Teen Court Procedures

Arrival at the Courthouse
All jurors and respondents should arrive at the Charles County Courthouse by 5:30 PM, entering through the glass doors at the rear of the Courthouse, facing the parking lot. Upon entry everyone is required to go through the security checkpoint. Please follow the instructions of the officer on the security checking procedures. Remember that radios, recording devices, cameras, weapons, and any other electronic devices are strictly prohibited. For Teen Court ONLY, a cell phone may be brought into the Courthouse to coordinate pickup after the session but MUST be turned off during the entire period you are in the Courthouse.

Respondents
After passing through the security checkpoint, all respondents and parents should proceed up the stairs to the second floor. Proceed down the hallway to the first hallway on the right that leads to Courtroom A. The Teen Court Coordinator will be located in the room immediately to the left. If the Coordinator is not available, please take a seat in the waiting room to the right. The Coordinator will call you into the office in turn.

Jurors
All jurors both volunteer and respondents who are attending as part of their disposition (“mandatory”), are to proceed down the first floor hallway to the first hallway on the right. Just past the elevators will be a room on the right identified as the Jury Waiting Room. Upon entering this area you will find a sign-in sheet at the front of the room. Sign in on this sheet, providing the requested information. Take a seat and await the Teen Court staff member to begin the orientation. Bathrooms are located in the main hallway. When coming from the Jury Waiting Room, turn right at the main hallway and the bathrooms will be located immediately to your left. Do NOT loiter in the halls or enter any other areas of the Courthouse under any circumstances. Immediately return to the Jury Waiting Room.

Orientation/Assignment to Jury Panels
All jurors should be seated in the Jury Waiting Room by 5:30 PM. A Teen Court Staff member will welcome everyone and provide a brief overview of the Teen Court program. This overview includes the purpose of the Charles County Teen Court, the responsibilities of the Teen Court juror, the courtroom procedures for the petit and grand jury formats, conduct guidelines, and any administrative guidance. At the conclusion of the overview, the sign-in roster will be used to assign jurors to different jury panels. Assignments will be made based on the nature of the cases on the docket. For example, traffic cases will have a majority of the jury consisting of those of driving age, or cases involving a middle school student consisting of middle school aged jurors. Requests to be seated on the same jury with an acquaintance will not be honored unless under special circumstances approved in advance. Any jurors arriving late or in excess of the maximum 12 required will be assigned to a jury panel as an “alternate juror” and will be substituted for an assigned juror if there is a recognition issue of the respondent. Alternates will be given an opportunity to sit on the jury panel by switching with an assigned juror for subsequent cases. Your Teen Court Jury Monitor will make any changes once in the courtroom. Each juror should remember the jury panel to which they have been assigned. The staff member will advise each assigned jury panel the nature of the cases on their docket and the jury format to be used. Any questions you may have about the Teen Court procedures should be directed to the Teen Court staff member. Any last minute bathroom breaks should be made now since the cases can not be stopped for this purpose.

Relocation to Assigned Courtrooms
At approximately 5:55 PM a Teen Court staff member will advise you that it was time to proceed to the courtroom. At this time you should collect all your belongings to take with you. All gum, food, and drinks should be disposed of at this time since none are permitted in the courtroom. All hats should be removed and remain off for the duration of the court session. All cell phones should be checked to ensure that they are turned completely off. The Teen Court staff member will announce the first jury panel to move to their courtroom and will direct them to the Teen Court staff member who will escort them to their courtroom and will serve as the Jury Monitor for the entire session. You should quietly follow your Jury Monitor to your assigned courtroom, entering the jury box, starting with the seats in the front row and then the second row. All alternate jurors are to sit in the gallery and are not to leave the courtroom unless specifically excused by the Judge or Jury Monitor.

Once seated in the jury box you can place your personal items beside your seat but out of the aisle. Follow the instructions of your Jury Monitor who will hand out notepads, pens, and sanction sheets (if appropriate). If the grand jury format is to be used, you will be asked to fill in a seating chart for the Judge, clearly printing your name in the box that corresponds with your seat. All items except your notepad and pen should be on the floor beside you.

Opening the Teen Court Session
Once all jurors are ready for the session to begin, all gallery observers are seated, respondents present along with their Teen Court attorneys (if applicable), and the courtroom is ready, the bailiff will notify the judge. The bailiff will return to the courtroom and say: “All rise, this session of the Charles County Teen Court is now in session, the Honorable <Judge’s Name> presiding”. The judge will enter and take the bench. The judge will ask everyone to be seated. The judge will give a brief introduction to Teen Court. The judge will ask everyone in the courtroom to rise, raise their right hand, and will administer the Oath of Confidentiality. The judge will then ask everyone to be seated and will review the significance of the Oath of Confidentiality. The respondent(s) will be identified. The judge will ask the jury if any member of the jury recognizes the respondent. If you know or recognize the respondent, raise your hand. The judge will ask you several questions about how well you know the respondent and if you can be totally impartial in your deliberations involving this individual. The respondent(s) will be asked if they know any member of the jury. If the respondent recognizes any jury member, they will likewise be asked if they had any reservations about that individual serving on the jury. If there is no challenge the case will continue. If there is any concern about an individual’s participation as a jury member, that member will be asked to leave the jury box and sit in the gallery and will be replaced by a alternate juror for that case. This is NOT a negative reflection on the juror involved, but ensures that the respondent is provided with as impartial a jury panel as possible. Once the jury has been selected, the judge will ask the jury panel to rise. You are to rise, face the respondent, and raise your right hand. The judge will administer the Jury Oath which says that you will faithfully perform your duties as a juror in an unbiased manner. The judge will then direct you to be seated.

What happens next depends on the court format being used for the case under consideration. There are two formats utilized by the Teen Court: Petit Jury and Grand Jury. The Petit Jury format involves the use of Teen Court attorneys as the Prosecutor and Defense Counsel. The Prosecutor will be seated at the table to the left as you look towards the gallery. The Defense Counsel and Respondent will be seated at the table to the right. In the Grand Jury format there will be no Teen Court attorneys present.

Important note
It is incumbent on each and every juror to give their full time and attention to the respondent’s responses to questions from either their Teen Court attorneys or from fellow jurors. Daydreaming, dozing off, doodling, laughing, smirking, making facial expressions, or otherwise not paying attention to the case being heard is unfair to your fellow teen who is the respondent and will not be tolerated, resulting in your immediate removal from the jury. Also remember that to enter the Teen Court Program that the respondent acknowledges their involvement/guilt to the charges. You are NOT determining whether they are guilty or not, only the appropriate disposition (sentence) for their actions.

Petit Jury Procedures
The Judge will announce the case and will ask if the Prosecution and Defense are prepared to proceed. The Prosecution and Defense will each provide their opening remarks, briefly introducing the case from their perspective. Remember that this information is not evidence, but their opinions. After the opening remarks, the Judge will ask the respondent to take the witness stand to be sworn in by the bailiff. The bailiff will administer the oath and will ask the respondent to take their seat and state their name and age. At this point the Defense and Prosecution will take turns asking questions of the respondent about the incident and their involvement. You should pay very close attention to the responses by the respondent since this is evidence and should be taken into consideration when you deliberate to come up with an appropriate disposition (sentence). Once each side has completed their questioning and follow-up questions, the Judge will ask the respondent if they would like to address the jury. This is the respondent’s opportunity to address you the jury directly and say anything they feel is appropriate about the incident or themselves that they would like for you to take into consideration as part of your deliberations. After the respondent has completed the Judge will direct the respondent to return to the defense table and be seated. The Prosecution and Defense attorneys will then address the jury to provide their closing remarks which will be their summary of the case and their recommendations for a disposition. Remember, this is only the opinion of the attorneys and not evidence. You are under no obligation to consider what the attorneys tell you at this point as part of your deliberations. After both attorneys have finished their closing remarks the Judge will address the jury and explain any elements of the law that would be applicable to the case under consideration. The Judge will then appoint a foreperson from the jury. The Judge will then direct the jury to retire to the Deliberation Room along with your Jury Monitor to determine a disposition. The Judge will recess the court until the jury has agreed upon a disposition.

The jury should quietly and orderly file out of the jury box and across the hall into the Deliberation Room. The Jury Monitor will guide you where to go. Each juror should take a seat at the table, with the foreperson appointed by the Judge taking the seat at the head of the table. Each juror will be provided with a Teen Court sanction guideline sheet. The foreperson will complete the jury disposition form with the respondent’s name and case number provided by the Jury Monitor. The Jury Monitor will identify the category (severity) of the offense. The foreperson will lead the discussion of each of the sanctions identified on the disposition form, using the sanction guideline for the category level of the offense. The sanction guideline identifies the minimum and maximum sanction levels for each category. Sanctions do not have to be limited to only those sanctions but can be anything reasonable that the jury feels would be appropriate for that particular respondent. For a sanction to be imposed, an affirmative vote is required by the total number of jurors minus 2. Any questions or issues should be directed to the Jury Monitor who will answer the question or communicate with the Judge as necessary. Once the jury panel has come to agreement on all the sanctions to be imposed, the foreperson will read out loud all the sanctions agreed upon and ask the jury if they agree with all of the sanctions. Once completed, the foreperson will sign the jury disposition form in the spot indicated. The Jury Monitor will notify the Judge that the jury has reached a disposition and will return to the Deliberation Room. The jury will quietly and in an orderly manner file back into the courtroom and take your seats back in the jury box. The Judge will call the court back to order.

Grand Jury Procedures
The Judge will announce the case and ask the respondent to take the witness stand to be sworn in by the bailiff. The bailiff will administer the oath and will ask the respondent to take their seat and state their name and age. The Judge will provide a general overview of the offense from the police report. The Judge will then ask the jury if they have any questions. Jurors should raise their hand and wait to be recognized by the Judge. Once recognized, you ask your question directly of the respondent. You can ask any question you feel is appropriate about the incident or about the respondent themselves. Do not be afraid to ask a question. If a question is asked that isn’t relevant, the Judge will intervene to help rephrase the question. It is very important that the jury members ask questions about all aspects of the incident in order to get the information needed to render a fair disposition. The only dumb question is the one that isn’t asked. You can ask follow-on questions about information from the respondent from any other juror’s question. At the completion of the questioning period, each juror should feel that they have enough information about the incident and the respondent’s involvement to render the fair and just disposition. The Judge will ask if the jury has any additional questions, after which the Judge will ask the respondent if they would like to address the jury. This is the respondent’s opportunity to address you the jury directly and say anything they feel is appropriate about the incident or themselves that they would like for you to take into consideration as part of your deliberations. After the respondent has completed the Judge will allow the respondent to leave the witness stand and will ask the respondent, parents, and all gallery observers to exit the courtroom while the jury deliberates the disposition. The bailiff will escort everyone out of the courtroom except the Judge, jury, bailiff, and Jury Monitor. The jury will conduct deliberations in the jury box. The Judge will address the jury and explain any elements of the law that would be applicable to the case under consideration. The Judge will then appoint a foreperson from the jury. Each juror will be provided with a Teen Court sanction guideline sheet. The foreperson will complete the jury disposition form with the respondent’s name and case number provided by the Jury Monitor. The Jury Monitor will identify the category (severity) of the offense. The foreperson will lead the discussion of each of the sanctions identified on the disposition form, using the sanction guideline for the category level of the offense. The sanction guideline identifies the minimum and maximum sanction levels for each category. Sanctions do not have to be limited to only those sanctions but can be anything reasonable that the jury feels would be appropriate for that particular respondent. For a sanction to be imposed, an affirmative vote is required by the total number of jurors minus 2. Any questions or issues should be directed to the Jury Monitor who will answer the question or communicate with the Judge as necessary. Once the jury panel has come to agreement on all the sanctions to be imposed, the foreperson will read out loud all the sanctions agreed upon and ask the jury if they agree with all of the sanctions. Once completed, the foreperson will sign the jury disposition form in the spot indicated. Jurors should place everything on the floor beside their seat. When the Judge and jury are ready, the bailiff will return the respondent, parents, and gallery observers to the courtroom. The Judge will call the court back to order.

Post-Deliberation Procedures
After calling the court back to order following jury deliberations, the Judge will ask the foreperson if the jury has reached a disposition. The foreperson will respond with “Yes, Your Honor” and hand the jury disposition form to the bailiff who will in turn hand it to the Judge. The Judge will review the disposition and will address the respondent, asking them to face the jury. The Judge will then read the disposition agreed upon by the jury and will ask the respondent if they understand the disposition. The Judge will ask the respondent’s parent(s) to join the respondent at the defense table. The Judge will ask some questions of the parent(s) concerning the respondent and then invite them to be seated. The Judge will directly address the respondent to discuss the various implications of the respondent’s action and the potential impact continuing such behavior will have on their future. Upon completion of the Judge’s comments the Judge will hand the signed jury disposition form to the bailiff who will escort the respondent and their parent(s) to the Teen Court Coordinator’s office for administrative processing. The jury, Judge, and bailiff will prepare themselves and the courtroom for the next case. The bailiff will bring in the next respondent and the process will repeat until all cases on the docket have been heard.

Dismissal
Once all of the cases designated for your courtroom have been heard you are to remain in your seat, either in the jury box or the gallery until you have been dismissed by the Judge or the Teen Court staff member. Make sure that you have turned in all of the materials you were given to use during the cases and have turned in all notes you took to the Teen Court Staff member for disposal. Before leaving, make sure that you have all your belongings and any trash around your seat has been picked up. If you have any attendance verification documents that require signature, please provide them to your Jury Monitor for action. Do not loiter in the halls since other courtrooms may still be in session. Proceed to the courthouse rear door and promptly exit. If you are awaiting a ride home, a Teen Court staff member will remain until everyone has been picked up.

Questions/Problems
If you have a question or a problem, please contact a Teen Court Staff member who can be readily identified by their blue shirt with the Sheriff’s Office logo on it. If you have a problem that can not wait during the hearing of a case, please raise your hand and you will be given an opportunity to discuss it with the Judge.


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