Title 49, Chapter 4A, Section 9
( 49-4A-9)
(a) Any child who has previously been adjudged to have committed an
act which is a felony if tried in a superior court and who, on a
second or subsequent occasion, is convicted of a felony in a
superior court may, in the discretion of the court, be sentenced
into the custody of the department as otherwise provided by law or
be committed as a youthful offender as authorized in Chapter 7 of
Title 42; provided, further, that any child convicted of a felony
punishable by death or by confinement for life shall only be
sentenced into the custody of the Department of Corrections. (b) Any final order of judgment by the court in the case of any such child shall be subject to such modification from time to time as the court may consider to be for the welfare of such child. No commitment of any child to any institution or other custodial agency shall deprive the court of jurisdiction to change the form of the commitment or transfer the custody of the child to some other institution or agency on such conditions as the court may see fit to impose, the duty being constant upon the court to give to all children subject to its jurisdiction such oversight and control in the premises as will be conducive to the welfare of the child and the best interests of the state; provided, however, that the release or parole of any child committed to the department for detention in any of its institutions under the terms of this chapter during the period of one year from the date of commitment shall be had only with the concurrence and recommendation of the commissioner or the commissioner's designated representative; provided, further, that upon releasing or paroling any child adjudicated delinquent for the commission of a designated felony act as defined in Code Section 15-11-63 and committed to the department for detention in any of its institutions under the terms of this chapter, the department shall provide notice to any person who was the victim of the child's delinquent acts that the child is being released or paroled. As long as a good faith attempt to comply with the notice requirement of this subsection has been made, the department and employees of the department shall not be liable for damages incurred by reason of the department's failure to provide the notice required by this subsection. (c) After the expiration of one year from the date of commitment,
the committing court shall review the case and make such order with
respect to the continued confinement or release of the child back to
the committing court for further disposition as the court deems
proper. (d) In the event adequate facilities are not available, the
department shall have the right to transfer youths committed to the
department under this Code section to the Department of Corrections
for incarceration in an appropriate facility designated by the
Department of Corrections. (e) Any child under 17 years of age who is sentenced in the superior
court and committed to the department may be eligible to participate
in all youth development center programs and services including
community work programs, sheltered workshops, special state
sponsored programs for evaluation and services under the Division of
Rehabilitation Services of the Department of Labor and the Division
of Mental Health, Mental Retardation, and Substance Abuse of the
Department of Human Resources, and under the general supervision of
youth development center staff at special planned activities outside
of the youth development center. When such a child sentenced in the
superior court is approaching his seventeenth birthday, the
department shall notify the court that a further disposition of the
child is necessary. The department shall provide the court with
information concerning the participation and progress of the child
in programs described in this subsection. The court shall review
the case and determine if the child, upon becoming 17 years of age,
should be placed on probation, have his sentence reduced, be
transferred to the Department of Corrections for the remainder of
the original sentence, or be subject to any other determination
authorized by law. |