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Help me get a grip!!!
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<blockquote data-quote="Sara PA" data-source="post: 182716" data-attributes="member: 1498"><p>Hand the card or letter to your son, tell him he may either open it, throw it away (opened or not) or write "refused" on it and put it out for the mailman. Really it should be his choice and his doing, considering the legal issues you're facing. </p><p></p><p>Teach him that we don't have to take every phone call, open every email or letter. We can just hit "delete" and move on. It's a good to know.</p><p></p><p>How new is the law that keeps juvenile felonies on their record forever? Before or after your son's case was adjudicated? Seems that the law shouldn't apply to case adjudicated prior to the law being passed, just those afterwards. Laws aren't supposed to be applied retroactively, but sometimes it takes a Supreme Court decision to make things as they should be.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sara PA, post: 182716, member: 1498"] Hand the card or letter to your son, tell him he may either open it, throw it away (opened or not) or write "refused" on it and put it out for the mailman. Really it should be his choice and his doing, considering the legal issues you're facing. Teach him that we don't have to take every phone call, open every email or letter. We can just hit "delete" and move on. It's a good to know. How new is the law that keeps juvenile felonies on their record forever? Before or after your son's case was adjudicated? Seems that the law shouldn't apply to case adjudicated prior to the law being passed, just those afterwards. Laws aren't supposed to be applied retroactively, but sometimes it takes a Supreme Court decision to make things as they should be. [/QUOTE]
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