瓜神app

Bringing The World Home To You

漏 2025 瓜神app
120 Friday Center Dr
Chapel Hill, NC 27517
919.445.9150 | 800.962.9862
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Juvenile detention centers in NC under scrutiny for use of isolation

Rooms at the C.A. Dillon Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Butner. North Carolina currently has 10 state-run detention centers and four county-operated facilities. A juvenile detention center is a locked facility, similar to a jail, where minors can be held while waiting for a court hearing or until another placement can be found, such as in a community-based program.
NC 瓜神appline
/
via NC Health 瓜神app
Rooms at the C.A. Dillon Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Butner. North Carolina currently has 10 state-run detention centers and four county-operated facilities. A juvenile detention center is a locked facility, similar to a jail, where minors can be held while waiting for a court hearing or until another placement can be found, such as in a community-based program.

Teenagers in North Carolina鈥檚 juvenile justice system are routinely being locked alone in their rooms for as much as 23 to 24 hours a day, according to an ongoing and advocates for young people in custody, despite state officials鈥 own acknowledgment of research showing that prolonged isolation causes mental and physical harm.

鈥淪ometimes it makes me scream in my cell,鈥 said one of the plaintiffs, a 16-year-old who has been housed at a juvenile detention center in Cabarrus County, in a describing his experience with isolation.

The lawsuit 鈥 originally in U.S. District Court on behalf of the 16-year-old and two other teenagers held for months in the Cabarrus facility 鈥 is to represent the thousands of youth who go through juvenile detention centers every year. Attorneys argue that the state鈥檚 use of isolation violates minors鈥 federal constitutional rights.

鈥淭hese children have suffered immense physical, social, and psychological harm from solitary confinement,鈥 the in asking for a court-ordered end to the practice.

The , which runs juvenile detention facilities, has filed a series of responses categorically denying the lawsuit鈥檚 claims of any policy or practice of regular solitary confinement for young people.

However, the department has acknowledged that staff shortages have affected how much time juveniles spend outside their rooms. Deputy Secretary William Lassiter, who has overseen the state鈥檚 juvenile justice system since 2014, said in a that 鈥渁dministrative room confinement鈥 unrelated to juvenile behavior has been used 鈥 and still is in some instances 鈥 to cope with 鈥渃ritical staffing issues鈥 and maintain safety.

Lassiter, in , acknowledged that people in entire units have had to remain in their rooms for stretches of time, particularly during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, to maintain legally mandated staffing ratios between juveniles and staff. However, he said that staff policies for the limit the duration of isolation.

Lassiter declined NC Health 瓜神app鈥 interview request for this story, citing department policy against commenting on pending litigation.

But in a written response to NC Health 瓜神app鈥 questions, DPS juvenile division spokesman Matthew Debnam said that many detention centers have been over capacity in recent years, partly because of a requiring that people younger than 18 who are charged in adult court be housed in juvenile facilities rather than in jails.

The number of juveniles sent to detention centers has been increasing, Debnam said, and they鈥檝e been staying longer in many facilities that were not designed to provide schooling and programming beyond temporary housing 鈥 all while the division has faced historically high staff vacancy rates.

While attorneys and advocates told NC Health 瓜神app they acknowledge strains the juvenile justice system is facing, they assert that it鈥檚 not right for kids to shoulder the consequences of administrative challenges.

NC Health 瓜神app spoke to nearly a dozen advocates and juvenile attorneys familiar with the state鈥檚 juvenile justice system and with conditions in youth detention centers. Many said that during the COVID pandemic, young clients began telling them about being left in their rooms for extended periods and that the practice continued even after the threat of infection subsided.

鈥淭his is just like pouring fuel on a fire,鈥 said Jake Sussman, interim chief counsel of Durham-based Southern Coalition for Social Justice鈥檚 Justice System Reform team, who tracks state justice issues. 鈥淲e are only aggravating any existing problems by placing these very vulnerable kids in isolation. It is the opposite of taking a public health approach, the opposite of thinking about somebody鈥檚 well-being and rehabilitation.鈥

Risk of harm

North Carolina鈥檚 juvenile justice system is designed and intended to be more rehabilitative than punitive. Young people who are charged as juveniles from the adult criminal justice system and they are held in separate facilities from people who are older than 18. While their cases progress through the courts, some juveniles are held in secure custody in a juvenile detention center.

The Department of Public Safety oversees 10 state-run detention centers and four county-operated facilities. In 2023, 2,934 juveniles were admitted to these facilities. The population was 85 percent male, 70 percent Black and 77 percent aged 15-17.

requires juvenile justice facilities to provide educational services to detained youth. further states that the education adheres to state education standards, comparable to what young people would receive in public schools.

In 2016, the Department of Public Safety to solitary confinement for juveniles younger than 18. President Barack Obama had banned in federal prisons earlier the same year.

The decision came as a result of growing recognition of the harms of solitary confinement 鈥 defined as the placement of a person in a locked room or cell with minimal or no contact with people other than correctional staff 鈥 on an individual鈥檚 health, particularly for juveniles.

Research consistently shows that solitary confinement affects and , increasing risks of anxiety, self-harm and suicide. Experts also say confinement in locked rooms brings a loss of interaction at a key developmental period for teens as they are working to build social skills.

Many experts and organizations 鈥 including the , the and the 鈥 oppose the use of isolation and solitary confinement for incarcerated youth.

Lassiter himself has spoken out about the negative impact of solitary confinement on juveniles.

鈥淲e find that kids that are locked in their rooms, they鈥檙e not growing,鈥 Lassiter in a 2019 interview. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not getting the therapy. They鈥檙e not trying to use the skills we鈥檙e trying to teach them.鈥

Despite this acknowledgment, attorneys and advocates told NC Health 瓜神app that juveniles are being locked in their rooms for extended periods 鈥 an uptick they say began during the pandemic.

鈥淐OVID normalized children being isolated for the system,鈥 said Kellie Mannette, a juvenile defense attorney practicing in Chatham, Orange and Durham counties. 鈥淚 think it wasn't a normal thing that was happening before COVID. And then COVID happened, and it became, like, 鈥極h, we can do this.鈥

鈥淎nd now it's really hard to get them to change it back to where it should be for the children.鈥

鈥楪etting out of my cell was the exception鈥

The law firm and the Charlotte-based nonprofit , which provide court-appointed attorneys for youth in Mecklenburg County, brought the lawsuit in January after hearing repeated complaints from clients about conditions inside facilities.

The increase in complaints came after the November 2022 of a 72-bed county-operated juvenile detention center in Mecklenburg County. Charlotte teens were mostly moved to the detention center in Cabarrus County 鈥 the facility that is the focus of the lawsuit.

For months before filing the lawsuit, attorneys and other advocates voiced concerns 鈥 including in meetings with Lassiter, who oversees operations of the state鈥檚 juvenile detention centers, according to the lawsuit 鈥 about the lack of out-of-cell time without improvement.

Legal filings from the plaintiffs over recent months describe prolonged isolation and inadequate access to education that fall short of the juvenile justice system鈥檚 intent of rehabilitation. The lawsuit claims that holding youth as young as 10 years old in what they say amounts to solitary confinement is a violation of juveniles鈥 constitutional rights to due process and protection from cruel and unusual punishment.

The 16-year-old plaintiff from Mecklenburg County, identified as John Doe 1, described his confinement at the 78-bed in a Sept. 26 . When he arrived in November 2023, he said, he was placed in a small room about the size of a closet with concrete walls, an 鈥渦ncomfortable bed with a thin mattress pad,鈥 a sink and a toilet.

And that鈥檚 where he said he spent 23 hours or more each day during most of his monthslong stay 鈥 only getting out for brief stints to shower, go outside for recreation, make a phone call or get water. He even ate his meals alone in his room.

While confined, John Doe 1 explained that he had very little to do in his room besides read and do pushups. He sometimes sought to talk to other children through the doors but said he risked getting in trouble.

鈥淏eing in solitary confinement makes me frustrated and angry,鈥 he . 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to be in solitary confinement because the other kids are often screaming and yelling and banging on their cell doors because they want to get out.鈥

John Doe 2, a 17-year-old from Mecklenburg County and fellow plaintiff in the lawsuit, recounted in a filed on Sept. 26 a similar experience of extended isolation at the Cabarrus facility, including on Christmas Day when he said he was only allowed outside his locked room for a 10-minute shower and 10-minute phone call.

鈥淕etting out of my cell was the exception, not what was normal,鈥 John Doe 2 .

Additionally, he said that he did not receive any mental health treatment or counseling after arriving at the detention center in November 2023 and that for long periods he did not attend school or receive educational services.

State denies practice

In response to dozens of the lawsuit鈥檚 assertions, 鈥渆mbracing a policy, custom or practice of isolating juveniles for nearly 24 hours a day.鈥

The state also disputed the details of the John Does鈥 confinement in a , asserting that while precise schedules vary by detention center, juveniles have the opportunity to participate in recreational activity and educational programming outside their room.

When juveniles are locked in their rooms during waking hours, according to , it can be a result of either 鈥 which has nothing to do with juvenile behavior 鈥 or , a management tool used as a security measure when a minor鈥檚 behavior presents a threat to themself or others. In all uses of isolation, , policies are in place to ensure that the length of time is minimized as much as possible and that juveniles are observed at least every 15 minutes.

The said that the John Doe plaintiffs were in isolation for various reasons, from security and staffing issues to infractions such as passing notes or 鈥渃ontraband.鈥

Regardless of whether the isolation is for administrative reasons or as a form of punishment, advocates told NC Health 瓜神app, youth will experience the same negative effects.

A statewide problem

While the lawsuit focuses on the conditions at Cabarrus Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Concord and C.A. Dillion Regional Juvenile Detention Center in Butner, the attorneys contend that the practice of isolation is happening across the state, and are asking the court to prohibit the practice. U.S. Magistrate Judge Joe Webster will have to rule whether the lawsuit meets the criteria for class-action status, which .

Juvenile defense attorneys not affiliated with the lawsuit told NC Health 瓜神app they鈥檝e heard about similar conditions from their clients.

鈥淪ome kids tell me they don't get out of their cell at all, unless it's to come to court,鈥 said a juvenile defense attorney with decades of experience representing minors accused of serious crimes. The attorney requested anonymity for fears of backlash against any of their clients in detention.

鈥淪ome kids tell me they get out for like a half an hour, but not when the other kids are out,鈥 the attorney said. 鈥淭he staff is saying it's because they're short-staffed, so they just can't have the kids outside. That's not really legal, and that鈥檚 bad policy.鈥

, a nonprofit advocacy organization, has federally designated authority to monitor the state鈥檚 juvenile detention facilities, where a large proportion of the population has intellectual and developmental disabilities. Corye Dunn, the organization鈥檚 director of public policy, said their monitoring through site visits and interviews has revealed practices in multiple facilities in which youth only get out of their cell for one hour a day, though some facilities provide more out-of-cell time than others.

Tara Muller, a policy attorney at Disability Rights NC, visited a juvenile detention facility recently for monitoring and said she could hardly sleep for three days after. It was clear the system was failing the kids, she said.

鈥淚t's truly so sad when they are then mistreated in the place where they went because they are supposed to be getting rehabilitation and assistance. And instead, they're locked in their room and then not even given a chance to have an education,鈥 Muller said.

Strains to the system

The juvenile justice system has been working for years to reduce staff vacancies and deal with a shortage of beds in juvenile detention centers 鈥 factors that affect youth in custody, advocates say.

The division鈥檚 overall job vacancy rate sits at 24 percent as of Nov. 12, according to data provided to NC Health 瓜神app, with stubborn vacancy rates persisting among direct care staff 鈥 the employees working inside facilities to counsel, support and supervise youth every day. The largest vacancy rate 鈥 40 percent 鈥 is among , the individuals responsible for supervising juveniles鈥 movement, providing behavioral intervention and evaluating treatment progress.

鈥淭he inadequate staffing problem is real, but the result of that, or the consequence of that, cannot be 鈥榃e are going to reduce the very limited rights that people have and mistreat and mishandle these young people in these facilities because we don't have the staffing,鈥欌 Sussman from the said.

The pandemic spurred an exodus of staff, plunging the division into historic vacancy levels that have affected operations. in his response to the lawsuit that staffing was stretched so thin that he and Department of Public Safety Secretary Eddie Buffaloe picked up shifts at detention centers to keep operations going.

Slowly, the division has been able to fill some vacancies 鈥 fueled by approved by the legislature and implemented in October 2023 鈥 but gaps remain.

Lassiter鈥檚 statement to improve staffing levels, including offering sign-on and retention bonuses, re-assigning employees in roles such as juvenile court counselors from their regular duties to take on shifts in juvenile detention centers, and hiring security guards through temporary staffing agencies at several juvenile detention centers.

At the same time as the division has grappled with serious staffing challenges, the number of juveniles moving through the juvenile justice system and housed in youth facilities has swelled after legislation, which took effect Dec. 1, 2019. That was an expected result of North Carolina raising the age of juvenile jurisdiction for nonviolent crimes, placing 16- and 17-year-olds into the juvenile justice system rather than the adult system.

Driven by this and the that juveniles be housed separately from adults, the number of juveniles admitted to detention centers has increased 33 percent since 2020, according to the division's .

In addition to more juvenile placements in detention centers, the average length of stay has grown to 35 days in 2023 鈥 up from 15 days in 2015.

These factors led the number of juveniles housed in detention centers to exceed capacity for a large portion of the year, according to the division鈥檚 most recent annual report. In 2023, the average daily population at juvenile detention centers was 363 鈥 up from 137 in 2019.

As of Nov. 13, there were 382 juveniles housed in detention centers, two more than the number of available beds.

Of the 382 juveniles currently in detention, 124 of them 鈥 roughly a third 鈥 either are transfers to adult court or began their cases in adult court. In 2023, the average length of stay for young people being tried as adults was substantially longer at 177 days, compared with 27 days for those in juvenile jurisdiction.

That puts a strain on the system, Debnam said in a statement to NC Health 瓜神app, noting that the majority of the division鈥檚 juvenile detention facilities were not built for such long periods of confinement. He said many of the facilities lack designated programming space and formal classrooms.

The opening of two facilities this year has provided 48 more detention beds, though capacity challenges persist.

Slowly, the division has been able to fill some vacancies 鈥 fueled by approved by the legislature and implemented in October 2023 鈥 but gaps remain.

Lassiter鈥檚 statement to improve staffing levels, including offering sign-on and retention bonuses, re-assigning employees in roles such as juvenile court counselors from their regular duties to take on shifts in juvenile detention centers, and hiring security guards through temporary staffing agencies at several juvenile detention centers.

At the same time as the division has grappled with serious staffing challenges, the number of juveniles moving through the juvenile justice system and housed in youth facilities has swelled after legislation, which took effect Dec. 1, 2019. That was an expected result of North Carolina raising the age of juvenile jurisdiction for nonviolent crimes, placing 16- and 17-year-olds into the juvenile justice system rather than the adult system.

Driven by this and the that juveniles be housed separately from adults, the number of juveniles admitted to detention centers has increased 33 percent since 2020, according to the division's .

In addition to more juvenile placements in detention centers, the average length of stay has grown to 35 days in 2023 鈥 up from 15 days in 2015.

These factors led the number of juveniles housed in detention centers to exceed capacity for a large portion of the year, according to the division鈥檚 most recent annual report. In 2023, the average daily population at juvenile detention centers was 363 鈥 up from 137 in 2019.

As of Nov. 13, there were 382 juveniles housed in detention centers, two more than the number of available beds.

Of the 382 juveniles currently in detention, 124 of them 鈥 roughly a third 鈥 either are transfers to adult court or began their cases in adult court. In 2023, the average length of stay for young people being tried as adults was substantially longer at 177 days, compared with 27 days for those in juvenile jurisdiction.

That puts a strain on the system, Debnam said in a statement to NC Health 瓜神app, noting that the majority of the division鈥檚 juvenile detention facilities were not built for such long periods of confinement. He said many of the facilities lack designated programming space and formal classrooms.

The opening of two facilities this year has provided 48 more detention beds, though capacity challenges persist.

Despite efforts to plan and implement Raise the Age effectively, juvenile justice experts said the policy change was never fully funded, which led to capacity issues and administrative pains faced today.

鈥淚f we know that we're not adequately funding [the juvenile justice system], then we shouldn't be terribly surprised when the outcome is not what we had hoped,鈥 said Dunn of Disability Rights NC. 鈥淚t seems there's a little bit of magical thinking going on that we can change the policy but not provide the appropriate resources for things to get better.鈥

Jessica Feierman, senior managing director at the national , who follows and has led litigation challenging juvenile justice systems鈥 use of solitary confinement, said concerns about overcrowded and understaffed detention centers are prevalent in states across the country.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 leading to more use of solitary confinement, worse conditions of confinement, less programming and reduced access to positive interventions that young people need.鈥

鈥業sn鈥檛 a therapeutic practice鈥

Ashley DiMuzio, an attorney in Winston-Salem who works with young clients, said prolonged isolation takes a toll, particularly on youth. She described the deterioration of one client who spent weeks in solitary confinement.

鈥淵ou could tell that he wasn鈥檛 eating as much,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e wasn't getting as much sleep. He was more irritated, more frustrated, and just wanted to get out. The conversations I had with him changed, where it was a little bit harder to have a substantive conversation with him about his case because his number one focus wasn't handling the matters. It was he wanted to get out no matter what.

鈥淗e was pretty much counting down the days until he turned 18 so that he could be transferred to an adult facility because from what he had heard, it was just better.鈥

The juvenile defense attorney who wished to remain anonymous represents clients accused of serious crimes who often spend months in detention as their cases progress. The attorney said they often see depression start to creep in, leading some clients to threaten or attempt suicide.

In one case, the attorney recalled a client who threatened suicide on multiple occasions because she was so desperate to get out of her locked room.

鈥淎fter the second or third time she did it, I think it was because she knew that she didn't want to be in her cell 24 hours a day. And if she said 鈥業'm gonna kill myself鈥 convincingly enough, the staff would have to commit her, and she would rather be in the psych ward where she gets to walk around the ward than be locked in a cell 24 hours a day,鈥 the attorney said.

Apryl Alexander, a health and policy professor at UNC Charlotte who previously worked with youth in custody, said children in the juvenile justice system are especially vulnerable to lasting harm from solitary confinement. That鈥檚 because they have higher incidences of , and than the general population. Often, it鈥檚 that contribute to youth committing crimes and landing in custody in the first place.

Alexander, who served on the task force that created the American Psychological Association鈥檚 opposing youth isolation in juvenile justice settings, said solitary isn鈥檛 a therapeutic practice.

鈥淚t's all counterintuitive,鈥 Alexander said. 鈥淲e need to be thinking about ways that we are truly supporting these youth so that when they do come back to our communities, they can thrive 鈥 not by continuing to evoke potentially traumatic situations on them.鈥

This story was produced with support from the  through a partnership with  and NC Health 瓜神app. Melanie Sill was the story editor.

This first appeared on and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

North Carolina Health 瓜神app is an independent, non-partisan, not-for-profit, statewide news organization dedicated to covering all things health care in North Carolina. Visit NCHN at .

More Stories