IN THE INTEREST OF J. M. S.
A15A1624
Court of Appeals of Georgia
DECIDED OCTOBER 8, 2015.
778 SE2d 391
DILLARD, Judge.
William A. Finch, Solicitor-General, Jenna N. Thomas, Assistant Solicitor-General, for appellee.
DILLARD, Judge.
J. M. S. was charged with various criminal offenses, via three delinquency petitions, when he was fifteen years old, and the Glynn County juvenile court granted the State‘s motion to transfer his case to the superior court. J. M. S. appeals, arguing that there was no evidence to support the juvenile court‘s finding that he was not amenable to treatment or rehabilitation and that the transfer order lacked sufficient detail to show that the court properly weighed his interest in remaining in juvenile court against the community‘s interest in having him treated as an adult.1 For the reasons set forth infra, we affirm.
In relevant part, the evidence shows that, on September 27, 2014, an individual—later identified from surveillance footage as J. M. S.—burglarized a Glynn County pawn shop and stole a laptop computer. The next day, J. M. S. and an accomplice burglarized a second pawn shop and stole three laptop computers and a DVR recording device. The surveillance footage of the second burglary shows that the perpetrators were looking at the gun case, but they were unable to steal any guns. A few days later, on October 2, 2014, J. M. S. and his accomplice burglarized the second pawn shop yet again. But this time, a police officer responded to the scene while the burglary was still in progress. J. M. S. first brandished an AR-15 rifle at the officer before turning and running from him. During the foot chase that ensued, J. M. S. dropped the AR-15 and a backpack on the ground, but continued running through a residential area and then into some nearby woods. Although J. M. S. was “very aggressive” and “put up a fight,” the officer was ultimately able to apprehend him by deploying a taser.
Subsequently, in addition to the AR-15, police officers recovered 15 other firearms from the backpack that J. M. S. had discarded. And
An investigating officer, who was an expert in gang activity, interviewed J. M. S., who admitted to being a member of a specific street gang. J. M. S. also showed the officer pictures of him “throwing gang signs,” and in one of the photographs, he was with an individual known to be a member of the same criminal street gang. J. M. S. also provided the names of other known gang members. The officer believed that the burglaries were gang related, in part, because there had been prior reports that J. M. S. criminally trespassed on several businesses with well-known gang members. In addition, during his past investigations of street-gang activity, the officer had encountered numerous situations in which adult gang members used juveniles to commit crimes because, if caught, they would be prosecuted in juvenile court. The officer believed that J. M. S. had been instructed to steal a large number of weapons, which would have caused “chaos” in Glynn County.
Ultimately, three delinquency petitions were filed in the juvenile court against J. M. S. related to the pawn-shop burglaries. Specifically, the first petition charged J. M. S. with second-degree burglary, second-degree criminal damage to property, obstructing or hindering a law-enforcement officer, obstructing or hindering a law-enforcement officer with violence, possession of a handgun by a person under the age of eighteen, and eight counts of participation in criminal gang activity. The other two petitions charged J. M. S. with one count each of second-degree burglary and participation in criminal gang activity. Thereafter, the State moved to transfer the case to superior court. After a probable cause hearing and a separate hearing on the State‘s motion, the juvenile court granted the motion and transferred the case to the superior court. This appeal by J. M. S. follows.
1. J. M. S. first argues that the juvenile court abused its discretion in transferring his case to superior court because the State failed to meet its burden of showing that he is not amenable to treatment or rehabilitation. We disagree.
We begin by noting that the function of this Court is limited to ascertaining whether there was “some evidence to support the juvenile court‘s determination, and absent an abuse of discretion, we will affirm the order transferring jurisdiction.”2
(1) The age of such child; (2) The seriousness of the alleged offense, especially if personal injury resulted; (3) Whether the protection of the community requires transfer of jurisdiction; (4) Whether the alleged offense involved violence or was committed in an aggressive or premeditated manner; (5) The culpability of such child including such child‘s level of planning and participation in the alleged offense; (6) Whether the alleged offense is a part of a repetitive pattern of offenses which indicates that such child may be beyond rehabilitation in the juvenile justice system; (7) The record and history of such child, including experience with the juvenile justice system, other courts, supervision, commitments to juvenile institutions, and other placements; (8) The sophistication and maturity of such child as determined by consideration of his or her home and environmental situation, emotional condition, and pattern of living; (9) The program and facilities available to the juvenile court in considering disposition; and (10) Whether or not a child can benefit from the treatment or rehabilitative programs available to the juvenile court.3
As previously mentioned, J. M. S. argues that the juvenile court abused its discretion in transferring his case to superior court because the State failed to present sufficient evidence that he was not amenable to treatment or rehabilitation in the juvenile system. At the transfer hearing, a juvenile-court probation officer, who completed a predisposition risk assessment for J. M. S., testified that he scored an eight on the assessment and that anyone who scores higher than six is considered high risk. The officer further testified that, although J. M. S. had not been previously adjudicated as a delinquent child, he had three prior “informal adjustments” for various offenses,
Further, while the officer did not know what type of services the Department of Juvenile Justice could provide to J. M. S., she indicated that the juvenile court has various therapy programs. And related to his prior “informal adjustments,” J. M. S. had been placed in one of these programs, but he only attended once or twice and was ultimately considered to be non-compliant with that program. The officer testified that she was unaware of any programs that could deter J. M. S. from being a gang member, and she believed that the lack of adult supervision in his home contributed to his “roaming the streets and stuff like that.” When asked if she could think of any reason that J. M. S. would not be amenable to treatment, the officer responded that the charge that he stole an “excessive amount of guns” was deeply concerning. The officer further testified that she “most definitely” had concerns for the community in light of the serious nature of the charges.
Faced with the foregoing, we cannot say that there was no evidence to support the juvenile court‘s determination that it was “doubtful” J. M. S. was amenable to treatment in the juvenile system.4 Indeed, J. M. S. had been non-compliant with a juvenile-treatment program in the past, and despite his history in the juvenile-court system, he continues to engage in criminal activity that has escalated in severity.5 In this respect, we have held that, “[e]ven if there is evidence that the child may be amenable to treatment, the juvenile court may still transfer the case if it finds that the amena-
Specifically, J. M. S.‘s criminal conduct escalated from a history of minor offenses, such as trespass and curfew violations, to three commercial burglaries that occurred within the span of a few days.8 And during the last of these burglaries, J. M. S. stole sixteen firearms, aimed an AR-15 rifle at a police officer, and engaged in aggressive behavior toward the officer until he was finally subdued by a taser.9 There was also evidence that the last burglary “was very sophisticated and well thought out.”10 Additionally, an expert in gang activity believed that the burglaries were gang-related based in part on J. M. S.‘s own admission to being a gang member and his prior association with well-known gang members. The expert also testified in detail about the serious danger that criminal street gangs pose to the community and noted that there had been an increase in gang-
2. J. M. S. also contends that the juvenile court‘s transfer order merely recites the relevant statutory factors without showing that it properly weighed the community‘s interest in transferring him to the superior court against his interest in potential rehabilitation in the juvenile system. This argument is belied by the record.
Contrary to J. M. S.‘s contention, the juvenile court‘s seven-page transfer order reflects that it engaged in the appropriate balancing test in finding that a transfer was warranted in this case. Indeed, the court specifically found that, due to the egregious nature of his most recent offenses, J. M. S.‘s interest in being prosecuted in the juvenile-justice system was outweighed by the community‘s interest in having him prosecuted in superior court. Thus, this argument is entirely without merit.
Judgment affirmed. Ellington, P. J., and McFadden, J., concur.
DECIDED OCTOBER 8, 2015.
