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Chronicle of Social Change
From Juvie to Juvenile Law:
Frankie Guzman’s Unlikely
Journey
 by Lisa Weinzimer
 October 4, 2016
In 1995, when Frankie Guzman was 15, living in the impoverished community of La Colonia in
the city of Oxnard, California, his older friend came to his house to ask for a favor.
The friend needed cash. His request: Help me to rob a liquor store.
“It was a terrible idea – something I wasn’t at all interested in doing,” Guzman said in a recent
interview.
But as his friend was walking away, Guzman started feeling guilty. He worried about what
would happen if his friend robbed the store alone. So they bought guns, stole ski masks and
gloves from a store, and drove to the liquor store at noon on a Saturday, Guzman said.
Shortly after they got away with $300 from the store’s register, the young men were caught and
arrested.
Because of their one-year age difference, Guzman and his friend were sent into different justice
systems. Guzman’s friend, age 16, was charged as an adult. To this day, Guzman has no idea
where life has taken him.
Guzman was charged as a juvenile. A judge handed him a 15-year sentence – the maximum
allowed at the time – at the California Youth Authority (CYA), the state’s prison system for
youth. Guzman was released early, and returned to his community at 19, but the time in prison
had troubled him deeply.
“I’m out for three months with a whole lot more issues and baggage and trauma than I went in
with, and really wasn’t able to function on the outside,” Guzman said.
Guzman did two more stints in juvenile prison until, at age 21, he started thinking differently.
“I was hopeless and desperate, and afraid of failure,” he said. “And in my mind, at that time,
failure was prison or a grave, or leading a meaningless worker’s life. And so I went to
community college and I tried to do something different.”
It was at Oxnard Community College, not in the juvenile justice system, where Guzman was
rehabilitated, he said.
“At community college – not only was it not a prison state – it was a place of nurturing and
education and rehabilitation,” he said.
Guzman went on to study at the University of California, Berkeley and then to law school at the
University of California, Los Angeles.
A recipient of a Soros Justice Fellowship, Guzman now works with the National Center for
Youth Law, helping youth who, like him, have become enmeshed in the state’s juvenile justice
system.
By any measure, Guzman has overcome long odds on his way to becoming an attorney and
juvenile justice advocate. But his story is especially important as Guzman works to keep today’s
youth out of the criminal justice system on a California ballot measure that intends to prevent
youth from being sentenced as adults.
Set to go before California voters in November, Prop. 57 would abolish district
attorneys’discretion to prosecute youth as adults and also enact sentencing reforms for adults.
Prop. 57 would reverse an initiative passed in 2000 that allowed district attorneys to file charges
against youth as young as 14 in adult court and expanded the list of offenses for which youth
could be charged as adults.
The ballot measure would grant judges sole power to decide whether to move a minor’s case into
the adult court system.
Guzman worked with other juvenile attorneys, advocates and community leaders to write the
proposition, and Gov. Jerry Brown later agreed to sponsor it and provide funding to promote it,
Guzman said.
Guzman also helped write a June report that analyzed data on youth in California who were
prosecuted as adults. In “The Prosecution of Youth as Adults,” he and two co-authors found that
while serious felony arrests have dropped 55 percent across the state since 2003, county district
attorneys in the state charged youth as adults at a 23 percent higher rate per capita in 2014 than
in 2003.
‘Direct file’ – a process that allows prosecutors can originate a juvenile’s case in adult court for
certain offenses – was originally meant to be used in extraordinary circumstances, but Guzman
and his team found that in 2014, 80 percent of youth transferred to the state’s adult criminal
justice system were placed there by prosecutors.
“Prosecutors don’t understand, in large measure, how much these kids have the cards stacked
against them,” Guzman said. “By virtue of their role as prosecutors, they are extremely biased
against defendants and their role is one of convicting. It is not increasing public safety through
rehabilitation. It is incapacitation through a conviction.”
With the November vote drawing close, Guzman said he is optimistic that voters will approve
Prop. 57, despite noting that some district attorneys are painting the ballot measure as being soft
on crime.
“Currently the only thing that would in any way suggest that we might have a problem is the
untruths that D.A.s are putting out there, which to me are not a problem,” Guzman said. “I don’t
believe they are going to carry much weight or water.”
Guzman is now 36. His life has taken him from robbing that liquor store at age 15 to, earlier this
year, getting summoned by Gov. Brown to discuss and finalize Prop. 57.
It has been an unlikely journey, and it has led him to what he is doing right now – in this unusual
election season – fighting for the passage of a ballot measure that he hopes will keep young
people out of the criminal justice system.
It is one of 18 propositions on the ballot. As November approaches, Guzman’s work is far from
over.
“I’m very excited about it,” Guzman said. “But the big fight is still to get people to vote for it.”
Lisa Weinzimer wrote this story as part of the Journalism for Social Change massive online
open course.
Holden Slattery contributed to this story.

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WORDPROFILEOCT21

  • 1. Chronicle of Social Change From Juvie to Juvenile Law: Frankie Guzman’s Unlikely Journey  by Lisa Weinzimer  October 4, 2016 In 1995, when Frankie Guzman was 15, living in the impoverished community of La Colonia in the city of Oxnard, California, his older friend came to his house to ask for a favor. The friend needed cash. His request: Help me to rob a liquor store. “It was a terrible idea – something I wasn’t at all interested in doing,” Guzman said in a recent interview. But as his friend was walking away, Guzman started feeling guilty. He worried about what would happen if his friend robbed the store alone. So they bought guns, stole ski masks and gloves from a store, and drove to the liquor store at noon on a Saturday, Guzman said. Shortly after they got away with $300 from the store’s register, the young men were caught and arrested. Because of their one-year age difference, Guzman and his friend were sent into different justice systems. Guzman’s friend, age 16, was charged as an adult. To this day, Guzman has no idea where life has taken him.
  • 2. Guzman was charged as a juvenile. A judge handed him a 15-year sentence – the maximum allowed at the time – at the California Youth Authority (CYA), the state’s prison system for youth. Guzman was released early, and returned to his community at 19, but the time in prison had troubled him deeply. “I’m out for three months with a whole lot more issues and baggage and trauma than I went in with, and really wasn’t able to function on the outside,” Guzman said. Guzman did two more stints in juvenile prison until, at age 21, he started thinking differently. “I was hopeless and desperate, and afraid of failure,” he said. “And in my mind, at that time, failure was prison or a grave, or leading a meaningless worker’s life. And so I went to community college and I tried to do something different.” It was at Oxnard Community College, not in the juvenile justice system, where Guzman was rehabilitated, he said. “At community college – not only was it not a prison state – it was a place of nurturing and education and rehabilitation,” he said. Guzman went on to study at the University of California, Berkeley and then to law school at the University of California, Los Angeles. A recipient of a Soros Justice Fellowship, Guzman now works with the National Center for Youth Law, helping youth who, like him, have become enmeshed in the state’s juvenile justice system. By any measure, Guzman has overcome long odds on his way to becoming an attorney and juvenile justice advocate. But his story is especially important as Guzman works to keep today’s youth out of the criminal justice system on a California ballot measure that intends to prevent youth from being sentenced as adults. Set to go before California voters in November, Prop. 57 would abolish district attorneys’discretion to prosecute youth as adults and also enact sentencing reforms for adults. Prop. 57 would reverse an initiative passed in 2000 that allowed district attorneys to file charges against youth as young as 14 in adult court and expanded the list of offenses for which youth could be charged as adults. The ballot measure would grant judges sole power to decide whether to move a minor’s case into the adult court system. Guzman worked with other juvenile attorneys, advocates and community leaders to write the proposition, and Gov. Jerry Brown later agreed to sponsor it and provide funding to promote it, Guzman said. Guzman also helped write a June report that analyzed data on youth in California who were prosecuted as adults. In “The Prosecution of Youth as Adults,” he and two co-authors found that while serious felony arrests have dropped 55 percent across the state since 2003, county district attorneys in the state charged youth as adults at a 23 percent higher rate per capita in 2014 than in 2003.
  • 3. ‘Direct file’ – a process that allows prosecutors can originate a juvenile’s case in adult court for certain offenses – was originally meant to be used in extraordinary circumstances, but Guzman and his team found that in 2014, 80 percent of youth transferred to the state’s adult criminal justice system were placed there by prosecutors. “Prosecutors don’t understand, in large measure, how much these kids have the cards stacked against them,” Guzman said. “By virtue of their role as prosecutors, they are extremely biased against defendants and their role is one of convicting. It is not increasing public safety through rehabilitation. It is incapacitation through a conviction.” With the November vote drawing close, Guzman said he is optimistic that voters will approve Prop. 57, despite noting that some district attorneys are painting the ballot measure as being soft on crime. “Currently the only thing that would in any way suggest that we might have a problem is the untruths that D.A.s are putting out there, which to me are not a problem,” Guzman said. “I don’t believe they are going to carry much weight or water.” Guzman is now 36. His life has taken him from robbing that liquor store at age 15 to, earlier this year, getting summoned by Gov. Brown to discuss and finalize Prop. 57. It has been an unlikely journey, and it has led him to what he is doing right now – in this unusual election season – fighting for the passage of a ballot measure that he hopes will keep young people out of the criminal justice system. It is one of 18 propositions on the ballot. As November approaches, Guzman’s work is far from over. “I’m very excited about it,” Guzman said. “But the big fight is still to get people to vote for it.” Lisa Weinzimer wrote this story as part of the Journalism for Social Change massive online open course. Holden Slattery contributed to this story.