The YCJA includes provisions that permit the use of extrajudicial measuresProceedings outside the formal court process for less-serious offences if it is deemed they would be adequate to hold non-violent offenders accountable.
Police may choose to handle the offence through extrajudicial measures, which include:
- taking no further action;
- a warning from police;
- a caution from the police, which is more formal than warnings and may involve a letter from police to the youth and the parents. The youth and parents may be required to appear at the police station for a meeting to discuss the incident;
- a referral from police to a community program or agency designed to help youth avoid committing offences;
- a Crown caution (similar to police cautions but issued by prosecutors after the police have referred the case to them); and
- an extrajudicial sanction, which is applied through more formal programs developed by provinces and territories.
Youth court judges also have different sentencing options to deal with offenders that include community-based sentences and custody and supervision sentences.
As the term implies, a community-based sentence would allow you to remain free while serving your sentence in the community, often under strict conditions. A custodial sentence includes time in a youth facility and a period of community supervision. Custody is intended primarily for violent offenders and serious repeat offenders.
Judges also have the option to impose an intensive rehabilitative custody and supervision order if you are found guilty of a serious violent offence and suffer from a mental, psychological or emotional disorder. A treatment and intensive supervision plan is developed for you in those circumstances.
When you are released from custody, the YCJA mandates that you receive assistance to reintegrate into the community, so there will be a period of supervision and support in the community as part of your sentence. When you are sentenced, a judge will set out the time you spend in custody and the period to be served under supervision. A youth worker is assigned to assist you in planning for your reintegration into the community.
If your crime is serious, a judge has the option of sentencing you as an adult if you were 14 years of age or older when the crime was committed. The Crown prosecutorLawyers who prosecutes charges on behalf of the Crown is also obligated to consider seeking an adult sentence when a youth is found guilty of murder, attempted murder, manslaughter or aggravated sexual assault. The Act permits provinces to raise the age of when you can be sentenced as adult to 15 or 16.
If you are sentenced as an adult, the Criminal Code penalties for adult offenders will apply and can include mandatory minimum penalties and sentences of up to life imprisonment. You will be allowed to serve your sentence in a youth facility until you reach the age of 18; then, you will be transferred.
When deciding your sentence, a judge will take the following into account:
- the degree of participation by the young person in the commission of the offence;
- the harm done to victims and whether it was intentional or reasonably foreseeable;
- any reparation made by the young person to the victim or the community;
- the time spent in detention by the young person as a result of the offence;
- the previous findings of guilt; and any other aggravating and mitigating circumstances related to the young person or the offence that are relevant to the purpose and principles set out in this section.
Besides custody or probation, a judge also has the option of imposing the following penalties:
Reprimand
Essentially a stern lecture or warning from the judge. The experience of going through the judicial system and being reprimanded is considered sufficient to hold a youth accountable in minor cases.
Intensive support and supervision order
It offers closer monitoring and more support than a probation order to help the offender change their behaviour.
Attendance order
The youth is required to attend a program on conditions set by the judge and can be crafted to address the offender's particular circumstances, such as targeting the time when they should be supervised.
Deferred custody and supervision order
A youth who would otherwise be jailed can serve a sentence in the community under conditions. If the conditions are violated, the youth can be remanded into custody. This order is not available for offences where the offender caused or attempted to cause serious bodily harm.
Intensive rehabilitative custody and supervision order
Such sentences are reserved for violent offenders. A judge could hand down this sentence if the youth was found guilty of a serious violent offence or where they caused or attempted to cause serious bodily harm. This option is also available to the court if the youth is suffering from a mental or psychological disorder or an emotional disturbance, if a treatment plan has been developed for the offender or if an appropriate program is available and the youth is suitable for admission.