Sunday, May 10, 2026

Pandering to the criminal elements

Massachusetts could pass law that would force 18, 19, and 20-year-old armed robbers, drug dealers and sex offenders to be charged as juveniles instead of adults



Saturday, May 9, 2026


The Senate is moving a bill that would gradually raise the juvenile-court age to 21 — sending 18, 19, and 20-year-old felony defendants to DYS instead of state prison, with sealed records and automatic release by 21.BOSTON — A bill quietly moving through the Massachusetts Senate — and one Gov. Maura Healey signature away from law if it clears the House — would mean a 20-year-old who deals fentanyl, sticks up a convenience store at gunpoint, or sexually assaults a child gets juvenile court. Sealed record. Out by his 21st birthday.






Department of Youth Services rather than state prison. Out of the system at 21 — for any case that lands in juvenile court.
The bill is S.1061, "An Act to promote public safety and better outcomes for youths," filed by Sen. Brendan Crighton (D-Lynn) with co-sponsors Cynthia Stone Creem (D-Newton), Liz Miranda (D-Boston), and Joanne Comerford (D-Northampton). The Senate Judiciary Committee voted it favorably out of committee on October 9, 2025. It now sits with Senate Ways and Means, the committee that recently advanced the PROTECT Act — passed Thursday on a 37-3 Senate floor vote — that would let illegal immigrants sue ICE agents.
The House version — H.1923, filed by Rep. James O'Day (D-West Boylston) and Rep. Manny Cruz (D-Salem) — was quietly sent to a study order on March 26, effectively shelving it on that side of the building.
But Senate President Karen Spilka opened the 194th General Court on January 1, 2025 by "once again calling on the Senate and House to pass meaningful legislation to address raising the age of juvenile jurisdiction." Her inaugural framed the change as starting with 18-year-olds; S.1061 goes further, ultimately to 21. The Senate is moving the bill. If the chamber passes it and the House is pressured into taking it up before the session ends July 31, the bill could land on Gov. Maura Healey's desk this year.
Massachusetts Senate President Karen Spilka
Senate President Karen Spilka (D-Ashland) named raising the age of juvenile jurisdiction a top priority in her January 2025 inaugural. S.1061 is now in Senate Ways and Means.

What the bill does

Massachusetts currently treats anyone 18 or older as an adult in criminal court. S.1061 changes that. The bill phases the age of juvenile-court jurisdiction up over four years — to 19 on enactment, to 20 on July 1, 2028, and to 21 on July 1, 2030.
It is not a one-line statute. The bill runs 95 sections, amending more than a dozen chapters of the General Laws — from the drug statutes (Ch. 94C) to assault and rape (Ch. 265) to firearms (Ch. 269) to court probation rules (Ch. 276). Every reference to age 18 in those chapters is replaced with the new "age of criminal majority."


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