Appendix C
Reported Juvenile Court Cases Disposed in 2001 and 2002, by County
Information on the juvenile courts’
petitioned and nonpetitioned delinquency,
status, and dependency caseloads
for each year (2001 and 2002) is
presented in the following table. Data
for 2001 are presented first, followed
by data for 2002. The total population
of each reporting jurisdiction, its population
age 10 through the upper age
of jurisdiction, and its population age
0 through the upper age of jurisdiction
are also presented. Case rates
(the number of cases per 1,000 juveniles
in the population) are presented
for each case type for the state. Delinquency
and status offense case rates
are based on the population age 10
through upper age, while rates for dependency
cases are based on the population
age 0 through upper age.
Table notes follow the table. The
notes associated with each data presentation
identify the source of the
data, the mode of transmission, and
the characteristics of data reported.
State and local agencies responsible
for the collection of their juvenile
court statistics compiled the data in
this table. Agencies transmitted these
juvenile court caseload data to the
National Juvenile Court Data Archive
in one of four modes. First, many jurisdictions
provided the project with
an automated data file that contained
a detailed description of each case
processed by their juvenile courts.
Second, some agencies completed a
juvenile court statistics (JCS) survey
form provided by the project. The
survey requested information about
each county jurisdiction, asking for
the number of delinquency, status offense,
and dependency cases disposed
and for the number of petition
and nonpetition cases. Third, statistics
for some jurisdictions were abstracted
from their annual reports. In
these instances, the report name is
listed. Finally, a few states simply
sent statistical pages to the National
Center for Juvenile Justice that contained
counts of their courts’ handling
of juvenile matters.
The units of count for the court statistics
vary across jurisdictions. Although
many states used cases disposed
as the unit of count, other
states reported cases filed, children
disposed, petitions filed, hearings, juvenile
arraignments, and charges.
The unit of count is identified in the
notes for each data set. The unit of
count for each source should be
reviewed before any attempt is made
to compare statistics either across or
within data sets. Variations in administrative
practices, differences in
upper ages of jurisdiction, and wide
ranges in available community resources
affect the number of cases
handled by individual counties and
states. Therefore, the data displayed
in this table should not be used to
make comparisons among the delinquency,
status offense, or dependency
workloads of counties or states without
carefully studying the definitions
of the statistics presented. For reasons
of confidentiality, case counts
greater than 0 and less than 5 are not
displayed in the table and are represented
with an asterisk (*). States
that have indicated incomplete reporting
of data also are noted.
Furthermore, caution must be taken
when interpreting the case rates appearing
at the end of each state table.
Case rate is defined as the number of
juvenile court cases per 1,000 juveniles
in the population in the reporting
counties. For example, not all California
counties reported statistics on
nonpetitioned delinquency cases. The
California nonpetitioned delinquency
case rate was generated from the
total number of nonpetitioned delinquency
cases from reporting counties.
The figures within a column relate
only to the specific case type. However,
some jurisdictions were unable
to provide statistics that distinguish
delinquency and status offense cases
from dependency matters or, at
times, from other court activities.
Such information is presented in this
appendix in a column labeled “All
reported cases.” By its nature, this
column contains a heterogeneous
mixture of units of count and case
types. These variations are identified
in the notes associated with each presentation
of data. Furthermore, due
to the nature of these data, case rates
are not calculated for the “All reported
cases” column.
Finally, although the majority of the
data presented in the appendix are
for calendar years, several reporting
jurisdictions were not able to aggregate
data for this timeframe. In those
instances, the data cover fiscal years.
The period of coverage is indicated in
the notes.
For a complete county listing of juvenile
court case counts, readers are
encouraged to visit Easy Access to
State and County Juvenile Court Case
Counts, a Web-based version of this
appendix, available from OJJDP’s
Statistical Briefing Book at
www.ojjdp.ncjrs.gov/ojstatbb/index.html. Unlike this appendix, the
Web version does not aggregate data
from the smaller counties in each
state.
Reported Juvenile Court Cases Disposed in 2001, by County
Reported Juvenile Court Cases Disposed in 2002, by County
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