CHILDREN AND THE LAW
...Delinquency Matters
......Disposition
.........Removal From Home
............WIC 1800 Extended Commitment
9 Cards On This Topic:
  • Current extended detention scheme set forth in W&IC 1800 et seq. satisfies due process and equal protection clauses of state and federal Constitutions.
  • W&IC §1801.5 gives M the right not to testify in juvenile commitment proceeding as it expressly extends to juveniles facing commitment "all rights guaranteed under federal and state constitutions in criminal proceedings."
  • EDA does not deprive ward of equal protection by treating him differently from similarly situated adult prisoners subject to civil commitments under SVPA and MDO laws.
  • Trial court's admonition to the jury, tailored to DA's specific remarks implying facts not in evidence and adding personal views, sufficient to cure any prejudice from DA's misconduct.
  • Extended Detention Act does not violate substantive due process.
  • CYA not authorized to parole D committed under W&IC 1800, but is authorized under statutory scheme for extended commitment to conditionally release D during current extended commitment period.
  • M entitled to new commitment proceeding to include finding his mental disorder caused serious difficulty in controlling his behavior — detention scheme interpreted to contain such requirement to preserve constitutionality.
  • Order of extended CYA commitment reversed where no rational trier of fact could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that M had serious difficulty controlling his sexually deviant behavior.
  • W&IC 1800 requires D's mental deficiency, etc., cause serious difficulty in controlling behavior, resulting in serious, well-founded risk of reoffense—must be alleged in petition re extended commitment and shown at PC hearing and trial.