American Decades
Juvenile Rights
An Empty Home.
At about 6:00 P.M. on 8 June 1964, the mother of fifteen-year-old Jerry Gault returned from work to her home in Gila County, Arizona, where she learned from a neighbor that her son Jerry was in the custody of the local juvenile court for having made an obscene phone call. Jerry Gault had one previous brush with the law—he allegedly stole a baseball glove two years earlier. After a brief release to his parents, Jerry Gault was summoned to an informal hearing before a judge of the superior court, who had been designated to serve as juvenile court judge. At the hearing, the judge questioned Jerry and an official at the juvenile facility where he had been held. It appeared that Jerry had been arrested by a local sheriff's deputy for making an obscene phone call to a neighbor, a Mrs. Cook, who was not at the hearing.
Declared Delinquent.
On the basis of a slender collection of information, the judge...
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1960's Law and Justice
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- The Attorney General and the Teamster
- Baker v. Carr
- The Boston Strangler
- The Trial of the Chicago Seven
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- In Cold Blood
- Criminal Law in the 1960s
- The Drug Wars
- Freedom of Religion
- Juvenile Delinquency
- Juvenile Rights
- Mississippi Burning
- New York Times v. Sullivan
- The Shootist
- The Supreme Court of the 1960s
- Voting Rights Act of 1965
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1960–1969
