Pete Colberson

OP-ED: OJJDP’s Listenbee Is Being Unfairly Criticized

As a retired juvenile justice professional with 20 years of experience working at the state level with OJJDP (the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention), I am surprised and appalled by recent attacks leveled by anonymous OJJDP staffers and Sen. Chuck Grassley against OJJDP Administrator Robert Listenbee.

Safe Housing for Youth, Other Factors Key to Beating Addiction

One of the biggest holes in the net of services to treat teens with addictions lies not in what happens during residential treatment, but in what happens after youth leave a facility, a leading expert told a group at the Neuroscience, Treatment and Young Adults conference at Kennesaw State University Wednesday.

West Virginia Eases Strict Truancy Law

After an aggressive campaign against the truancy law by the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia, state lawmakers have voted to ease the law, perhaps the strictest in the nation.

In the Churchyard, Crosses and Memories of Fallen Children

NEW YORK — At St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery in Manhattan, somewhere between 60 to 70 bamboo crosses with t-shirts hanging off of them decorated the yard during this year’s Holy Week.

They were small, only about knee high, but it makes sense for them to be so short. The crosses represented a child under 11 who was injured or killed by guns since Easter last year.

A Portrait of the Artist As a Juvenile Lifer

WAYNESBURG, Pa. — The boy loved to walk in the woods.

Five years ago, Kenneth Carl Crawford III returned to that woods behind his childhood home in Oklahoma, but only in his mind — the only way he can go back now, perhaps the only way he’ll ever go there again in his time on this Earth.