Pubdate: Wed, 06 Oct 1999 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 1999 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/index/ Author: Molly Sullivan, Staff Reporter 'TEEN COURT' HAS THE LAST WORD It's a court where teens rule. They are the prosecutors, defense attorneys, clerks and bailiffs. But most importantly, they are the jury that decides what punishment fits the crime. At the new "teen court" in Blue Island, students from Eisenhower High School will sit in judgment of their peers. Blue Island police, the Cook County state's attorney's office and Eisenhower High School are teaming up to start the court, which works much the same way as peer juries in other suburbs. It's the first time the state's attorney's office has been involved in the start-up of a teen court. The court will help the office adapt to a new juvenile justice law that calls for a "restorative and balanced approach" to justice, said Assistant State's Attorney Rich Stake, who helped form the program. The goal is to divert juvenile misdemeanor cases--such as damage to property and possession of "very small amounts" of marijuana--from the courts while giving teens a meaningful punishment, Stake said. "Studies show this works," Stake said. "Kids pay more attention to their peers than a principal or judge." Matteson Police detective Richard Walsh can vouch for that. He oversees Matteson's peer jury, and in 2 1/2 years, just one student who completed the program was re-arrested, he said. The program is designed for first-time offenders. Police make an arrest, then decide if the case is eligible for teen court. Teens and their parents must agree to participate, and a teen must admit guilt before heading before the jury for sentencing. Before imposing a sentence, up to 12 jurors will get a chance to question the student about why he or she committed the crime. That, officials hope, will lead to solutions. Community service will be the most common form of punishment because it has the most impact, officials said. Eisenhower students who will serve in the court said their peers will listen "because they don't like an adult telling them what to do," said junior Gaby Becerra, 16, of Blue Island. Eisenhower is starting its own teen court for school violations based on the same system as the police court. Judith L. Nelson, program coordinator at the Southwest YMCA's Network for Counseling and Youth Development in Alsip, who developed the program for Blue Island, has worked on similar projects. "You see kids blossom. They gain self-confidence," Nelson said. "The whole peer element is what empowers these kids." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake