OPINION
In this appeal from an adult-certification order, appellant J.C.P. argues that because adult certification exposes a juvenile to a potentially greater sentence if convicted, he has a Sixth Amendment right to a jury *666 determination of any fact supporting that certification under Blakely v. Washington. Because the constitutional protections available in the juvenile system arise from the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and not from the Sixth Amendment, and because adult certification is a pretrial jurisdictional determination, a juvenile does not have a Sixth Amendment right to a jury determination of facts supporting adult certification. We affirm.
FACTS
Appellant J.C.P., Jr., is a juvenile who was indicted on three counts of first-degree murder for an incident in which he allegedly participated in the killing of his uncle. According to the record available to us, the state alleges the following facts: J.C.P. attended and consumed alcohol at a party in Morton, Minnesota, in the late night and early morning hours of September 23 and 24, 2004. J.C.P. argued with his uncle at the party and became enraged. With the assistance of his friend, J.C.P. beat his uncle so violently that his uncle’s blood spattered the walls nearly to the ceiling. Again with the assistance of others, J.C.P. continued to beat and kick his uncle even after his uncle became unconscious. J.C.P. left his unconscious uncle at the party, but he returned with friends with the intent to kill him. J.C.P. took his uncle’s keys, wrapped him in a blanket, loaded him into his uncle’s vehicle, and drove him to the Lower Sioux reservation where J.C.P. stabbed him 15 times. J.C.P. and his friends dumped the beaten, stabbed, dead uncle’s body into the Minnesota River. They then set the uncle’s vehicle ablaze. J.C.P. left the state, and police eventually arrested him in October 2004. Authorities initially charged J.C.P. by juvenile delinquency petition. The state later filed a motion for certification to prosecute J.C.P. as an adult. J.C.P. challenged the state’s motion and argued that under
Blakely v. Washington,
After a certification study and hearing, the juvenile court granted the state’s motion and ordered certification. The juvenile court rejected J.C.P.’s Blakely argument and denied his request for a jury determination of the facts supporting certification. The juvenile court stayed the prosecution proceedings pending J.C.P.’s appeal of the adult-certification order. This appeal follows.
ISSUE
Does a juvenile have a Sixth Amendment right to a jury determination of the facts supporting adult certification?
ANALYSIS
J.C.P. argues that he has a Sixth Amendment right under
Blakely
to have a jury determine the facts supporting adult certification and that the statute permitting the district court to certify a juvenile as an adult based on clear and convincing evidence is therefore unconstitutional. The application of
Blakely
presents a constitutional issue, which we review de novo.
State v. Hagen,
The certification scheme that J.C.P. challenges is established by statute. When a juvenile who is at least 14 years old is alleged to have committed an offense that would be a felony if committed by an adult, the juvenile court may certify “the proceeding for action under the laws and *667 court procedures controlling adult criminal violations.” Minn.Stat. § 260B.125, subd. 1 (2004). There is a rebuttable presumption that a proceeding will be certified if the juvenile is 16 or 17 years old and the alleged crime has a presumptive sentence of imprisonment. Minn.Stat. § 260B.125, subd. 3 (2004). When presumptive certification does not apply, the juvenile court may order certification if the “the prosecuting authority has demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that retaining the proceeding in the juvenile court does not serve public safety.” Minn.Stat. § 260B.125, subd. 2(6)(ii) (2004). J.C.P. does not challenge the juvenile court’s determination that certification is appropriate or argue that the other provisions of the adult-certification statute are unconstitutional. The only issue J.C.P. raises on appeal is whether the nonpresumptive adult-certification statute violates his Sixth Amendment rights as described in Blakely.
A criminal defendant has a Sixth Amendment right to have a jury find any fact beyond a reasonable doubt, except that of a prior conviction, that increases a sentence beyond the statutory maximum.
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
The juvenile-court system is a product of legislative enactment.
See
Minn.Stat. § 260B.101, subd. 1 (2004) (providing that “the juvenile court has original and exclusive jurisdiction in proceedings concerning any child who is alleged to be delinquent”);
State v. Dehler,
Juvenile-court proceedings must “satisfy the basic requirements of due process and fairness.”
Kent,
383 U.S at 553,
But fundamental fairness under the Due Process Clause does not guarantee juveniles every right criminal defendants enjoy, such as the right to a jury trial.
McKeiver,
J.C.P. argues that in addition to the rights guaranteed under the Due Process Clause,
Blakely
entitles a juvenile to a jury determination of the facts supporting certification because certification exposes a juvenile to a sentence potentially more severe than the consequences he might face if adjudicated delinquent in juvenile court. But
Blakely’s
requirement that a jury determine any fact that increases a sentence beyond the statutory maximum is rooted in a criminal defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to have a jury determine guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Blakely,
Also,
Blakely
focuses on a materially different stage of prosecution, well after the district court’s jurisdiction over the matter has been exercised, limiting the
*669
district court’s ability to impose sentences that exceed the presumptive sentence or statutory maximum absent a jury finding regarding the sentence.
Blakely,
Other courts have likewise concluded that adult certification proceedings are jurisdictional in nature, not sentence-related proceedings to which
Blakely
would apply.
See State v. Kalmakoff,
The state’s juvenile system is designed primarily to protect accused juveniles from criminal prosecution and to rehabilitate them. The state may not remove a juvenile from that protection except by due process. Inasmuch as the adult certification procedure is the method to expel a juvenile from the juvenile system’s protection and is not in itself a criminal prosecution, the Sixth Amendment has no direct bearing on it. We conclude that a juvenile facing adult certification does not have a Sixth Amendment right to a jury determination of the facts supporting certification. Blakely therefore does not render the adult-certification statute unconstitutional.
DECISION
Because the source of the protections afforded juveniles in juvenile delinquency proceedings is the Due Process Clause and *670 not the Sixth Amendment, and because adult certification is a pretrial jurisdictional determination that does not result in an adjudication or a sentence, a juvenile does not have a Sixth Amendment right under Blakely to a jury determination of the facts supporting certification.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Raino court went on to add, “in recent years the courts have made applicable in juvenile proceedings constitutional guarantees associated with the traditional prosecutions.” Id.
