Adult inmates cause trouble in juvenile detention

In the wake of repeated violent clashes at its facilities, the Juvenile Observation and Protection Department wants to send adult inmates with felony convictions and problematic behaviour to maximum security zones.
"I may need to propose this measure to prevent them from causing trouble," director general Paisal Wichienkua said on Wednesday. The department's juvenile observation and protection centres were designed and its workers were trained to deal with young inmates, not those aged 18-24 who were filling up the centres, he said. Of over 6,000 inmates in the department's system, nearly 3,000 were in that age range. Control measures used for the young occupants would not be very efficient when applied to older convicts, who were usually blamed for instigating the violence. The department would ask the Justice Ministry to amend laws to ensure that those over 18 when arrested were sent to prisons, not the youth rehabilitation centres. "For convicts who are almost 18 years old and receive a long jail term, they should be sent to prisons," Paisal said, adding that at most, those at the juvenile centres should not be over 20. As an immediate measure, he ordered officials to block inmates' access to news about breakouts or violence at other correction facilities. "Also, the gang leaders behind any incident should be subjected to temporary custody at prisons or military camps," he said. Public prosecutors would be asked to order pettycrime offenders to perform community service under probation, rather than send them to the juvenile detention centres. The Nation
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