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Texas is one of six states that tries 17-year-olds as adults. But a new bill wants Texas to follow the national trend of raising the age of criminal responsibility from 17 to 18.
, authored by Reps. Jr. (D-Houston) and (D-Houston), last week and could be on its way to the Senate.
Wu says that on the practical side, moving 17-year-old suspects from the adult criminal justice system to its juvenile justice counterpart would bring Texas in line with the federal standard of considering 18-year-olds adults.
鈥淔rom a more philosophical side, a 17-year-old can't sign contracts, they can't serve on a jury, they can't buy tobacco, they can't consent to their own medical care, they can't join the military [and] they can't vote because we say they鈥檙e not emotionally and intellectually mature enough,鈥 Wu says. 鈥淏ut yet we say we can put you in prison for that same immaturity.鈥
What you鈥檒l hear in this segment:鈥 Why Wu believes this bill could save the state thousands of dollars a week
鈥 How Wu responds to one of the bill鈥檚 main critics, Sen. John Whitmire (D-Houston)
鈥 Where the bill stands in the Legislature
Written by Molly Smith.
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