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Virginia statute

Va. Code Ann. § 16.1-278.7 — Commitment to Department of Juvenile Justice

Current through 2026 Regular Session

Part of Article 9: Disposition, Code of Virginia.

Full text of Va. Code Ann. § 16.1-278.7

Statutory text current through the 2026 Regular Session. This publication reproduces the text of the Code of Virginia from the official Virginia Law Portal API published by the Virginia General Assembly's Division of Legislative Automated Systems; it is not the official Code of Virginia.

Va. Code Ann. § 16.1-278.7Primary source, current through the 2026 Regular Session
Only a juvenile who is (i) adjudicated delinquent of an act enumerated in subsection B or C of § 16.1-269.1 and is 11 years of age or older or (ii) 14 years of age or older may be committed to the Department. In cases where a waiver of an investigation has been granted pursuant to subdivision A 14 or A 17 of § 16.1-278.8 , at the time a court commits a child to the Department the court shall order an investigation pursuant to § 16.1-273 to be completed within 15 days. No juvenile court or circuit court shall order the commitment of any child jointly to the Department and to a local board of social services or transfer the custody of a child jointly to a court service unit of a juvenile court and to a local board of social services. Any person sentenced and committed to an active term of incarceration in the Department of Corrections who is, at the time of such sentencing, in the custody of the Department, upon pronouncement of sentence, shall be immediately transferred to the Department of Corrections. When making a finding that a juvenile should be committed to the Department for an indeterminate period, the court shall consider the following: (i) the Department's estimated length of stay guidelines established by the State Board as required by § 66-10 ; (ii) that the interests of the juvenile and the community require that the juvenile be placed under legal restraint; and (iii) that the juvenile is not a proper person to receive treatment or rehabilitation through other available programs or facilities.

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This reference is informational and is not legal advice.