Ending Fees and Fines for Juvenile Offenders is Best for Rehabilitation
A former chief judge of Delaware's Family Court argues that imposing fines and fees on juvenile offenders undermines their potential to become productive, law-abiding adults.

I was a judge and chief judge of Delaware's Family Court for over 17 years. In those roles, I held trials and oversaw plea agreements where I was required to order youths under 18 to pay fines and fees that ended up pushing them deeper into the criminal justice system when they inevitably did not pay. I have thus seen firsthand the problems that court-imposed financial obligations create for young people and their families who are often already struggling financially.
During my tenure and with my support, Delaware began to move away from imposing financial penalties in juvenile Family Court proceedings. I am proud that in 2023, Delaware joined a growing number of states and jurisdictions when we passed into law major reforms to our criminal legal system's financial obligations, including eliminating fines and fees for our young people in Family Court. Delaware Family Court judges are not only not required to impose fines or fees as a penalty for children found delinquent; they are no longer permitted to do so.
Delaware is known as the "First State," but we were not the first state to make these changes. We are one of eight states to eliminate all fines and fees in juvenile cases, joining Maryland, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Washington. A dozen others have made strides toward this goal, including Arizona, Louisiana, South Dakota, Texas, and others who eliminated all fees, but not all fines, for adjudications of delinquency.
In fact, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), an organization of state legislators dedicated to limited government, free markets, and federalism, adopted model legislation in August 2023, urging more states to eliminate all fees, fines, or other financial obligations (other than restitution) against minors in criminal or juvenile proceedings.
As a judge, I took my role of enforcing personal accountability seriously—which is why I support these reforms. Children should not be expected to earn wages, and sometimes the children who appeared in front of me were too young to legally do so. When we punish children with financial obligations, it's their families that pay them, if they get paid at all. Children from wealthy families who appeared before me could pay off their cases quickly and would receive record-clearing expungements when the time came.
Children from poor families were not so fortunate, and with their families unable to pay off their court debts, they would often enter adulthood still trying to make monthly payments and still unable to clear their criminal record. A 2016 study co-authored by Alex Piquero, currently director of the Bureau of Justice Statistics, finds evidence from a survey "of 1,167 adolescent offenders in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania" to "suggest that financial penalties in general and the sheer amount of financial penalties in particular significantly increase the likelihood of recidivism, even after controlling for relevant demographics and case characteristics."
I also believe in a small, efficient government. A 2019 study from the Brennan Center for Justice that examined 10 counties across Texas, Florida, and New Mexico found that collecting fines and fees is incredibly inefficient. It cost Texas and New Mexico counties, for example, 41 cents of every dollar of revenue they raised from fees and fines to pay for in-court hearings and jail costs alone. One county in New Mexico spent $1.17 to collect every dollar of revenue it raised through fines and fees, losing money through this system.
Before eliminating all fines and fees in 2021, Oregon charged families for the costs of having their children in custody. For fiscal year 2019, Oregon reported that they spent $866,000 to collect $864,000 in such fees. Before California eliminated juvenile fees in 2017, Santa Clara County spent $450,000 to collect just $400,000 in fees in fiscal year 2014-15, according to a March 2017 report from the University of California Berkeley Law's Public Advocacy Clinic. This is government waste at its worst. Eliminating fines and fees for children often has a low fiscal impact (or even savings!) because of how inefficient or wasteful it is for governments to try to collect this money.
Delaware is in many ways a microcosm of the rest of the country. The Mason-Dixon line runs through our state. Northern Delaware is urban and densely populated; southern Delaware is split between sparsely populated agricultural land and more densely housed retired beachcombers. If Delaware can make these reforms, any state in this country can, and I urge them to join us in doing so. Our court system is meant to require accountability and rehabilitation. Fines and fees stand in the way of that. Eliminating them levels the playing field while clearing the way for American youth to concentrate on their education and flourish.
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We are one of eight states to eliminate all fines and fees in juvenile cases, joining Maryland, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Washington.
Good job….the little darlings shoot and carjack people in the streets. Hey Judge, try driving your very nice car in Newark (The Jersey EWR, not the DE Newark) this summer, on a nice warm night with your windows down.
See if the little Fee-free darlings thank you….or car jack you.
Nice going. Please tell us you’ve left the bench, never to return.
If they're dangerous enough to be a carjacker risk, they deserved to be in jail. Fines (whether collectible or not) would have made no difference.
There's plenty to criticize about this judge's approach without resorting to strawmen.
We should lock up the strawmen as well - - - - - - - -
We used to just crucify them in the corn field.
What about shoplifting? Usually not criminal. If I'm 17 why would I ever pay for something under the threshold limit?
Arizona's threshold is higher than California's.
1000 vs 950. But has nothing to do with my question.
The judge is writing about Delaware. Duh.
If Oregon, Washington and New York are doing something, what are the odds that it's a good idea?
I've got an idea. Why don't we slap fines onto people such that most of what they legally earn is taken away from them to pay for it and interest for the rest of their life, and then act surprised when they seek out other ways to make money!
The Con Credo: String 'em up. It'll teach 'em a lesson. They'll never jaywalk again.
Finally. Sarc going full dem pays off.
I've got an idea. When people commit minor crimes, catch and release them with a sternly worded letter. We can all act surprised when they commit additional crimes.
False dichotomy for the win!
I'm going to assume that the author knows much more than I due to his experience. Seem obvious that government should create disincentives to criminal behavior juvenile or otherwise. If fines are ineffective and create another layer of bureaucracy I'm cool with that. As long as more useful disincentives remain in place or are expanded.
Disincentives to criminal behavior in the form of excessive penalties, especially for juveniles, don’t work on people who assume they’re not going to get caught. Just results in unjust sentences for those who do. People with low impulse control don't respond to disincentives the way normal people do, and those are the people most likely to get into trouble with the law.
From the guy supporting years in jail for parading. Who has mocked half a billion in fines to the person he hates most. Lol.
Trump is a "billionaire". He can afford billions in fines, amirite?
Youre on welfare i take it. You think he has hundreds of millions in liquid assets? And because he has assets who cares about immoral judgements and lawfare. At least you don't pretend to be libertarian.
Wealth and money aren't the same thing.
I think the author is talking about fines and fees in excess of restitution for theft or property damage. I could be wrong.
Hmmmm.
I wonder sending the parent(s) to jail for their kid's crimes would have any influence on the child's criminal behavior, especially after the parent(s) get out of jail?
Since the current system is ineffective and potentially counterproductive, why keep doing it over and over instead of coming up with a creative new system?
A new restorative justice system that has made things worse every time it has been enacted. See Portland or D.C.
Your preference is not creative nor is it new.
It is, though, an abject failure.
Seems like it would encourage them to learn the value of work to pay off their bills, and remind them that crime doesn't pay.
Flogging is more effective, and cheap.
Children from poor families were not so fortunate, and with their families unable to pay off their court debts, they would often enter adulthood still trying to make monthly payments and still unable to clear their criminal record.
All the more reason poor people should be the most crime adverse, and their parents cracking their kids' skulls to make sure they avoid it.
You know what I don't see in this article though? What justice SHOULD they serve in order to rehabilitate them?
Letting them off consequence free sends the wrong message; having them do hard time seems excessive given their age; and we can't exactly condition a sentence on compulsory military service. So, what other option is there for them?
Answer: fees and fines. And the reason we did this, successfully, for so long is because we lived in a society where that necessarily implied that a kid would go find an after-school job to help keep him out of trouble, teach him some work ethic, and get his head on straight.
We don't do that anymore. Now those jobs belong to graduates with masters in sociology and intersectional politics degrees, the little criminal just has to declare he's been systemically and historically raycissisted and/or has anxiety, and his poor family can just set up a digital panhandling page.
The reason you don't have a solution for their rehabilitation Chandlee, is because you don't have a solution to the societal collapse that's doesn't want them rehabilitated. Or because you're in favor of said collapse.
OK, fine but why did he not make a recommendation on what WILL get the attention of these kids? I think we have seen that just talking to them does not work. There needs to be real world consequences for their actions. Let them mop up the blood in the ER. Clean up the jail cells at the local police station or the morgue. Let them see where they will wind up if they continue to do stupid things.
The most effective thing we could do long term is stop subsidizing the reproduction of unmarried indigent women. Few of these delinquents come from functioning families.