Youth Justice and Representing Youth Clients
This timely webinar will explore the critical and crucial pathways that you need to navigate this delicate system. There are major challenges in neurodiversity, reporting, processes, and outcomes. Analyse the entry into the youth court and the complex processes entailed. Examine recent decisions and updates on Section 322 delay applications. Don’t miss this information packed morning which will give you the tools and strategies necessary to assist your clients. WEB233NZA47Z
Description
Attend and earn 3 CPD hours
Chair: Simon Judd, Barrister,Kitchener Chambers
9.15am to 9.45am A View from the Bench
Presented by Her Honour Judge Malosi
9.45am to 10.30am Challenges in the Youth Justice System
- Neurodiversity
- Reports
- Process in the youth court
- Outcomes for young people
Presented by Dale Lloyd, Principal, Lloyd Troon Law
10.30am to 11.15am Entry into the Youth Court
This paper will examine the two ways in which a young person may be brought before the Court and will cover:
- The process of arresting a young person
- The remedies for an unlawful arrest
- The ‘intention to charge” FGC process
- What may happen if the statutory timeframes are not met
- Recent decisions regarding arrest and the intention to charge process
Presented by Gary Earley, Barrister
11.15am to 11.30am Break
11.30am to 12.15pm Update on Section 322 Delay Applications
- Legislative provisions: Oranga Tamariki Act and New Zealand Bill of Rights Act
- United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child
- H v R [2019] NZSC 69
- Recent decisions
Presented by Sarah Mandeno, Barrister/Youth Advocate
12.15pm to 12.30pm Closing Comments and Final Q and A
Learning Objectives:
- Receive practical guidance on how to navigate the youth justice system
- Consider current and topical issues relating to representing youth justice clients and their families
- Develop strategies for overcoming challenges regarding the processes and the Courts
- Stay up to date on recent decisions and legislative provisions
Presenters
Dale Lloyd
Dale is the current Chair of the Youth Justice Committee, and has for the last 16 years has represented young persons in court and in pre-court conferences. She has been a legal adviser to families and business owners throughout the South Island for over 20 years. Dale specialises in youth and family law is a Ministry of Justice appointed Lawyer for the Child, a Youth Advocate, and is currently a Trustee on the Te Kura Whakatip o Kawarau School Board of Trustees. Dale believes the measure of her success as a lawyer is making a difference for her client. She is passionate about facilitating sustainable positive change for young people, their whanau and community.
Gary Earley
Gary began his legal career as the Auckland/Northland Regional Solicitor for the then Department of Social Warfare. A blessedly brief career as a civil litigator followed wherein Gary distinguished himself in a ground-breaking case concerning the provenance of a container load of cabbages.
Gary became a partner in a South Auckland law firm, a barrister in 2000 and a youth advocate in 2006. He has presented in a number of ADLS and NZLS seminars despite being asked to stop. Topics ranged from the spine tingling “How to Run a Small Law Practice” to riveting addresses on Transport Law. He has presented several forgettable papers on youth justice.
There is a significant black market in audio recordings of these addresses for their use a aide a dormirs for the heretofore chronically insomniac.
Sarah Mandeno
Sarah is an experienced barrister specialising in serious crime. She is a member of the Criminal Committee of the New Zealand Bar Association. Between 1999 to 2004 she worked for the Auckland Crown Solicitor’s office. She then worked in the United Kingdom. In 2006 qualified as a solicitor of England and Wales. In 2007 Sarah left her role at Field Fisher Waterhouse in London, where she was involved in the conduct of regulatory proceedings for the General Medical Council and Nursing and Midwifery Council, to rejoin the Auckland Crown Solicitor’s office, where she was a senior Crown prosecutor (2008) and an Associate (2009). Between June 2016 and January 2018 Sarah worked as a senior lawyer at the Public Defence Service, Manukau before commencing practice as a Barrister in June 2018. Since then Sarah has primarily been a Youth Advocate (PAL 1-4). She undertakes assignments as either the assigned advocate or counsel to assist the Court in the Youth Courts in Tāmaki Makarau (including Rangatahi Courts, Ngā Kōti Rangatahi, and Pasifika Court).
Simon Judd
Simon was admitted in 1994 and has practised as a barrister sole since December 2003. He appears regularly in most courts and tribunals on a wide range of civil and public law matters. He has a particular interest in the law relating to the removal of students from school for disciplinary reasons and has advocated for law reform in that area. He has acted for students who have been suspended from school and has argued cases in the High Court and Court of Appeal to judicially review decisions by School Boards excluding or expelling students. He is Chair of Youth Law Aotearoa, a community law centre, which assists children and young people.