disposition of the matter.
(3)
If an appeal is taken from a judgment finding a child or youth to be within the
jurisdiction of the court before the juvenile court enters a judgment disposing
of the matter under ORS 419B.325 or 419C.411, any necessary modification of the
appeal must be made according to the rules of the appellate court.
(4)
When an appeal is taken from a judgment finding a child or youth to be within
the jurisdiction of the court, if the appellate court:
(a)
Reverses the judgment, the judgment disposing of the matter is reversed; or
(b)
Modifies the judgment, a party may move for relief as otherwise provided by law.
[2001 c.480 §2; 2003 c.348 §1; 2003 c.396 §29]
419A.208 Orders subject to appeal by
state; effect of appeal of preadjudicatory order.
(1) In addition to the state’s right to appeal under ORS 419A.200, the state
may appeal from any of the following orders of a judge or referee:
(a)
An order made prior to an adjudicatory hearing dismissing or setting aside a
delinquency petition;
(b)
An order that sets aside a petition for delinquency if the order is made after
an adjudicatory hearing in which the youth is found to be within the
jurisdiction of the court;
(c)
An order made prior to an adjudicatory hearing suppressing or limiting evidence
or refusing to suppress or limit evidence; or
(d)
An order made prior to an adjudicatory hearing for the return or restoration of
things seized.
(2)
If the state pursuant to subsection (1) of this section appeals a
preadjudicatory order, and the youth is in detention in the same proceeding
pursuant to ORS 419C.109, 419C.136, 419C.139, 419C.170 and 419C.173, the juvenile
court shall consider release of the youth from detention during the pendency of
the appeal in accordance with the following provisions:
(a)
When the youth is charged with an act that would be murder if committed by an
adult, release shall be denied when the proof is evident or the presumption
strong that the youth committed the act.
(b)
The youth shall be released upon the youth’s personal recognizance unless
release criteria show to the satisfaction of the juvenile court that the youth
would not be likely to appear before the court as ordered upon later appearance
dates and that such a release is therefore unwarranted. Release criteria
include the following:
(A)
The youth’s education and employment status and history and financial
condition;
(B)
The nature and extent of the youth’s family relationships;
(C)
The youth’s past and present residences;
(D)
The names of persons who agree to assist the youth in attending court at the
proper time;
(E)
The nature of the current petition;
(F)
The youth’s juvenile record, if any, and, if the youth has previously been
released pending trial, whether the youth appeared as required;
(G)
Any facts indicating the possibility of violations of law if the youth is
released without restrictions;
(H)
Any facts tending to indicate that the youth has strong ties to the community;
and
(I)
Any other facts tending to indicate the likelihood that the youth will appear
before the court as ordered upon later appearance dates.
(c)
If the court finds that release of the youth on the youth’s personal
recognizance is unwarranted, it shall order conditional release. The court may
impose upon the released youth one or more of the following conditions, but
shall impose the least onerous condition reasonably likely to ensure the youth’s
later appearance:
(A)
Release of the youth into the care of a parent or other responsible person or
organization for supervising the youth and assisting the youth in appearing in
court. The supervisor shall immediately notify the court in the event that the
youth breaches the terms of the conditional release.
(B)
Reasonable restrictions on the activities, movements, associations and
residences of the youth.
(C)
Any other reasonable restriction designed to ensure the youth’s appearance. [2001
c.480 §5; 2003 c.396 §30]
419A.211 Appointment of counsel.
(1) If the child, ward, youth, youth offender, parent or guardian is determined
to be entitled to, and financially eligible for, appointment of counsel at
state expense in an appeal as provided in ORS 419A.200 and 419A.208, the court,
upon request of the person or upon its own motion, shall appoint suitable
counsel to represent the person. Counsel appointed by the court shall be paid
compensation determined by the public defense services executive director as
provided in ORS 135.055 if the circuit court is the appellate court or as
provided in ORS 138.500 if the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court is the
appellate court. The court may not substitute one appointed counsel for another
except pursuant to the policies, procedures, standards and guidelines of the
Public Defense Services Commission.
(2)(a)
When the court appoints counsel to represent the child, ward, youth or youth
offender, it may order the parent, if able, or guardian of the estate, if the estate
is able, to pay to the Public Defense Services Account in the General Fund,
through the clerk of the court, in full or in part the administrative costs of
determining the ability of the parents or estate to pay for legal services and
the costs of the legal and other services that are related to the provision of
appointed counsel.
(b)
The test of the parent’s or estate’s ability to pay costs under paragraph (a)
of this subsection is the same test as applied to appointment of counsel for
defendants under ORS 151.216. If counsel is provided at state expense, the
court shall apply this test in accordance with the guidelines adopted by the
Public Defense Services Commission under ORS 151.485.
(c)
If counsel is provided at state expense, the court shall determine the amount
the parents or estate is required to pay for the costs of administrative, legal
and other services related to the provision of appointed counsel in the same
manner as this amount is determined under ORS 151.487.
(d)
The court’s order of payment is enforceable in the same manner as an order of
support under ORS 419B.408 and 419C.600.
(3)
When the court appoints counsel and the child, ward, youth, youth offender,
parent or guardian has been determined to be entitled to, and financially eligible
for, appointed counsel at state expense, the compensation for counsel and costs
and expenses necessary to the appeal shall be determined and paid as provided
in ORS 135.055 if the circuit court is the appellate court or as provided in
ORS 138.500 if the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court is the appellate
court. [2001 c.480 §6; 2001 c.962 §56; 2003 c.396 §§31,32; 2003 c.449 §50]
FINGERPRINTING AND PHOTOGRAPHING
419A.250 Authority; segregation of
records; access; when records may be kept with those of adults; destruction of records;
missing children. (1) A child, ward, youth or
youth offender may be photographed or fingerprinted by a law enforcement
agency:
(a)
Pursuant to a search warrant;
(b)
According to laws concerning adults if the youth has been transferred to
criminal court for prosecution;
(c)
Upon consent of both the child or youth and the child or youth’s parent after
advice that they are not required to give such consent;
(d)
Upon request or consent of the child’s parent alone if the child is less than
10 years of age, and if the law enforcement agency delivers the original
photographs or fingerprints to the parent and does not make or retain any
copies thereof; or
(e)
By order of the juvenile court.
(2)
When a youth is taken into custody under ORS 419C.080, the law enforcement
agency taking the youth into custody shall photograph and fingerprint the
youth. When a youth is found within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court for
the commission of an act that would constitute a crime if committed by an
adult, the court shall ensure that the youth offender’s fingerprints have been
taken. The law enforcement agency attending upon the court is the agency
responsible for obtaining the fingerprints. The law enforcement agency
attending upon the court may, by agreement, arrange for another law enforcement
agency to obtain the fingerprints on the attending agency’s behalf.
(3)
Fingerprint and photograph files or records of children, wards, youths and
youth offenders must be kept separate from those of adults, and fingerprints
and photographs known to be those of a child may be maintained on a local basis
only and may not be sent to a central state or federal depository.
(4)
Fingerprint and photograph files or records of a child, ward, youth or youth
offender are open to inspection only by, or the contents disclosed only to, the
following:
(a)
Public agencies for use in investigation or prosecution of crimes and of
conduct by a child, ward, youth or youth offender that if committed by an adult
would be an offense, provided that a law enforcement agency may provide
information to another agency only when the information is pertinent to a
specific investigation by that agency;
(b)
The juvenile department and the juvenile court having the child, ward, youth or
youth offender before it in any proceeding;
(c)
Caseworkers and counselors taking action or otherwise responsible for planning
and care of the child, ward, youth or youth offender;
(d)
The parties to the proceeding and their counsel; and
(e)
The victim or a witness of an act or behavior described under ORS 419C.005 (1)
or the victim’s parent, guardian, personal representative or subrogee, when
necessary to identify the youth or youth offender committing the act or
behavior and identifying the apparent extent of the youth or youth offender’s
involvement in the act or behavior.
(5)(a)
Fingerprint and photograph files or records of youths and youth offenders must
be sent to a central state depository in the same manner as fingerprint and
photograph files or records of adults. The fingerprint and photograph files or
records of a youth or youth offender sent to a central depository under this
subsection are open to inspection in the same manner and under the same
circumstances as fingerprint and photograph files or records of adults.
(b)
A party filing a petition alleging that a youth is within the jurisdiction of
the court under ORS 419C.005 shall notify the central state depository of the
following:
(A)
The filing of a petition alleging that a youth committed an act that if
committed by an adult would constitute a crime; or
(B)
The dismissal of a petition alleging that a youth committed an act that if
committed by an adult would constitute a crime.
(c)
The juvenile court shall notify the central state depository of the disposition
of a case in which jurisdiction is based on ORS 419C.005.
(d)
The Department of State Police shall delete the fingerprint and photograph
files or records of a youth or youth offender from the depository and destroy
the files or records relating to the conduct that caused the files or records
to be sent to the depository:
(A)
One year after receiving the files, if the central state depository has not
received notice under paragraph (b) of this subsection;
(B)
No later than one year following receipt of a notice of dismissal of a petition
under paragraph (b)(B) of this subsection; or
(C)
In all other circumstances, no later than five years and 30 days after
fingerprint and photograph files or records are sent to the central state
depository.
(6)
Fingerprint and photograph files and records of a child, ward, youth or youth
offender must be expunged when the juvenile court orders expunction of a child,
ward, youth or youth offender’s record pursuant to ORS 419A.260 and 419A.262.
(7)
The parent or guardian of a missing child may submit a fingerprint card and
photograph of the child to a law enforcement agency at the time a missing
person report is made. The law enforcement agency may submit the fingerprint
file to the Department of State Police. The information must be entered into
the Law Enforcement Data System and the Western Identification Network
Automated Fingerprint Identification System.
(8)
When fingerprint files or records are submitted under subsection (7) of this
section, the Department of State Police shall enter in a special index in the
computerized criminal history files the name of the child and the name of the
county or agency that submitted the fingerprint file or record.
(9)
Fingerprints and other information entered in any data system pursuant to
subsection (7) of this section must be deleted when the child is located. [1993
c.33 §48; 1993 c.602 §1; 1995 c.422 §67; 1999 c.111 §3; 2003 c.396 §33; 2007
c.71 §111; 2011 c.547 §44]
RECORDS
419A.253 When information in report or
material considered by court must be identified in record.
(1) When, for the purpose of a hearing or proceeding that will result in the
entry of an order or judgment, the juvenile court considers information in a
report or other material described in ORS 419A.255 (2) and no party has offered
the report or material as an exhibit or asked the court to take judicial notice
of the information, the court shall identify on the record the report or
material, or the part of the report or material, that the court has considered.
Subject to the court’s ruling on objections by the parties, the court shall
either take judicial notice of the information pursuant to ORS 40.060 to 40.085
or cause the report or material, or the part of the report or material, to be
marked and received as an exhibit. The court shall cause a list to be made that
reasonably identifies, by reference to its source, information judicially
noticed under this subsection. The list may be included in the order or
judgment or may be set out in a separate document attached to the order or
judgment. If an appeal is taken from the order or judgment following the
hearing or proceeding and the designation of record on appeal includes
exhibits, the court or the trial court administrator shall cause the exhibits
and any report or other materials containing judicially noticed information to
be transmitted to the appellate court as part of the record on appeal.
(2)
The list described in subsection (1) of this section is part of the record of
the case maintained by the clerk of the court under ORS 419A.255 (1).
(3)
Nothing in ORS 419A.255 limits access to any juvenile court records by an
appellate court reviewing a juvenile court order or judgment. Appellate court
rules may establish procedures for appellate court access to juvenile court
records. [2005 c.451 §2]
419A.255 Maintenance; disclosure;
providing transcript; exceptions to confidentiality.
(1) The clerk of the court shall keep a record of each case, including therein
the summons and other process, the petition and all other papers in the nature
of pleadings, motions, orders of the court and other papers filed with the
court, but excluding reports and other material relating to the child, ward,
youth or youth offender’s history and prognosis. The record of the case shall
be withheld from public inspection but is open to inspection by the child,
ward, youth, youth offender, parent, guardian, court appointed special
advocate, surrogate or a person allowed to intervene in a proceeding involving
the child, ward, youth or youth offender, and their attorneys. The attorneys
are entitled to copies of the record of the case.
(2)
Reports and other material relating to the child, ward, youth or youth offender’s
history and prognosis are privileged and, except at the request of the child,
ward, youth or youth offender, may not be disclosed directly or indirectly to
anyone other than the judge of the juvenile court, those acting under the judge’s
direction, service providers in the case and the attorneys of record for the
child, ward, youth or youth offender or the child, ward, youth or youth
offender’s parent, guardian, court appointed special advocate, surrogate or
person allowed to intervene in a proceeding involving the child, ward, youth or
youth offender. Reports and other material relating to a youth offender’s
history and prognosis in cases under ORS 419C.005 may be disclosed to the
superintendent of the school district in which the youth offender resides or
the superintendent’s designee. The service providers in the case, school
superintendents, superintendents’ designees and attorneys are entitled to
examine and obtain copies of any reports or other material relating to the
child, ward, youth or youth offender’s history and prognosis. Any service
provider in the case, school superintendent, superintendent’s designee or
attorney who examines or obtains copies of such reports or materials is
responsible for preserving their confidentiality. A service provider, school
superintendent or superintendent’s designee who obtains copies of such reports
or materials shall return the copies to the court upon the conclusion of the
service provider’s, superintendent’s or superintendent’s designee’s involvement
in the case.
(3)
Except as otherwise provided in subsection (7) of this section, no information
appearing in the record of the case or in reports or other material relating to
the child, ward, youth or youth offender’s history or prognosis may be
disclosed to any person not described in subsection (2) of this section without
the consent of the court, except for purposes of evaluating the child, ward,
youth or youth offender’s eligibility for special education as provided in ORS
chapter 343, and no such information may be used in evidence in any proceeding
to establish criminal or civil liability against the child, ward, youth or
youth offender, whether such proceeding occurs after the child, ward, youth or
youth offender has reached 18 years of age or otherwise, except for the
following purposes:
(a)
In connection with a presentence investigation after guilt has been admitted or
established in a criminal court.
(b)
In connection with a proceeding in another juvenile court concerning the child,
ward, youth or youth offender or an appeal from the juvenile court.
(4)
If the court finds that the child, ward, youth, youth offender or parent is
without financial means to purchase all or a necessary part of the transcript
of the evidence or proceedings, the court shall order upon motion the
transcript or part thereof to be furnished. The transcript or part thereof
furnished under this subsection shall be paid for in the same manner as
furnished transcripts are paid for in criminal cases.
(5)
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the following are not confidential
and not exempt from disclosure:
(a)
The name and date of birth of the youth or youth offender;
(b)
The basis for the juvenile court’s jurisdiction over the youth or youth
offender;
(c)
The date, time and place of any juvenile court proceeding in which the youth or
youth offender is involved;
(d)
The act alleged in the petition that if committed by an adult would constitute
a crime if jurisdiction is based on ORS 419C.005;
(e)
That portion of the juvenile court order providing for the legal disposition of
the youth or youth offender when jurisdiction is based on ORS 419C.005;
(f)
The names and addresses of the youth or youth offender’s parents or guardians;
and
(g)
The register described in ORS 7.020 when jurisdiction is based on ORS 419C.005.
(6)
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, when a youth has been taken into
custody under ORS 419C.080, the following information shall be disclosed
unless, and only for so long as, there is a clear need to delay disclosure in
the course of a specific investigation, including the need to protect the
complaining party or the victim:
(a)
The youth’s name and age and whether the youth is employed or in school;
(b)
The youth offense for which the youth was taken into custody;
(c)
The name and age of the adult complaining party and the adult victim, unless
the disclosure of such information is otherwise prohibited or restricted;
(d)
The identity of the investigating and arresting agency; and
(e)
The time and place that the youth was taken into custody and whether there was
resistance, pursuit or a weapon used in taking the youth into custody.
(7)(a)
Information contained in reports and other materials relating to a child, ward,
youth or youth offender’s history and prognosis that, in the professional
judgment of the juvenile counselor, caseworker, school superintendent or
superintendent’s designee, teacher or detention worker to whom the information
for the reports or other materials has been provided, indicates a clear and
immediate danger to another person or to society shall be disclosed to the
appropriate authority and the person or entity who is in danger from the child,
ward, youth or youth offender.
(b)
An agency or a person who discloses information under paragraph (a) of this
subsection has immunity from any liability, civil or criminal, that might
otherwise be incurred or imposed for making the disclosure.
(c)
Nothing in this subsection affects the provisions of ORS 146.750, 146.760,
419B.035, 419B.040 and 419B.045. The disclosure of information under this
section does not make the information admissible in any court or administrative
proceeding if it is not otherwise admissible.
(8)
A county juvenile department is the agency responsible for disclosing youth and
youth offender records if the records are subject to disclosure.
(9)
A petition filed under ORS 419B.851 alleging that a child who is a foreign
national is within the jurisdiction of the court, or a motion requesting an
implementation plan other than return of a ward to the ward’s parent, is
subject to disclosure to the consulate for the child or ward’s country as
provided under ORS 419B.851 (3).
(10)
Nothing in this section prohibits a guardian appointed under ORS 419B.365 or
419B.366 from disclosing or providing copies of letters of guardianship when so
required to fulfill the duties of a guardian.
(11)
The court shall cooperate in the sharing of information with a court in another
state to facilitate an interstate placement of a child or ward. [1993 c.33 §49;
1993 c.234 §3; 1993 c.546 §8; 1995 c.422 §68; 1997 c.724 §§3,4; 1999 c.59 §118;
1999 c.620 §8; 2001 c.904 §11; 2001 c.910 §1; 2003 c.143 §4; 2003 c.229 §9;
2003 c.396 §34a; 2007 c.611 §4; 2008 c.50 §9]
419A.256 When transcript of proceeding is
part of record of case; disclosure. (1)(a) Once
prepared and filed with the court, a transcript of a juvenile court proceeding
is part of the record of the case maintained by the clerk of the court under
ORS 419A.255 (1) and is subject to the provisions of ORS 419A.255 (1) and (3)
governing access and disclosure.
(b)
Notwithstanding ORS 419A.255, if a transcript, audiotape or videotape has been
prepared in any proceeding under ORS chapter 419C, the victim may obtain a copy
by paying the actual cost of preparation.
(2)
The official audio, video or other recording of a juvenile court proceeding
shall be withheld from public inspection but is open to inspection by the
child, ward, youth, youth offender, parent, guardian, court appointed special
advocate, surrogate or a person allowed to intervene in a proceeding involving
the child, ward, youth or youth offender, and their attorneys. [2005 c.451 §3;
2007 c.609 §9]
419A.257 Disclosure to district attorney
and other state and county entities. (1) The
district attorney or assistant attorney general representing the state in a
juvenile court proceeding, the juvenile department, the Department of Human
Services and the Oregon Youth Authority may inspect and obtain from the court
copies of the records, reports and other materials described in ORS 419A.255
(1) and (2) to the same extent that attorneys for the other parties and the
other parties are authorized to inspect and obtain copies of the records,
reports and other materials. An agency or person that inspects or obtains
records, reports or materials under this subsection is subject to ORS 419A.255
(3).
(2)
Nothing in ORS 419A.255 prohibits the district attorney or assistant attorney
general representing the state in a juvenile court proceeding, the juvenile
department, the Department of Human Services, the Oregon Youth Authority or the
other parties in the proceeding or their attorneys from disclosing to each
other records, reports and other materials described in ORS 419A.255 (1) and
(2) if the disclosure is reasonably necessary to perform official duties
related to the involvement of the child, ward, youth or youth offender with the
juvenile court or juvenile department. An agency or person to whom records,
reports or materials are disclosed under this subsection is subject to ORS 419A.255
(3).
(3)
An agency or person that inspects or obtains records, reports or materials
under subsection (1) of this section or to whom records, reports or materials
are disclosed under subsection (2) of this section may not use or disclose the
records, reports or materials except:
(a)
As provided in subsections (1) and (2) of this section;
(b)
In the juvenile court proceeding for which the records, reports or materials
were sought or disclosed;
(c)
With the consent of the court as provided in ORS 419A.255 (2) or (3); or
(d)
As provided in ORS 419A.253. [2005 c.451 §4]
419A.260 Expunction; definitions.
(1) As used in this section and ORS 419A.262:
(a)
“Contact” means any instance in which a person’s act or behavior, or alleged
act or behavior, which could result in a juvenile court’s assumption of
jurisdiction under ORS 419B.100 (1)(a) to (c) and (f) or 419C.005 comes to the
attention of an agency specified in paragraph (d) of this subsection.
(b)
“Expunction” means:
(A)
The removal and destruction or sealing of a judgment or order related to a
contact and all records and references; and
(B)
Where a record is kept by the Department of Human Services or the Oregon Youth
Authority, either the sealing of such record by the department or the Oregon Youth
Authority or, in a multiperson file, the affixing to the front of the file, by
the department or the youth authority, a stamp or statement identifying the
name of the individual, the date of expunction and instruction that no further
reference shall be made to the material that is subject to the expunction order
except upon an order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
(c)
“Person” includes a person under 18 years of age.
(d)
“Record” includes a fingerprint or photograph file, report, exhibit or other
material which contains information relating to a person’s contact with any law
enforcement agency or juvenile court or juvenile department and is kept
manually, through the use of electronic data processing equipment, or by any
other means by a law enforcement or public investigative agency, a juvenile
court or juvenile department or an agency of the State of Oregon. “Record” does
not include:
(A)
A transcript of a student’s Youth Corrections Education Program academic
record;
(B)
Material on file with a public agency which is necessary for obtaining federal
financial participation regarding financial assistance or services on behalf of
a person who has had a contact;
(C)
Records kept or disseminated by the Department of Transportation, State Marine
Board and State Fish and Wildlife Commission pursuant to juvenile or adult
order or recommendation;
(D)
Police and court records related to an order of waiver where the matter is
still pending in the adult court or on appeal therefrom, or to any disposition
as an adult pursuant to such order;
(E)
Records related to a support obligation;
(F)
Medical records;
(G)
Records of a proposed or adjudicated termination of parental rights and
adoptions;
(H)
Any law enforcement record of a person who currently does not qualify for
expunction or of current investigations or cases waived to the adult court;
(I)
Records and case reports of the Oregon Supreme Court and the Oregon Court of
Appeals;
(J)
Any records in cases under ORS 419C.005 in which a juvenile court found a
person to be within the jurisdiction of the court based upon the person’s
commission of an act which if done by an adult would constitute one of the
following offenses:
(i)
Aggravated murder under ORS 163.095;
(ii)
Murder under ORS 163.115;
(iii)
Attempt, solicitation or conspiracy to commit murder or aggravated murder;
(iv)
Manslaughter in the first degree under ORS 163.118;
(v)
Manslaughter in the second degree under ORS 163.125;
(vi)
Criminally negligent homicide under ORS 163.145;
(vii)
Assault in the first degree under ORS 163.185;
(viii)
Criminal mistreatment in the first degree under ORS 163.205;
(ix)
Kidnapping in the first degree under ORS 163.235;
(x)
Rape in the third degree under ORS 163.355;
(xi)
Rape in the second degree under ORS 163.365;
(xii)
Rape in the first degree under ORS 163.375;
(xiii)
Sodomy in the third degree under ORS 163.385;
(xiv)
Sodomy in the second degree under ORS 163.395;
(xv)
Sodomy in the first degree under ORS 163.405;
(xvi)
Unlawful sexual penetration in the second degree under ORS 163.408;
(xvii)
Unlawful sexual penetration in the first degree under ORS 163.411;
(xviii)
Sexual abuse in the third degree under ORS 163.415;
(xix)
Sexual abuse in the second degree under ORS 163.425;
(xx)
Sexual abuse in the first degree under ORS 163.427;
(xxi)
Promoting prostitution under ORS 167.012;
(xxii)
Compelling prostitution under ORS 167.017;
(xxiii)
Aggravated driving while suspended or revoked under ORS 163.196;
(xxiv)
Aggravated vehicular homicide under ORS 163.149; or
(xxv)
An attempt to commit a crime listed in this subparagraph other than
manslaughter in the second degree and criminally negligent homicide;
(K)
Blood samples, buccal samples and other physical evidence and identification
information obtained, stored or maintained by the Department of State Police
under authority of ORS 137.076, 181.085 or 419C.473; or
(L)
Records maintained in the Law Enforcement Data System under ORS 181.592.
(e)
“Termination” means:
(A)
For a person who is the subject of a record kept by a juvenile court or
juvenile department, the final disposition of a case by informal means, by a
decision not to place the person on probation or make the person a ward of the
court after the person has been found to be within the court’s jurisdiction, or
by a discontinuance of probation or of the court’s wardship.
(B)
For a person who is the subject of a record kept by a law enforcement or public
investigative agency, a juvenile court or juvenile department or an agency of
the State of Oregon, the final disposition of the person’s most recent contact
with a law enforcement agency.
(2)
The juvenile court or juvenile department shall make reasonable effort to
provide written notice to a child who is within the court’s jurisdiction under
ORS 419B.100 (1)(a) to (c) and (f) or to a youth who is within the court’s
jurisdiction under ORS 419C.005, and to the child’s or youth’s parent, of the
procedures for expunction of a record, the right to counsel under this chapter,
the legal effect of an expunction order and the procedures for seeking relief
from the duty to report as a sex offender provided under ORS 181.823, at the
following times:
(a)
At any dispositional hearing or at the time of entering into a formal
accountability agreement;
(b)
At the time of termination;
(c)
Upon notice to the subject of an expunction pending pursuant to application of
a juvenile department or motion on a juvenile court; and
(d)
At the time of notice of execution of an expunction order. [1993 c.33 §50; 1993
c.546 §93; 1993 c.602 §2; 1995 c.422 §69; 1999 c.97 §4; 1999 c.111 §1; 1999
c.626 §17; amendments by 1999 c.626 §40 repealed by 2001 c.884 §1; 2001 c.884 §§3b,3d;
2007 c.867 §8; 2009 c.783 §7]
419A.262 Expunction proceeding; notice to
victim; effect of expunction; confidentiality; penalties.
(1) An expunction proceeding shall be commenced in the county where the subject
person resided at the time of the most recent termination.
(2)
Upon application of either a person who is the subject of a record or a
juvenile department, or upon its own motion, the juvenile court shall order
expunction if, after a hearing when the matter is contested, it finds that:
(a)
At least five years have elapsed since the date of the person’s most recent
termination;
(b)
Since the date of the most recent termination, the person has not been
convicted of a felony or a Class A misdemeanor;
(c)
No proceedings seeking a criminal conviction or an adjudication in a juvenile
court are pending against the person;
(d)
The person is not within the jurisdiction of any juvenile court on the basis of
a petition alleging an act or behavior as defined in ORS 419B.100 (1)(a) to (c)
and (f) or 419C.005; and
(e)
The juvenile department is not aware of any pending investigation of the conduct
of the person by any law enforcement agency.
(3)
In the case of an application by the juvenile department or of the court acting
upon its own motion, expunction shall not be ordered if actual notice of
expunction has not been given to the person in accordance with subsection (10)
of this section unless the person has reached 21 years of age.
(4)
When a person who is the subject of a record kept by a juvenile court or
juvenile department reaches 18 years of age, the juvenile court, after a
hearing when the matter is contested, shall order expunction if:
(a)
The person never has been found to be within the jurisdiction of the court; or
(b)
The conditions of subsection (2) of this section have been met.
(5)
Expunction shall not be ordered under this section if actual notice of
expunction has not been given to the person in accordance with subsection (10)
of this section unless the person has reached 21 years of age.
(6)
Subsections (4) and (5) of this section apply only to cases resulting in
termination after September 13, 1975.
(7)
Notwithstanding subsections (2) and (4) to (6) of this section, upon
application of a person who is the subject of a record kept by a juvenile court
or juvenile department, upon application of the juvenile department, or upon
its own motion, the juvenile court, after a hearing when the matter is
contested, may order expunction of all or any part of the person’s record if it
finds that to do so would be in the best interests of the person and the
public. In the case of an application by the juvenile department or of the
court acting upon its own motion, expunction shall not be ordered if actual
notice of expunction has not been given to the person in accordance with
subsection (10) of this section unless the person has reached 21 years of age.
(8)
When an expunction proceeding is commenced by application of the person whose
records are to be expunged, the person shall set forth as part of the
application the names of the juvenile courts, juvenile departments,
institutions and law enforcement and other agencies that the person has reason
to believe possess an expungible record of the person. The juvenile department
shall provide the names and addresses of the juvenile courts, juvenile
departments, institutions and law enforcement and other agencies that a
reasonable search of department files indicates have expungible records.
(9)
When an expunction proceeding is commenced by application of the juvenile
department or upon the court’s own motion, the application or motion shall set
forth the names and addresses of the juvenile courts, juvenile departments,
institutions and law enforcement and other agencies that a reasonable search of
department files indicates have expungible records and those provided by the
subject person.
(10)(a)
Notice and a copy of an application for expunction under subsections (2) to (7)
of this section shall be given to:
(A)
The district attorney of the county in which the expunction proceeding is
commenced and the district attorney of each county in which the record sought
to be expunged is kept; and
(B)
The person who is the subject of the record if the person has not initiated the
expunction proceeding.
(b)
A district attorney who receives notice under this subsection shall notify the
victim of the acts that resulted in the disposition that is the subject of the
application for expunction and shall mail a copy of the application for
expunction to the victim’s last known address.
(11)
Within 30 days of receiving the notice of application for expunction under
subsection (10) of this section, a district attorney shall give written notice
of any objection and the grounds therefor to the person whose records are to be
expunged and to the juvenile court. If no objection is filed the court may
decide the issue of expunction either without a hearing or after full hearing
pursuant to subsections (12) to (15) of this section.
(12)
When an expunction is pending pursuant to subsections (2) to (7) of this
section, the court may proceed with or without a hearing, except that:
(a)
The court may not enter an expunction judgment without a hearing if a timely
objection to expunction has been filed pursuant to subsection (11) of this
section; and
(b)
The court may not deny an expunction without a hearing if the proceeding is
based on an application of the subject.
(13)(a)
Notice of a hearing on a pending expunction shall be served on the subject and
any district attorney filing a timely objection pursuant to subsection (11) of
this section.
(b)
When a district attorney receives notice of a hearing for expunction of a
record concerning a youth or youth offender proceeding under ORS chapter 419C,
if the victim of the acts that resulted in the disposition that is the subject
of the application for expunction requests, the district attorney shall mail
notice of the hearing to the victim’s last-known address.
(14)
The court shall conduct a hearing on a pending expunction in accord with the
provisions of ORS 419B.195, 419B.198, 419B.201, 419B.205, 419B.208, 419B.310,
419B.812 to 419B.839 and 419B.908. Rules of evidence shall be as in a hearing
to establish juvenile court jurisdiction and as defined in ORS 419B.310 (3) and
419C.400 (2). The burden of proof shall be with the party contesting
expunction.
(15)
At the conclusion of a hearing on a pending expunction, the court shall issue
judgment granting or denying expunction.
(16)
The juvenile court or juvenile department shall send a copy of an expunction
judgment to each agency subject to the judgment. Upon receipt of a copy of the
judgment, the agency shall comply and, within 21 days of the date of receipt,
return the copy to the juvenile court or juvenile department with an
indorsement indicating compliance.
(17)
When all agencies subject to an expunction judgment have indicated their
compliance or in any event no later than six weeks following the date the
judgment was delivered as required by subsection (16) of this section, the
juvenile court shall provide the person who is the subject of the record with a
copy of the expunction judgment, a list of complying and noncomplying agencies,
and a written notice of rights and effects of expunction. The juvenile court
and juvenile department then shall expunge forthwith all records which they
possess and which are subject to the judgment, except the original expunction
judgment and the list of complying and noncomplying agencies which must be
preserved under seal.
(18)
In addition to those agencies identified in ORS 419A.260 (1)(d), the juvenile,
circuit, municipal and justice courts, and the district and city attorneys of
this state, are bound by an expunction judgment of any juvenile court of
appropriate jurisdiction in this state issuing an expunction judgment.
(19)
Upon entry of an expunction judgment, the contact that is the subject of the
expunged record shall not be disclosed by any agency. An agency that is subject
to an expunction judgment shall respond to any inquiry about the contact by
indicating that no record or reference concerning the contact exists.
(20)
A person who is the subject of a record that has been expunged under this
section may assert that the record never existed and that the contact, which
was the subject of the record, never occurred without incurring a penalty for
perjury or false swearing under the laws of this state.
(21)
Juvenile courts, by court rule or by order related to a particular matter, may
direct that records concerning a subject person be destroyed. No such records
shall be destroyed until at least three years have elapsed after the date of
the subject’s most recent termination. In the event the record has been
expunged, the expunction judgment and list of complying and noncomplying
agencies may not be destroyed, but shall be preserved under seal. The
destruction of records under this subsection does not constitute expunction.
(22)
An expunction judgment and list of complying and noncomplying agencies shall be
released from confidentiality only on order of the court originating the
expunction judgment, based on a finding that review of a particular case
furthers compliance with the expunction provisions of this chapter.
(23)
A subject has a right of action against any person who intentionally violates
the confidentiality provisions of this section. In any such proceeding,
punitive damages up to an amount of $1,000 may be sought in addition to any
actual damages. The prevailing party shall be entitled to costs and reasonable
attorney fees.
(24)
Intentional violation of the confidentiality provisions of this section by a
public employee is cause for dismissal.
(25)
A person who intentionally releases all or part of an expunged record commits a
Class C misdemeanor. [1993 c.33 §51; 1993 c.546 §9; 1997 c.249 §132; 1999 c.111
§2; 2001 c.480 §7; 2001 c.622 §45; 2007 c.609 §10]
419A.290 [1993
c.33 §52; 1993 c.546 §114; repealed by 1995 c.422 §138]
419A.295
[Formerly 419.494; repealed by 1995 c.79 §215]
MISCELLANEOUS
419A.300 Reports to school districts
concerning young persons on conditional release.
(1)(a) Once each month, the Department of Human Services shall provide to each
school district a list of all young persons enrolled in a school in the school
district who are on conditional release. The department shall include in the
list the name and business telephone number of the caseworker assigned to each
case.
(b)
When a young person who is on conditional release transfers from one school
district to a different school district, the caseworker assigned to the case
shall notify the superintendent of the school district to which the young person
has transferred of the young person’s status. The caseworker shall make the
notification no later than 72 hours after the caseworker knows of the transfer.
(2)
Upon request by the superintendent of the school district in which a young
person is enrolled or the superintendent’s designee, the department shall
provide additional information, including the offense that brought the young
person within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court and such other information
that is subject to disclosure under ORS 419A.255 (5).
(3)
In addition to the general notification required by subsection (1) of this
section, the department shall notify the superintendent or the superintendent’s
designee of the specific offense and whether the act involved a firearm or
delivery of a controlled substance.
(4)
ORS 419A.015 (4) and (5) apply to persons sending or receiving records under
this section. [2005 c.843 §29; 2008 c.50 §10]
419A.305 Notice to school administrators
concerning students subject to juvenile court petitions.
(1) As used in this section:
(a)
“Principal” means a person having general administrative control and
supervision of a school.
(b)
“School administrator” means:
(A)
The superintendent of the school district in which a youth attends school, or
the designee of the superintendent, if the youth attends a public school that
is not a public charter school;
(B)
The principal of a public charter school, if the youth attends a public charter
school;
(C)
The principal of a private school that provides education to one or more
instructional levels from kindergarten through grade 12 or equivalent
instructional levels, if the youth attends a private school;
(D)
The superintendent of the school district in which the youth resides, or the
designee of the superintendent, if the school that the youth attends is not
known by the person giving notice;
(E)
The director of the Oregon School for the Deaf; or
(F)
The Superintendent of Public Instruction if the youth is in an educational
program under the Youth Corrections Education Program.
(c)
“School district” has the meaning given that term in ORS 332.002.
(2)
Notice shall be given to a school administrator when:
(a)
A youth makes a first appearance before the juvenile court on a petition
described in subsection (7) of this section alleging that the youth is within
the jurisdiction of the juvenile court under ORS 419C.005.
(b)
A youth admits to being within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court as
provided in ORS 419C.005 on a petition described in subsection (7) of this
section or is adjudicated by a juvenile court to be within its jurisdiction on
a petition described in subsection (7) of this section.
(c)
A youth is found responsible except for insanity under ORS 419C.411.
(d)
Notice had been given as provided by paragraph (a) or (b) of this subsection
and the juvenile court:
(A)
Sets aside or dismisses the petition as provided in ORS 419C.261; or
(B)
Determines that the youth is not within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court
after a hearing on the merits of the petition.
(3)
A notice required by subsection (2) of this section shall be given by:
(a)
The district attorney;
(b)
In the case of a petition filed under ORS 419C.250, the person who filed the
petition;
(c)
In the case of a person prosecuting a case who is not the district attorney,
the person who is prosecuting the case; or
(d)
In the case of a juvenile department that has agreed to be responsible for
providing the notices required under this section, the juvenile department.
(4)
A notice required under subsection (2) of this section may be communicated by
mail or other means of delivery, including but not limited to electronic
transmission. A notice must include:
(a)
The name and date of birth of the youth;
(b)
The names and addresses of the youth’s parents or guardians;
(c)
The alleged basis for the juvenile court’s jurisdiction over the youth;
(d)
The act alleged in the petition that, if committed by an adult, would
constitute a crime;
(e)
The name and contact information of the attorney for the youth, if known;
(f)
The name and contact information of the individual to contact for further
information about the notice;
(g)
If applicable, the portion of the juvenile court order providing for the legal
disposition of the youth;
(h)
Any conditions of release or terms of probation; and
(i)
Any other conditions required by the court.
(5)
In addition to the information required by subsection (4) of this section:
(a)
A notice required by subsection (2)(a) of this section shall contain substantially
the following statement: “This notice is to inform you that a student who
attends your school may come under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court as
the result of a petition filed with the juvenile court. The student has not yet
been determined to be within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court nor to have
committed any violations of law. The allegation pending before the juvenile
court must not be discussed with the student.”
(b)
A notice required by subsection (2)(b) of this section shall contain substantially
the following statement: “This notice is to inform you that a student who
attends your school has come under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court as
the result of a petition filed with the juvenile court. There may be pending
juvenile court hearings or proceedings, and a disposition order may not yet
have been entered by the court. The allegation pending before the juvenile
court must not be discussed with the student.”
(c)
A notice required by subsection (2)(c) of this section shall contain
substantially the following statement: “This notice is to inform you that a
disposition order has been entered in a case involving a student who attends
your school about whom a previous notice was sent. The disposition order finds
the student to be responsible except for insanity under ORS 419C.411 for the
act alleged in the petition filed with the juvenile court. The case should not
be discussed with the student.”
(d)
A notice required by subsection (2)(d) of this section shall contain
substantially the following statement: “This notice is to inform you that a
petition involving a student who attends your school about whom a previous
notice was sent has been set aside or dismissed or the juvenile court has
determined the student is not within its jurisdiction. The notice and any
documents or information related to the notice in the student’s education
records should be removed and destroyed upon receipt of this notice. The case
should not be discussed with the student.”
(6)
A notice required under subsection (2) of this section must be given within 15
days after:
(a)
The youth makes a first appearance before the juvenile court on a petition;
(b)
The youth admits to being within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court;
(c)
The youth is adjudicated by a juvenile court to be within the jurisdiction of
the court;
(d)
The petition is dismissed or set aside;
(e)
The juvenile court determines that the youth is not within the jurisdiction of
the juvenile court after a hearing on the merits of the petition; or
(f)
The juvenile court enters a disposition order finding the youth responsible
except for insanity under ORS 419C.411.
(7)
This section applies to petitions filed alleging that the youth engaged in:
(a)
Conduct that, if committed by an adult, would constitute a crime that:
(A)
Involves serious physical injury or threatened serious physical injury to
another person, including criminal homicide, felony assault or any attempt to
cause serious physical injury to another person;
(B)
Involves the sexual assault of an animal or animal abuse in any degree;
(C)
Is a felony sex offense listed in ORS 181.594, except for rape in the third
degree under ORS 163.355 or incest under ORS 163.525;
(D)
Involves a weapon, as defined in ORS 166.360, or the threatened use of a
weapon;
(E)
Involves the possession or manufacture of a destructive device, as defined in
ORS 166.382, or possession of a hoax destructive device, as defined in ORS
166.385; or
(F)
Involves an offense in which an element of the crime is:
(i)
Manufacture of a controlled substance;
(ii)
Delivery of a controlled substance in conjunction with conduct described in
subparagraph (A) of this paragraph; or
(iii)
Delivery of a controlled substance to a person under 18 years of age; or
(b)
Conduct that is of such a nature that the court determines notice is necessary
to safeguard the safety and security of the school, students and staff. The
person or entity responsible for giving notice under subsection (3) of this
section shall request that the court make the determination under this
paragraph when the person or entity believes notice is necessary to safeguard
the safety and security of the school, students and staff and the conduct
involves an offense under ORS 163.160.
(8)
Except as otherwise provided in ORS 192.490, a person who sends or receives
notice under this section is not civilly or criminally liable for failing to
disclose the information under this section. [2008 c.50 §2; 2009 c.447 §1; 2009
c.713 §18; 2011 c.9 §58]
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