This appeal is by a twelve-year-old boy from a judgment of the Juvenile Court holding that it had been established “by proper, competent and sufficient proof, and by a preponderance of the evidence” that he, together with two other boys, had knocked to the ground an eleven-year-old boy and had taken forcibly from his pants pocket 45 cents in change. The only error assigned is that the judgment was based upon proof by a preponderance of the evidence. The claim is that a charge of this nature in the Juvenile Court can be established only by proof beyond a reasonable doubt. 1
It is firmly established in this jurisdiction that when a petition is filed in the Juvenile Court against a child, the child “is not accused of a crime, not tried for a crime, not convicted of a crime, not deemed to be a criminal, not punished as a criminal, and no public record is made of his alleged offense.” Pee v. United States, 107 U.S.App. D.C. 47, 49,
*786 In the light of the foregoing it is our •opinion that to inject into a juvenile delinquency proceeding the strictly criminal law concept of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt would be both unnecessary and improper. Although there is some authority to the contrary, 2 our conclusion appears to be in accord with the great weight of authority. 3
Affirmed.
Notes
. In its findings the trial court stated that had it used the standard of reasonable doubt, its finding would have been “not involved.”
. See, e.
g.,
Jones v. Commonwealth,
. People v. Lewis,
