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Of the 48 youth at Maxey when the facility closed, 18 went to Michigan's other two juvenile correction facilities, 16 went to private agencies, eight went home to relatives, three entered supervised independent living programs, two went to Job Corps, and one was transferred to a county-run program. The first transfer happened in June 2015 and ...
The St. Clair Youth Treatment Center is housed in, but physically separated from, the county's juvenile detention center. The detention side has 20 to 40 boys and girls at any one time from Macomb ...
The Detroit House of Corrections, built in 1861, was owned and run by the city of Detroit but originally accepted prisoners from throughout the state including women. The Detroit House of Corrections was transferred to the state in 1986, renamed to Western Wayne Correctional Facility, and became a women's facility for the rest of its tenure.
The facility previously housed Mound Correctional Facility, which was closed on January 8, 2012. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It was reopened as part of an inter-agency collaboration between the State of Michigan and City of Detroit in August 2013 as the Detroit Detention Center.
Gilchrist chaired the Michigan Task Force on Juvenile Justice Reform, which issued a report making recommendations to improve the state's juvenile justice system and informed the bills he approved.
A custody battle in Detroit has gone very public after three children were put in a juvenile detention facility June 24 allegedly for refusing to have lunch with their father. The children say ...
The Bureau of Juvenile Justice is responsible for the operation of juvenile correctional facilities. [20] Facilities include: Bay Pines Center [21] Shawono Center (Boys adjudicated for sex offenses) [22] Former facilities: W.J. Maxey Boys Training School [23] (Closed October 1, 2015) [24]
State investigators found a slew of violations, including feces-covered walls, lack of clean clothes and no records that a youth received medication.