Oklahoma Code § 10A-2-5-202

Title 10A. Children And Juvenile Code: Definitions – Purpose – Legislative intent
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A.  For the purposes of the Youthful Offender Act:
1.  "Youthful offender" means a person:
a. thirteen (13) or fourteen (14) years of age who is
charged with murder in the first degree and certified
as a youthful offender as provided by Section 2-5-205
of this title,
b. fifteen (15), sixteen (16), or seventeen (17) years of
age and charged with a crime listed in subsection C of
Section 2-5-205 of this title, and
c. sixteen (16) or seventeen (17) years of age and
charged with a crime listed in subsection E of Section
2-5-205 of this title,
if the offense was committed on or after November 1, 2022; provided,
the state shall not base the timing of the filing of any charges
solely on the applicability of the Youthful Offender Act;
2.  "Sentenced as a youthful offender" means the imposition of a
court order making disposition of a youthful offender as provided by
Section 2-5-209 of this title which shall constitute an adult
criminal sentence if the youthful offender is transferred to the
custody or supervision of the Department of Corrections;
3.  "Next friend" means an individual or executive of an
organization who has assumed a parental role without formal legal
proceedings, but to all objective observers is readily identified as
custodian or guardian in fact;
4.  "Certification as an adult" means a person for whom the
court has granted a motion for the imposition of an adult sentence
pursuant to subsection C of Section 7 of this act;
5.  "Certification as a juvenile" means a person for whom the
court has granted a motion for certification as a juvenile pursuant
to subsection B of Section 6 of this act;
6.  "Certification study" means a report prepared for the court
by the Office of Juvenile Affairs that includes but is not limited
to information related to the circumstances of an offense, any

injury that may have occurred, the history of the person in the
juvenile justice system, and a psychological evaluation.  Such study
shall address the guidelines established in subsection B of Section
6 of this act; and
7.  "Juvenile delinquent" means a person who is accused of
committing an act which could be prosecuted under subsection A, B,
C, D, or E of Section 2-5-205 of this title and against whom the
district attorney has chosen to file a petition alleging the person
as delinquent.
B.  It is the purpose of the Youthful Offender Act to better
ensure the public safety by holding youths accountable for the
commission of serious crimes, while affording courts methods of
rehabilitation for those youths the courts determine, at their
discretion, may be amenable to such methods.  It is the further
purpose of the Youthful Offender Act to allow those youthful
offenders whom the courts find to be amenable to rehabilitation by
the methods prescribed in the Youthful Offender Act to be placed in
the custody or under the supervision of the Office of Juvenile
Affairs for the purpose of accessing the rehabilitative programs
provided by that Office.
C.  It is the intent of the Legislature to fully utilize the
Youthful Offender Act as a means to protect the public while
rehabilitating and holding youth accountable for serious crimes.
The Legislature finds that eligible seventeen-year-olds should have
the opportunity to be processed as youthful offenders as provided by
law and held accountable through the provisions of the Youthful
Offender Act for custody, institutional placement, supervision,
extended jurisdiction within the Office of Juvenile Affairs (OJA),
and the ability to transfer youthful offenders to the Department of
Corrections when incarceration or additional supervision is required
beyond the maximum age allowed in the OJA.  No older youth should be
deemed ineligible or denied consideration as a youthful offender who
is otherwise lawfully eligible based upon the age of the youth being
seventeen (17) years, but it is the intent of the Legislature that
such youthful offender shall not remain in the custody or under the
supervision of the OJA beyond the youthful offender's maximum age of
eighteen (18) years and six (6) months or until nineteen (19) years
of age if jurisdiction has been extended as provided in subsection D
of Section 9 of this act.  To deny access to an otherwise eligible
older youth without cause is to circumvent the original intent of
the Legislature in creating the Youthful Offender Act.
D.  Unless otherwise provided by law, when a court determines
that a youthful offender has successfully completed his or her
treatment and rehabilitation plan and is discharged by the court
without a court judgment of guilt and the case dismissed with
prejudice, the arrest or adjudication record does not have to be
disclosed for the purposes of employment, civil rights, or any

regulation, license, questionnaire, application, or any other public
purpose.  Any prohibition regarding possession of firearms pursuant
to Section 1283 of Title 21 of the Oklahoma Statutes shall still be
applicable.
E.  In any case for which the court orders a certification
study, the district attorney shall provide to the Office of Juvenile
Affairs (OJA) a copy of any police report and all other relevant
documents or information in the possession of the district attorney
or any other law enforcement agency that has reported to the
district attorney in the case, which should be considered in
preparing the ordered report.  The police reports, any report from
the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, and any other relevant
documents or information as available, shall be provided to the OJA
within five (5) business days of the issuance of the order.
F.  In any case for which the court orders a certification
study, the attorney for the youth is ordered to provide to OJA the
names and contact information of the youth's parents, guardians, or
next friend, along with any relevant documents or information the
youth requests OJA to consider in the preparation of the ordered
report.  The names and contact information and any other documents
or information shall be provided to OJA within five (5) business
days of the issuance of the order.
Added by Laws 1994, c. 290, § 19, eff. July 1, 1996.  Amended by
Laws 1995, c. 352, § 165, eff. July 1, 1997.  Renumbered from §
1507.16 of Title 10 by Laws 1995, c. 352, § 199, eff. July 1, 1995.
Amended by Laws 1997, c. 293, § 24, eff. July 1, 1997; Laws 2001, c.
357, § 3, eff. July 1, 2001; Laws 2006, c. 286, § 2, eff. July 1,
2006; Laws 2007, c. 1, § 9, emerg. eff. Feb. 22, 2007; Laws 2008, c.
277, § 1, emerg. eff. June 2, 2008; Laws 2009, c. 234, § 80, emerg.
eff. May 21, 2009.  Renumbered from § 7306-2.2 of Title 10 by Laws
2009, c. 234, § 188, emerg. eff. May 21, 2009.  Amended by Laws
2022, c. 375, § 2, eff. Nov. 1, 2022.

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