Judges: Carla J. Stovall, Attorney General of Kansas
Filed Date: 4/5/1999
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Marti Crow State Representative, 41st District State Capitol, Room 284-W Topeka, Kansas 66612
Dear Representative Crow:
You request our opinion concerning whether the
The Commissioner of Juvenile Justice is authorized to establish a juvenile intake and assessment system and to contract with providers for such services.1 After a juvenile is taken into custody pursuant to K.S.A. 1998 Supp.
"[The] juvenile intake and assessment worker shall collect the following information:
(1) A standardized risk assessment tool . . .;
(2) criminal history . . .;
(3) abuse history . . .;
(4) substance abuse history
(5) history of prior community services used or treatments provided;
(6) educational history;
(7) medical history; and
(8) family history."2
The purpose of gathering such information is to aid the worker in determining whether to deliver the juvenile to a shelter facility pending adjudication, or release the juvenile to a parent or other adult with or without certain conditions of release.3 Presumably, if a juvenile had a history of substance abuse, one of the release conditions would be to obtain substance abuse treatment. If the juvenile were going to a shelter facility, a substance abuse problem could be a factor in determining which facility would be appropriate.
You indicate that you are aware of at least one judicial district where the workers ask every juvenile to undergo a urinalysis as part of the substance abuse history, regardless whether there is suspicion of a substance abuse problem. If the juvenile refuses, there are no consequences and the worker makes a release determination based upon the information provided. If the juvenile agrees to submit to a urinalysis, the results cannot be used against the juvenile in any proceeding.4
You are concerned that the
In Lucero v. Gunter,7 a prisoner was asked to submit to a urinalysis for drug testing and refused. He was charged with disobeying a lawful order, found guilty and ordered to serve ten days in punitive segregation with a loss of good time credits. He filed suit claiming that his
The case was remanded to determine whether the request was based on random selection [which the Court determined would not violate the
You indicate that there are no adverse consequences if a juvenile refuses to submit to a urinalysis and therefore, under the Lucero
holding, a juvenile would not have standing to raise a
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Mary Feighny Assistant Attorney General
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