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U.S.|For Young Offenders in Maine, Justice Varies With Geography

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The highway to Caribou in Aroostook County, Maine, near the Canadian border.


FOR YOUNG OFFENDERS IN MAINE, JUSTICE VARIES WITH GEOGRAPHY

Maine has tried to send fewer teenagers to prison, emphasizing rehabilitation
programs instead. But the rural north of the state shows the effort has played
out unevenly.

The highway to Caribou in Aroostook County, Maine, near the Canadian
border.Credit...

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By Callie Ferguson

Photographs by Ashley L. Conti

Callie Ferguson spent one year examining the juvenile justice system in Maine as
part of The Times’s Local Investigations Fellowship.

 * March 28, 2024Updated 6:43 a.m. ET

Aroostook County, in Maine’s far north, is the largest county east of the
Mississippi, a sparsely populated region of fields and forests with just two
small cities and about 50 smaller towns. Police chiefs describe their
jurisdictions as sleepy, with little serious crime.

Even so, the county has sent a disproportionate number of adolescents in recent
years to the state’s only youth prison.

Between 2017 and 2023, there were 20 commitments to Long Creek Youth Development
Center from Aroostook — nearly double the number from York County, which has
more than three times as many residents at the other end of the state.

Aroostook was also an outlier for using short prison terms, known as “shock”
sentences, to punish young offenders, handing them down at some of the highest
rates statewide before the practice began to wane.



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York County, which includes wealthy coastal communities and former mill towns
that help make up Maine’s largest metropolitan area, rarely imposed such
sentences.

For more than a decade, Maine has emphasized rehabilitation in its approach to
juvenile justice, sending fewer teenagers to prison. The change is in keeping
with a national movement to consign fewer youth to the criminal justice system,
especially correctional settings, which a growing body of research shows can
often do more harm than good at preventing delinquency.

But the differences between Aroostook and York Counties show that the effort has
played out unevenly, resulting in justice by geography. The disparity appears to
stem from philosophical differences over the appropriate response to teenagers
who get in trouble, the varying availability of services across the state and
the unequal distribution of lawyers and caseloads, according to interviews with
defense attorneys, law enforcement officials and former corrections officials.


Image
Fort Kent in Aroostook County, which has little serious crime but higher
juvenile detention rates than more populous areas in southern Maine.
Image

Rural Aroostook also has fewer social programs that can serve as alternatives to
prison.

York stood out even beyond its low commitment rate. Adolescents there were far
less likely to end up with a felony record than anywhere except for neighboring
Cumberland County, according to a data analysis by The New York Times and The
Bangor Daily News. Between 2017 and 2022, those counties reduced 93 percent of
felony cases that resulted in a guilty plea to misdemeanors. At the low end, two
central Maine counties reduced them only about half the time; in Aroostook, that
rate was 64 percent.



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William Francis, a juvenile community corrections officer in Aroostook for more
than 30 years, said his supervisors at the Maine Department of Corrections were
concerned about the commitment rates in his county and used to tell him that
practices should be the same everywhere. “‘What happens in Aroostook should be
what happens in York,’” he repeated in an interview. Given the variables in each
location, he recalled thinking, “Be real.”

But such differences are troubling to many involved in the juvenile system.
“Justice should not be defined by where in the state a child lives,” said Sarah
Branch, a former juvenile prosecutor who is now a defense lawyer and director of
the Youth Justice Clinic at the University of Maine School of Law. “What we have
right now are barriers for some children that don’t exist for others.”

The system needs better oversight to ensure consistent, effective outcomes,
according to juvenile law and policy experts as well as a 2020
state-commissioned assessment.


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Prosecutors and defense lawyers often can’t compare outcomes for similar
offenses across jurisdictions, leaving them to rely on anecdotal information.
While the Corrections Department publishes general statistics online about Long
Creek admissions and juvenile criminal referrals from police agencies, it can be
difficult to obtain more granular information because much of it is confidential
or isn’t collected in formats that are easy to analyze. And the state court
system, which is paper-based, is constrained by its limited digital data.



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Image

Old Orchard Beach in York County, which includes wealthy coastal towns that help
make up Maine’s largest metropolitan area.
Image

York County, in southern Maine, has about triple the residents of Aroostook, but
it’s sent roughly half the number of youth to prison.

No independent entity holds the system accountable for measuring and improving
outcomes, said Jill Ward, who leads the Center for Youth Policy and Law at the
university. Unlike the other New England states, Maine does not have an
ombudsman who can investigate confidential cases, analyze data and issue public
reports about successes and failures.

The 2020 assessment recommended that state officials develop a plan to address a
range of problems, including geographic inequities. But that never happened. Ms.
Ward, who helped lead the task force that produced the report, called that “a
missed opportunity.”

Ben Goodman, a spokesman for Gov. Janet Mills, did not address the oversight
issues in the system but described a commitment to diversion programs throughout
the state. “The administration recognizes there is more work to do,” he said,
citing challenges including “the difficulty of the work” and staffing
shortfalls.



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In a statement, the Corrections Department said it had a limited ability to
control for disparities in the juvenile system because “various actors” —
police, prosecutors, judges — influence cases.

Samuel W. Prawer, the department’s director of government affairs, said his
agency had made “significant efforts” to invest in mental health and mentorship
programs for youth, and acknowledged that these were needed in every part of the
state. But such efforts “rely on appropriate funding,” he said.



“While we do not have control over the judicial system’s decisions, we will
continue to do our best within our budget resources to expand access to
community and home-based services and support diversion away from incarceration
where deemed appropriate,” Mr. Prawer said.

Justice by geography isn’t unique to Maine. Across the United States, the
idiosyncrasies of local courts affect case outcomes, and variation is especially
likely in the juvenile system with its emphasis on individualized treatment.
Last year, a nonprofit advocacy group in Massachusetts identified wide-ranging
differences depending on which police department, district attorney and court
handled a case. Similarly, a 2005 study of Missouri’s juvenile system found that
teenagers’ odds of confinement changed with where they lived.

Most juvenile crime in Maine involves misdemeanors like assault, theft and
property destruction. But the rates at which adolescents pleaded or were found
guilty varied widely, according to the Times/BDN analysis. York County had the
lowest rate, at 14 percent, while Aroostook had the highest, at nearly 60
percent.



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In Aroostook, a 16-year-old killed an older man during a drug-related robbery in
2015, one of eight murders by minors in the state since 2010, but local law
enforcement officials said in interviews that serious juvenile crime was rare.



“Major situations? Like down south?” said Michael DeLena, the police chief in
Fort Kent, a town of about 2,500 along the Canadian border. “We don’t see that.
It’s more small things.” The cases he considered most worrisome involved repeat
offenders, typically charged with theft, property destruction, drunken driving
or fighting.


Image

Tanya Pierson, a juvenile prosecutor, standing outside the York Judicial Center
in Biddeford, Maine.

Tanya Pierson, a longtime juvenile prosecutor with the York County District
Attorney’s Office, said her colleagues did handle more serious crimes, including
those committed with guns, such as robbery, a shooting and making a threat with
a firearm.

That is true in neighboring southern counties as well. Police in Lewiston, the
state’s second-largest city, have responded to multiple shootings in recent
years where youth were charged. Last month, Portland police officers arrested
two teenage boys accused of robbing a woman at knifepoint while she sat in her
parked car. And three 17-year-olds were recently sent to Long Creek after a
rolling gunfight in Portland; police said they and other teenagers were involved
in a cocaine-trafficking ring.



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Mr. Francis, who retired in 2021, primarily covered northern Aroostook during
his time as a community corrections officer. He was known for his “tough-love”
approach, and toward the end of his career, he said, he butted heads with his
supervisors over the department’s shifting policies, especially concerning
commitments.

During that period, the state took a more progressive approach and worked to
reduce youth incarceration. But the push to lower commitments also came from
mounting public pressure after Long Creek, located in South Portland, had become
mired in controversy following a teen suicide, chronic staff shortages, riots
and a vote by lawmakers to shut the prison down, which Ms. Mills vetoed.

Since then, the administration has been faulted for not adopting a comprehensive
plan to fill severe gaps in community services statewide for troubled youth,
develop alternative secure sites to Long Creek and stabilize the prison. Tumult
at the site has continued, with several major disturbances since November, and
on Friday, it was announced that the prison’s superintendent of two years was
stepping down for unspecified personal reasons.


Image

Long Creek Youth Development Center, in South Portland, is Maine’s only juvenile
prison.

While the number of adolescents from Aroostook sent to Long Creek has fallen
since the beginning of the pandemic, which significantly drove down the prison’s
population, the county still had the highest rate of commitments in Maine from
2017 to 2023, according to the Times/BDN analysis of data provided by the
Corrections Department. The county also recorded 26 shock sentences, the same as
Cumberland County, which is the state’s largest and has the highest volume of
juvenile cases. (Other counties stood out for high rates of shock sentences,
including Androscoggin, home to Lewiston, and rural Somerset in central Maine.)



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District Attorney Todd Collins said sentences to Long Creek from Aroostook in
recent years usually resulted from multiple probation violations that couldn’t
be resolved out of court. “The threat of jail is to motivate the child,” he said
in an interview.

Some of the underlying crimes involved theft, assault, stealing a car, drug
possession, trespassing and making a threat, in one case with a weapon. In a few
serious cases, such as one involving rape, he said his office viewed commitment
to Long Creek as a more rehabilitative alternative to charging the teen in adult
court.

Mr. Francis, who is a former police officer and member of the Maine Army
National Guard, recalled that a few years ago, his bosses told him that they
were concerned that Aroostook County was an outlier for its high commitment
numbers and urged him to find more creative ways to support youth in the
community.

“I got called on the carpet more than once,” Mr. Francis said.


Image

District Attorney Todd Collins outside the Aroostook County Superior Court in
Caribou.

Corrections officials discouraged his use of more traditional law enforcement
tools, such as drug testing, he said, which could identify probation violations
and lead to incarceration. He refused to refer adolescents to a restorative
justice program — a diversion effort that would make offenders confront the harm
they caused — because he was skeptical of its value. He felt strongly about
following through with consequences if teenagers violated probation, he added,
worrying that a lack of action would increase their chances of ending up in the
much harsher adult criminal justice system.



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For example, he recalled, a boy on probation was sent to Long Creek after
stealing thousands of dollars from his family’s business. In other cases, like
commitments involving sexual assault, there were concerns about people’s safety.
“Remember the victims,” he said.

“Incarceration was always a last resort,” Mr. Francis said, agreeing with his
supervisors on that goal, if not entirely on the philosophy behind it.
“Punishment works. It’s become a bad word.”

And sometimes, he said, a commitment could save a life. He described the case of
a young heroin addict who kept violating her probation by using and selling
drugs. Worried she might die, he pushed to send her to Long Creek, the only
locked facility available. She later thanked him, he said.

Mr. Francis was one of four community corrections officers working in Aroostook.
It’s not clear how much his views contributed to the county’s relatively high
commitment rate. While he made recommendations to prosecutors and judges, they
were the ultimate decision makers.

The judge who most often oversaw his cases had more liberal views. In an
interview, David Soucy, who presided over District Court in northern Aroostook
for 11 years until retiring in 2021, called incarceration and punitive
approaches to delinquency “wasteful and ineffective and honestly cruel.”



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Image

Madawaska, a mill town abutting Canada in Aroostook County.

The commitments he ordered, he said, “always had to do with either a lack of
available resources or a secure home for people who were seriously out of
control.” Sometimes “it was a matter of preservation — to keep them alive,” he
said.

Mr. Soucy lamented what many police officers, prosecutors, families and
advocates have also pointed out: The state’s pressure to keep adolescents out of
Long Creek has not coincided with an equally forceful effort to build up
rehabilitation programs in their communities or intervention efforts that would
reduce their risk of entering the justice system in the first place.

For instance, Aroostook County, one of the state’s poorest, once had at least
three group homes for teenagers who needed supervision, Mr. Soucy said, but now
it has none. During the pandemic, the county’s last residential treatment
facility for children closed and reopened as a youth homeless shelter and
transitional living program, addressing a growing need but not filling the gap
for those who require more care.

It’s difficult to find therapists in the county, which is one of only two
without an intensive in-home behavioral health program aimed at keeping youth
out of the justice system; it’s hard to scale a costly service over such a large
area. Many young offenders also have drug problems, but the state’s only
residential program is far away, close to Portland, with few slots. A lack of
public transportation in most rural counties further limits access to health
services as well as education and work opportunities.



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Even for commitments, Mr. Soucy had no choice. The state used to operate a
second youth prison in Penobscot County, which borders Aroostook, but it stopped
holding minors in 2015. For a while, the former judge said, he at least hoped
that troubled youth would get help at Long Creek, but he became disillusioned
after reports about its deteriorating conditions.

He tried not to let the state’s concern about Aroostook’s commitment numbers
influence his decisions from the bench, he said, warning that disparities in a
system with relatively small numbers could be insignificant or misleading. “It’s
a desperate situation,” Mr. Soucy said. “You either did nothing, or this
draconian alternative of incarceration away from home in southern Maine.”


Image

Maine closed its other juvenile prison in Penobscot County, which neighbors
Aroostook.

The counties in the south of the state — little more than an hour from Boston —
have more juvenile cases, allowing for more specialization in juvenile law among
defense lawyers, prosecutors and judges, which could affect how cases are
resolved.

For instance, Ms. Pierson, the York County prosecutor, and Michelle McCulloch, a
veteran juvenile prosecutor in Cumberland County, both said their offices were
highly motivated to reduce felonies as part of plea deals. Teenagers who have
been found guilty of a felony — which becomes public record — may have to
disclose that on applications for school, jobs or professional licenses, and it
typically bars them from enlisting in the military, Ms. Pierson said.



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“If our goal is rehabilitation and for them to become a productive member of
society, that’s the best way to do it: through education, having a job where
they can support themselves,” she said. As a prosecutor, she must protect public
safety and consider input from victims, she said, but added that she and some of
her colleagues viewed commitment to Long Creek as a failure of earlier
interventions and alternatives to prison.

More rural courts, however, see as few as a dozen juvenile cases a year. And
while there are not nearly enough lawyers to represent poor defendants in Maine,
the problem is acute in rural areas. Last year, the state created a special team
of public defenders to combat the shortage in Aroostook, Penobscot and
Washington Counties.

Sharon Craig, a defense lawyer who represents youth at Long Creek, recalled
being assigned a client from Penobscot, where she doesn’t typically practice.
She was surprised that the boy had been committed for nonviolent offenses that
would not usually warrant such a penalty in southern Maine courts. He was also
young, only 13, she said.

A month after he arrived, she said, staff members at Long Creek took steps to
transfer him to a residential treatment facility.

Justin Mayo and Irene Casado Sanchez contributed reporting. Julie Tate
contributed research.

This article was reported in partnership with Big Local News at Stanford
University.




Callie Ferguson reports on Maine’s juvenile justice system as part of a Times
fellowship focused on local investigations. More about Callie Ferguson

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