Pubdate: Sun, 30 Mar 2003 Source: Middletown Press, The (CT) Copyright: 2003 The Middletown Press Contact: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?brd=1645 Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/586 Author: Amy L. Zitka Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) HAMM SEEKS TO STRENGTHEN YOUTH LAWS EAST HAMPTON -- Prompted By Last Year's Tragic Death Of 16-Year-Old Makayla Korpinen, The State's First Reported Death By An Ecstasy Overdose, Several Legislative Bills Are Being Introduced To Eliminate The "Gray Area" Surrounding 16 And 17 Year Olds. State Rep. Gail K. Hamm, D-34, has introduced three bills to strengthen the Youth in Crisis Act. Those bills and numerous others will be the topic of a Judiciary Committee public hearing Monday at 1 p.m. in Hartford. Several of the bills are intended to assist the police, schools and courts when dealing with troubled teenagers who are truant, runaways, or are beyond the control of their parents. "These young people are good kids, rebellious and trying to grow up on their own terms, yet they take a wrong turn somewhere or lose their way," Hamm said. "Parents are seeking court supervision and intervention like counseling or substance abuse treatment for their children. Too often the system has let everyone down. We must do more to make sure these children don't fall through the cracks." One of Hamm's bills, which is "the fastest way," but also the most expensive way, the representative said, is to close the gray area on the 16- and 17-year-old issue. Hamm is seeking to raise the juvenile court limit, so teenagers will be considered juveniles until the age of 18 years old. Matters concerning 16 and 17 year olds are handled in adult courts, but the teens in criminal cases can seek youthful offender status. The second bill would mandate police to notify parents if their teen had been picked up, Hamm said. If the teen had not committed a crime, he would not be detained with delinquents, she said. If a teen had defied a judge's order, for example, the teen could be jailed. Incarcerating a youth in crisis, a court-defined troubled 16 or 17 year old, is the wrong approach, Hamm said. The third proposed legislation would be to construct a "Makayla House." "We're seeking state funding to create a home for runaway girls who haven't broken any laws," said Hamm, whose law practice focuses on youth issues. "They may be truant, or status offenders. They're troubled kids, but not criminals." It would be considered a safe house where teen girls could "take a break, rest from the street and get their act together," she said. Makayla Korpinen's mother, Catherine, will be testifying Monday before the Judiciary Committee in favor of an updated Youth In Crisis law. Catherine Korpinen will share her account of how the laws failed to protect her child. She will be seeking a change in "the gray area" of the law relating to 16 and 17 year olds, Korpinen said Friday. "She was 16 years old. She was just a baby," Catherine Korpinen said of her daughter. The teen had been away from home for just a few weeks when she died. She would not comment on what prompted the teen's departure from her Stevenson Road home. Hamm had approached her about the legislation, said Korpinen, who said she had been devastated at the time. "She was very good to me. She was supportive," Korpinen said of Hamm. "I felt very strongly," Hamm said of the teen's death. "It pointed out the flaws in the system." Makayla Korpinen, an East Hampton High School sophomore, was living at the home of her boyfriend's family at the time of her death. On May 17, she ingested Ecstasy at a house party and began to have seizures. The teen was brought to Middlesex Hospital the next day and was taken by Life Star helicopter to the Connecticut Children's Medical Center in Hartford. She lapsed into a coma and died May 21. According to the medical examiner, Korpinen died from complications of Ecstasy intoxication. The current Youth in Crisis Act is intended to help troubled 16 and 17 year olds and their families get their lives back on track. Under the act, parents can file petitions to seek to have the teens be classified as a youth in crisis. Under the law, police can search for runaways and report their whereabouts to families and caregivers, but they are not required to return them home. Police may hold a teen in protective custody for up to 12 hours until a parent or agency can intervene, according to the law. The current act is "permissive," Hamm said. The proposed bills would say "they have to stay there and contact the parents." Last year, Catherine Kor-pinen filed an intent to sue the town, the police department and social services in which she claimed they had failed to protect her daughter. Korpinen, according to court documents, had urged police and social services to return her daughter. She also recently filed a civil suit claiming three teens and the parents of two of the teens were negligent and that their actions led to Makayla's death. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk