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51 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 563 (2014)
Kidnapping Incorporated: The Unregulated Youth-Transportation Industry and the Potential for Abuse

handle is hein.journals/amcrimlr51 and id is 593 raw text is: 




                              ARTICLES


        KIDNAPPING INCORPORATED: THE UNREGULATED
                YOUTH-TRANSPORTATION INDUSTRY
                   AND   THE   POTENTIAL FOR ABUSE


Ira P. Robbins*

                                   ABSTRACT

   Strangers come  into a child's room in the middle of the night, drag her kick-
ing and  screaming  into a van, apply  handcuffs, and  drive her to a behavior-
modification facility at a distant location. What sounds like a clear-cut case of
kidnapping  is complicated by the fact that the child's parents not only authorized
this intervention, but also paid for it. This scarcely publicized practice-known as
the youth-transportation industry-operates on the fringes of existing law. The law
generally  pre-sumes  that parents have  almost  unlimited authority over  their
children, but the youth-transportation industry has never been closely examined
regarding  exactly what the transportation process entails or whether it is in fact
legal.
   The companies  provide a service to parents who want to send their children to
behavior-modification facilities, including boot camps and  other residential re-
form  schools, but who are unable or unwilling to deliver the children themselves. A
transportation  company  contracts with  the parents to arrange for pickup  and
conveyance;   the parents delegate  rights over their children to the company,
usually by signing a power  of attorney. Due to the circumstances in which these
transports typically take place, however; this delegation of rights has far greater
implications than simply authorizing the transportation of a child from point A to
point B. After suffering the emotional trauma of being taken from their parents,
children may  suffer physical abuse as well, as the companies often use force in
the form  of handcuffs and other restraints. This Article examines the details of
the transport process and  raises legal questions about the disciplinary authority
that parents possess, including the extent to which they can grant this authority to
a third party.


  * Barnard T. Welsh Scholar and Professor of Law and Justice, American University, Washington College of
  Law. A.B. University of Pennsylvania; J.D. Harvard University. I am grateful to my superb and indispensable
  research assistants-Christina Copsey, Jay Curran, Giulia di Marzo, Jacob Eden, Tracey Little, Meghan Quinn,
  and Libby Ragan-whom I consider to be not only my students, but also my friends and colleagues. I am also
  grateful for the financial support provided by the American University Law School Research Fund. © 2014,
  Ira P. Robbins.


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