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Teen
curfews added in some towns, challenged in others CHICAGO,
Illinois (AP) -- Decades ago, a question punctuated a popular
late-night newscast in Chicago: "It's 10:30," the anchor
would say. "Do you know where your children are?" It
was a reminder to parents that anyone younger than 17 was supposed
to be off the streets and obeying a citywide curfew -- one that
remains in effect today. Back
then, curfews weren't questioned. They just were. That's not the
case anymore. "It's
not fair. They think all kids are bad, but we're not,"
13-year-old Jose Regalado said as he took a break from an evening
basketball game at a Chicago YMCA. He and other teens there
complained that police go out of their way to hassle them, even when
they're rushing home shortly after curfew has begun. Now
even as a number of cities -- from Albuquerque, New Mexico, to
Alpharetta, Georgia -- are pushing to add them in an attempt to cut
crime, others are being hit with lawsuits that challenge their
curfews' constitutionality. Last
week in Vernon, Connecticut, for instance, the town council decided
to not to appeal a federal court ruling that upheld a ban on the
town's decade-old curfew. "I
was happy to see it go away," says Dr. Ellen Marmer, a
pediatric cardiologist who is also the town's new mayor. She says
Vernon should spend its money on positive activities for youth,
including a new skateboarding park. "If
you keep telling kids 'no' all the time and don't give them a 'yes'
part, they're going to rebel," Marmer says. "You have to
keep a balance." The
Vernon curfew had been challenged by the Connecticut Civil Liberties
Union, which argued that curfews violated parents' right to set
their own children's curfew. Andy
Herm -- who filed his own federal lawsuit to fight Denver's curfew
when he was 17 -- agrees, but also believes the courts should
consider young people's rights. His
2002 lawsuit argued that curfews violate the Fourth Amendment and
its protections against unreasonable search and seizure (in this
case ID). The suit also contended that the curfew impeded minors'
First Amendment rights during curfew hours. "I
was rather tempted to hold a protest against the curfew after curfew
hours," says Herm, now 19 and a sophomore at the University of
British Columbia in Vancouver. He
raised the $150 to file the suit by collecting donations, a dollar
at a time, from students at school. And his dad, an attorney,
explained how to file the suit. In
the end, however, it was thrown out because -- besides having to
obey a curfew if their cities have one -- minors in Colorado are not
allowed to file lawsuits. Police:
Curfews curb juvenile crime
Either
way, at least one legal expert says he would've been surprised if
the court sided with a teen. "We
don't have a country where people take very seriously the idea that
young people deserve a lot of freedom," says Martin Guggenheim,
a professor at New York University School of Law who specializes in
children's rights. Police,
meanwhile, argue that curfews help reduce juvenile crime (a claim
some researchers dispute) and keep young people from becoming
victims of crime. Albuquerque's mayor, for instance, began asking
lawmakers for a statewide curfew after a 16-year-old was shot in a
park in the early morning hours last August. "If
you're 16 or younger, you belong in the house, not standing on a
street corner," says Chicago police spokesman Pat Camden whose
department caught 40,335 curfew violators last year. Many
Chicago residents support the curfew. They include Kathy Posner, a
retiree who serves on her neighborhood's police advisory board. "Unfortunately,
many parents in lower-income areas work at night and are not around
to correctly supervise their teenage children," she says. Mike
Males, a sociologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz,
says that, indeed, there is a perception that curfews make a city
safer. But his research has found that juvenile crime rates in such
cities as San Francisco actually went down when curfews were
abolished. He
says curfews also tend to punish kids who aren't doing anything
wrong -- and often disproportionately target black and Hispanic
youth. In
Vernon, Connecticut, he found that of 410 youth cited for violating
curfew from 1995 to 1998, only seven were committing crimes, served
with warrants or identified as runaways. Frank
Sanchez, the Atlanta-based director delinquency prevention Boys
& Girls Clubs of America, says communities should focus on
providing programs and safe havens after school into the early
evening -- the time when statistics show that most juveniles are
victims of violent crime, or commit crimes themselves. Imposing
a curfew, Sanchez says, is like "putting a Band-Aid on the
problem.” |