Wisconsin Code § 938.49

Notification by court of placement with a county department or the department of corrections; transfer of reports and records
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) NOTICE TO COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OR DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS OF PLACEMENT.
When a court places a juvenile in a juvenile correctional facility
under the supervision of a county department or the department
of corrections or a secured residential care center for children and
youth under the supervision of a county department, the court
shall immediately notify the county department or the department of corrections of that action. The court shall, in accordance
with procedures established by the department of corrections,
provide transportation for the juvenile to a receiving center designated by the county department or the department of corrections
or deliver the juvenile to personnel of the county department or
the department of corrections.
(2) TRANSFER OF COURT REPORT AND PUPIL RECORDS. When
a court places a juvenile in a juvenile correctional facility or a secured residential care center for children and youth under the supervision of the department of corrections or a county department, the court and all other public agencies shall immediately do
all of the following:
(a) Transfer to the department of corrections or the county department a copy of the report submitted to the court under s.
938.33 or, if the report was presented orally, a transcript of the report and all other pertinent data in their possession.
(b) Notify the juvenile’s last school district or, if the juvenile
was last enrolled in a private school participating in the program
under s. 118.60 or in the program under s. 119.23 or, pursuant to
s. 115.999 (3), 119.33 (2) (c) 3., or 119.9002 (3) (c), in a school
under the operation and general management of the governing
body of a private school, the private school or the governing body
of a private school, in writing of its obligation under s. 118.125
(4).

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.