. fox & friends weekend. it is july 17th, year of our lord, 2022. i saw the born on 4th of july picture there. that was a cute one. pete: that means that baby is now 20. makes all of us fee older. welcome, carley. in for rachel campos duffy. carley: first time hosting fox & friends weekend out on the planter. that is what this area is called. pete: welcome to new york city. carley: sounds and smells of that of new york city. will: three of us a few rats and you watching us on fox & friends. pete: could we get someone to trim the hedges here? a little uneven. carley: skip bedell could come out here. workshopping some segment ideas live on fox & friends. pete: we are complaining. carley is in for rachel campos duffy, that more babies show up on. carley: that is food request. pete: my favorite, starting top five list of course the is football pictures. will: i enter the cowboy on a tall horse with the american flag picture. i love americana, you know what, not far b
all the time. we have a juvenile crisis, 2019, 2020, we had over 700,000 juveniles arrested. that is 2,000 juveniles arrested every day across america. you see kids like this, there is a new trend across our country, that is called, break-ins. they re going in and robbing people left and right now. home invasions are spiking up in communities across our land. it is scary. it really is, this can come to neighborhood near you. this is not a terrible area we re talking about, you know. to see these type of things happening, to see what these kids are putting into the system through this music, through video games, through entertainment they consume. they are living the life-style, it is becoming part of american culture that needs to end. we need to get law and order back in our nation. we need to start holding these kids accountable. these kids are fatherless. they re going out committing
NC bill takes aim at prosecution of 6-year-olds
By Bryan Anderson
CDC: children’s summer camps should continue social distancing, mask-wearing
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its COVID-19 guidelines for children s summer camps.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Children as young as 6 can be prosecuted in North Carolina juvenile court the lowest age set by law in the country but a bipartisan effort would raise the minimum age of delinquency to 10 and move the state out of its status at the bottom.
More than 2,100 complaints were filed against nearly 1,150 youth under 10 during the three fiscal years from 2016 to 2019, according to the North Carolina Department of Public Safety, with Black children disproportionately accused of wrongdoing. The data shows 211 children ages 6 to 9 appeared before a judge, including 54 ultimately found responsible for the complaints.
North Carolina bill aims to stop prosecuting 6-year-olds
BRYAN ANDERSON, Associated Press/Report for America
June 29, 2021
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1of6Dawn Blagrove, executive director of Emancipate NC, poses for a photo in Raleigh, N.C., Friday, June 11, 2021. North Carolina state lawmakers recently advanced a bill that would prevent 6- to 9-year-olds from having to appear before a judge for juvenile justice proceedings. This would end the state s status as being the only one left that subjects such young children to these courtroom appearances.Gerry Broome/APShow MoreShow Less
2of6Barbara Fedders, attorney, University of North Carolina School of Law professor and director of the Youth Justice Clinic, poses for a photo at the School of Law in Chapel Hill, N.C., Thursday, June 10, 2021. North Carolina state lawmakers recently advanced a bill that would prevent 6- to 9-year-olds from having to appear before a judge for juvenile justice proceedings. This would end the