Updated March 28, 2016: The justices of the Supreme Court of Ohio voted in favor of Rule 5.01, a rule that will require juvenile courts to adopt a local rule that creates a presumption against automatic shackling. Ohio’s juvenile courts will have until July 1st, 2016 to adopt a local rule.
For years, many children who appeared in Ohio’s juvenile courts were routinely and automatically required to wear handcuffs, belly chains, and/or leg irons in court. The use of restraints in court is commonly referred to as shackling.
Though it is unconstitutional to shackle adults in court without a specific need, Ohio’s children were shackled without justification or an individualized determination that restraints were needed. Despite the fact that juvenile shackling was common in Ohio, no rules existed guiding the practice.
This will change with
Local Child Restraint Rule 5.01 .
This rule will require courts to adopt a local rule that creates a presumption against automatic shackling in Ohio’s juvenile courts. The only exception will be if a judge determines that restraints are needed because a child presents a threat in court or an imminent flight risk. The rule requires the judge to permit any party to be heard on the record on the issue of whether restraints are necessary and calls for the least restrictive restraint needed.
Resources That Led To Reform
- Read the ACLU of Ohio Letter to the Supreme Court of Ohio supporting Juvenile Rule 5.01.
- Read the briefing paper on Juvenile Shackling.
- Download our sample letter for supporting organizations.
We pushed for an end to automatic shackling of children in Ohio’s juvenile courts in order to:
To learn more about the practice of shackling in Ohio juvenile courts, and the effort to end the practice, read our blog series:
Ohio now joins 23 states and the District of Columbia that prohibit the automatic use of restraints juvenile courts. Adopting a presumption against automatic shackling will allow Ohio’s juvenile courts to function in trauma-informed manner that reduces harm to the children it serves and upholds due process rights.