The juvenile just turned 18 and was transferred to adult court. Now, the adult court wants to place him on deferred adjudication.
My question is can the adult court legally do this? Has anybody had this situation come up? The applicable statute is sec. 54.051(e). As far as I can tell, this provision has never been cited and is far from clear.
It certainly seems wrong to switch the child/ defendant from straight probation to deferred. Unfortunately, sec. 54.051(e) vaguely alludes to "community suprevision under article 42.12." Arguably, that phrasing includes deferred adjudication or straight probation.
On further reflection, it looks like the adult court isn't authorized to place the juvenile on deferred under art. 42.12, sec. 5 because the adult court doesn't receive the juvenile's guilty plea. The only reason for the transfer under sec. 54.015(e) is to place the juvenile on community supervision, not to accept a plea.
Does this sound right to you guys?
[This message was edited by Anne Swenson on 11-19-01 at .]
Anywho, after consulting with several of the attorneys here at TDCAA, and contacting our juvenile gurus across the state, our answer to this question presented is: no one knows. It seems logical that a district court would not be allowed to modify or change the type of community supervision the juvenile is subject to anymore than it could modify the "conditions consistent with those ordered by the juvenile court." However, we have received several reports of district judges doing all kinds of strange things upon having these cases transferred to their courts, including one judge that required the defendant to do jail time even though he had already been serving his probation time. Thus far, nothing has been appealed and published and no AG opinions have been issued concerning the authority of a district judge in these situations, and thus the answer at this time is a simple one: no one knows.
[This message was edited by erik on 11-27-01 at .]