Texas Register, Volume 21, Number 80, Pages 10639-10789, October 29, 1996 Page: 10,733
10639-10789 p. ; 28 cm.View a full description of this periodical.
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demanding return are not required to use the petition to the home state
court as in Article IV. Three certified true copies of adjudication and/
or disposition orders and pick up orders are sufficient.
(b) Requisition for Escapee or Absconder/Requisition for
Juvenile Charged With Being Delinquent, form II, must be used for
Article V returns. For the purposes under this article, box number
one is checked, Requisition for Escapee or Absconder.
(c) The state to which the juvenile is returned shall be
responsible for the costs of and making transportation arrangements
within five working days of being notified that the requisition has
been honored.
(d) No juvenile charged with violent offenses or who is
considered dangerous to him/herself and/or others shall be returned
unescorted.
(e) All pending charges in the holding state must be disposed
of prior to a youth's return.
(f) The Texas ICJ office will bear the costs of returning Texas
non-delinquent and delinquent runaways when it is determined that
the responsible party is financially unable to do so.
117.21. Rendition Amendment (Article XVI, NAJCA).
(a) The Rendition Amendment to the Interstate Compact on
Juveniles provides additional remedies, and is binding only among
and between those states and jurisdictions which have specifically
executed the same. The deputy administrator should be contact for
information regarding the participating states.
(b) The Rendition Amendment provides for the return of
youth who are not yet adjudicated and/or are being returned to a
third state.
(c) Requisition for Escapee or Absconder/Requisition for
Juvenile Charged with Being Delinquent, form II, is used to initiate
the Rendition Amendment. For the purposes of this amendment, box
number two is checked, Requisition for Juvenile Charged with Being
Delinquent.
(d) A juvenile who has not been adjudicated but is charged
with being a delinquent may be returned to the demanding state,
where the juvenile has committed a criminal act. The demanding
state may file a petition, whether the juvenile fled the state before or
after the filing of the petition. For example: A youth leaves state
A, passes through state B and commits a crime, and is apprehended
in state C. If all three states are party to the Rendition Amendment,
state B may send a requisition with supporting certified documents
to state C. However, if the youth has been returned to state A, state
B may also forward the requisition to state A.
(e) All provisions and procedures of Article V shall be
followed. The demanding state shall be responsible for the costs
and making transportation arrangements within five working days of
being notified by the asylum state's ICJ office that the requisition has
been honored.
(f) The Texas ICJ office will bear the costs of returning Texas
non-delinquent and delinquent runaways when it is determined that
the responsible party is financially unable to do so.
117.23. Detention.
(a) Persons over the age of 17 being held solely on a juvenile
warrant must be detained in a juvenile detention facility.(b) Status offenders who are picked up as a Missing Person
must be held in a secure facility while awaiting return to the home
state. These youth must be returned to the home state within five
working days.
(c) A holding state shall not be reimbursed for detaining
youth under the provisions of the ICJ. The expeditious return through
the ICJ process will minimize the holding state's detention costs.
Therefore, states/jurisdictions shall not be charged or billed for
detention costs, and do not bill other states for costs related to
detaining their juveniles, (AJCA Rules and Regulations 4-109).
(d) Juvenile detention facilities that contract with other
counties should strive to assist those counties with youth being
detained under the provisions of the ICJ, (i.e., taking youth before the
juvenile judge in that county for the form III, taking youth to airport,
etc.).
117.25. Airport Surveillance.
(a) Airport surveillance services can be accessed on Monday
through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. for:
(1) runaway youth who are not at risk to harm themselves
or others; or
(2) youth who are traveling to a placement.
(b) For youth who are returned to their home/demanding state
via commercial airliner as arranged through the ICJ, and who are
unaccompanied, airport surveillance providers will meet the arriving
airliner and place the youth on the connecting flight. In order to
ensure that these youth reach their final destinations, the providers
do not leave the gate area until the flight is airborne.
(c) The Texas ICJ office contracts with surveillance providers
in the Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston Intercontinental, and Houston
Hobby airports. The Texas ICJ office can arrange to have youth
met at these airports. Assistance usually can be arranged at other
Texas airports.
(1) Surveillance services are available at many airports in
the United States. These services can be accessed through the Texas
ICJ office.
(2) The request for assistance must be made at least 24
hours in advance of the youth's travel. The following information is
required:
(A) youth's name;
(B) date of birth;
(C) TYC number, if applicable;
(D) classification and/or offense;
(E) notice of run risk;
(F) flight schedule;
(G) detailed physical and clothing description; and
(H) person's name, title, and phone number who will
meet the youth at the final destination.
(3) After surveillance services are secured, any change
or deviation from the original information and/or schedule must be
reported to the Texas ICJ office as soon as possible to ensure that the
youth is met at the connecting airport.PROPOSED RULES October 29, 1996 21 TexReg 10733
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Texas. Secretary of State. Texas Register, Volume 21, Number 80, Pages 10639-10789, October 29, 1996, periodical, October 29, 1996; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth182324/m1/95/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.