Children won't just get candy while trick or treatin'... Dark yellow background with a neon jack-o-lantern and multi-color arrows.

Children Won’t Just Get Candy While Trick Or Treatin’, They’ll Get New Legal Protections This Month Too

Neydin Milián

Communications Strategist

she/her/hers

October 26, 2022

It’s that time again. Spooky season. But there are new laws taking effect this month that are definitely NOT spooky. And, they’re great news for children in Maryland too!


It’s that time again. Spooky season. But there are new laws taking effect this month that are definitely NOT spooky. And, they’re great news for children in Maryland too! After years of advocacy, the Child Interrogation Protection Act (CIPA) and the Juvenile Justice Reform Law both passed this year. The first just took effect on October 1.

CIPA does three important things:

  • Requires that a child has an opportunity to consult with an attorney before police can interrogate them.
  • Ensures that parents/guardians will be notified if their child is taken into custody.
  • Establishes that if a police officer willfully doesn’t comply with the law’s requirements, any statement made during an interrogation may not be used against the child.

These measures are so vital because children are extremely vulnerable, especially to authority figures. It is very difficult for most children to defend their rights against an adult, and even more difficult against an authority figure. In order to survive, children must depend on adults. In an interrogation room, children are vulnerable to police officers and the drive to satisfy the needs of adults around them for self protection.

That’s why it comes as no surprise that when being interrogated by police, children waive their rights at a shocking rate of 90%. According to the National Registry of Exonerations, 36% of exonerees who were under the age of 18 at the time of the alleged offense had falsely confessed. This is triple the estimated rate of false confessions for all ages.

The Juvenile Justice Reform Act is another reform that went into effect this year, in June. That law:

  • Raises the minimum age of juvenile court jurisdiction to 13.
  • Bans imprisonment of children for technical violations of probation and low-level offenses—except for hand­gun vio­la­tions and repeat­ed mis­de­meanor offenses.
  • Removes barriers so that children can move out of the criminal legal system more easily and start repairing their lives and futures.

Children are inherently more vulnerable of getting stuck in the criminal legal system, but Black children are the most vulnerable. Coupled with institutionalized racism and anti-Blackness within the incarceration system, Black children are targeted the most for this dangerous dynamic, which can bring incarceration and a lifetime of consequences at a young age.

According to the 2019 Census data, 77 percent of children behind bars are Black, even though 31.6 percent of children ages 5 to 17 are Black.

We must fix this issue immediately. Black children should and need to be protected under the law. Their voice, rights, and lives matter. That is why the Child Interrogation Protection Act is so important.

We, along with our partners, hope Black children will stop being targeted unfairly by and over represented in our criminal legal system with these new reforms. As we approach the 2023 legislative session, check back in with us to see how you can get involved and create a better future for children in Maryland.

Have a happy Halloween and a month full of crunchy candy and sweet reforms!

Related Content

Press Release
Sep 29, 2022
Saturday, October 1, Child Interrogation Protection Act goes into effect. A Black guardian comforts upset Black child.
  • Children's Rights|
  • +2 Issues

Child Interrogation Protection Act Goes into Effect Saturday

After years of advocacy, the Child Interrogation Protection Act passed in 2022 and will go into effect this Saturday.
News & Commentary
Feb 04, 2021
Image shows justice scales and statue and a teddy bear laying on its side.
  • Children's Rights|
  • +2 Issues

Opinion: Interrogation of Children Should Be Part of Police Reform Discussion

Typically, a child can let you know what kind of pizza to order for dinner and what flavor of soda to go with it. But if that child is put in a cold dark room with three law enforcement officers to be questioned about a robbery or murder that they have no knowledge of, there must be an adult in the room to protect the child’s best interest before they answer questions in a way that could change their life forever.
Publication
Sep 26, 2023
Protect children's rights in Maryland. Yanet Amanuel is pictured on the right of the image with a blurred background. She is a Black woman with latte skin town. Her hair is pulled up in a bun of small braids. She is wearing eaarings and a creamy top.
  • Children's Rights|
  • +3 Issues

The More You Know: Child Interrogation Protection Act (Part 2)

The Child Interrogation Protection Act is extremely important in the lives of Black and Brown children throughout Maryland who deserve access to justice too.
Publication
Sep 19, 2023
Yanet Amanuel is looking at the camera. She is a Black woman with latte colored skin and has her hair in braids in a bun on top of her head. The words say, "What is the Child Interrogation Protection Act?" The ACLU of Maryland logo is on the bottom left.
  • Children's Rights|
  • +3 Issues

What is the Child Interrogation Protection Act? (Part 1)

Yanet Amanuel, Public Policy Director at the ACLU of Maryland, discusses top-lines regarding the Child Interrogation Protection Act in Maryland.