This case involves a challenge to a juvenile court’s decision to waive its jurisdiction over a 13-year-old boy who was alleged to have committed aggravated murder. Under the relevant statutes, ORS 419C.352 and ORS 419C.349, a youth under the age of 15 who is alleged to have committed murder may be waived into adult court only if, at the time of the conduct, he or she “was of sufficient sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved.” In this case, based on evidence suggesting that youth was of “average” sophistication and maturity for his age and was “just as effective” as peers of his age in understanding that his conduct was wrong, the juvenile court found that the statutory “sophistication and maturity” requirement had been satisfied. The Court of Appeals affirmed in an en banc decision, holding that the “sophistication and maturity” provision requires only an awareness of the physical nature and criminality of the conduct at issue—a test that generally has been considered sufficient to establish criminal capacity. State v. J. C. N.-V., 268 Or App 505, 539, 342 P3d 1046 (2015). As discussed below, we agree with youth that the “sophistication and maturity” requirement is more demanding. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and the decision of the juvenile court, and remand the case to the juvenile court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Youth was 13 years and eight months old when he allegedly participated in a violent murder and robbery. When he was taken into custody, youth was deemed to be within the exclusive jurisdiction of the juvenile court. ORS 419C.005(1); ORS 419C.094. The state, however, petitioned the juvenile court to waive youth into Washington County Circuit Court so that he could be tried as an adult for, among other things, aggravated murder, ORS 163.095.
At a hearing on the state’s petition, the parties presented evidence addressing the requirements for waiver. To show that youth possessed “sufficient sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct
The state also relied on an evaluation of youth submitted by a psychologist, Dr. Sebastian. Sebastian’s report acknowledged youth’s immaturity. She reported that, on a well-accepted “Sophistication-Maturity Scale” designed for use by courts in making waiver decisions, youth was immature in many ways: he “ha[d] not developed an internal locus of control,” he was “influenced and led by older youth,” and his “self-concept [was] not yet solidly developed.” His “moral development [was] still immature in that he c[ould] identify the impacts of his behavior on his immediate family * * * but he was unable to appreciate the impact of his behavior on his victims.” Sebastian’s conclusion, however, was that youth exhibited average sophistication and maturity for his age and that he understood that his conduct was wrong:
Page 564“By structured interview, testing and collateral dat[a], it is this examiner’s opinion that [youth] is as sophisticated and mature as one might expect of a thirteen/fourteen-year old. In other words, he is average in sophistication and maturity for his age. Using records, testing and interview it is clear this young man has the ability to: (1) think independently, (2) understand behavioral norms and expectations of adolescents in the larger picture, (3) weigh the risks and benefits of his action, (4) demonstrate age appropriate social skills, (5) anticipate the consequences of his actions, [and] (6) discern which of his behaviors are antisocial. When compared to his age mates, he is just as effective or more effective (because of his strong cognitive ability) in understanding that his crime was wrong and identifying alternatives to his actions. He is less able than his peers at understanding his emotions, resolving conflicts effectively and resisting the influence of other youth.”
To counter the state’s contention that, at the time of the murder, youth had sufficient “sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of [his] conduct,” youth presented neuro-scientific evidence about the limitations of adolescent brains in relation to those of adults. An expert, Dr. Nagel, testified about the undeveloped nature of the prefrontal cortex in adolescents, and about how that neurological difference makes it harder for adolescents to access the brain’s higher level, logical functions. Nagel also testified that not only do adolescents thus remain deficient in higher level thinking and decision-making, but the onset of puberty causes additional neurological “disequilibrium” by “turning up the volume” on the brain’s emotional and reward centers. The result, Nagel testified, is that adolescents have significantly more trouble than both adults and younger children in making moral choices in emotionally-charged or social reward-based situations. Although adolescents may have the capacity to understand the act of killing someone in a cold situation, Nagel explained, that capacity is easily overridden in emotionally-laden situations.
Youth also presented the report of a psychologist, Dr. Bolstad, who had performed an intensive examination of youth and his history. Bolstad concluded that cognitively and in most other respects youth was “average” or “normal” for a 13-year-old. Bolstad noted, however, that young
Bolstad also noted that, because of their immature brains, 13-year-olds generally lack sophistication in terms of understanding abstract principles and have difficulty in weighing alternatives and in anticipating the consequences of their actions and decisions. Bolstad added that, because empathy and remorse require abstract thinking, 13-year-olds generally have limitations in those areas as well. He opined that much of the deficits in empathy and remorse that he and others had observed in youth was a product of his young age. He suggested, too, that a family culture of not talking about feelings and youth’s own personal strategies for distracting himself from difficult feelings also might play a role in those deficits. When pressed to speak to the “sophistication and maturity” requirement of ORS 419C.349(3), Bolstad seemed to acknowledge that, at the time that youth participated in the murder, he could understand that what he was doing was against the law and that it potentially was going to harm someone; he opined, however, that, although youth thus could appreciate the nature of the crime at some level, he could not do so “at a level of having empathy because * * * that’s a much more challenging task for a 13-year-old with an immature brain.” Bolstad concluded that the “cognitive deficits” associated with the typically undeveloped brain of adolescents “likely would have interfered with [youth’s] capacity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved.”
The parties also offered evidence on another requirement for waiver—that the juvenile court find that retaining jurisdiction over the youth would not serve “the best interests of the youth and of society,” ORS 419C.349(4). That evidence addressed the considerations identified in the
After hearing the parties’ evidence, the juvenile court granted the state’s petition to waive youth into adult court. As required by ORS 419C.355, the court issued written findings in support of the required determinations under ORS 4190.349(3) and (4). Although the juvenile court’s findings suggest some confusion about the significance of the determination required by ORS 419C.349(3),1
“demonstrate [d] a degree of maturity consistent with Youth’s biological age at the time of the event, and in several respects reflect [ed] a degree of maturity consistent with an older youth. Youth’s response to the police in the interview was coherent and responsive. Youth was able to respond to questions of motivation and intent, explain his behavior, and the decisions behind his conduct. * * * Youth was aware of the criminality of his conduct and told police he did not want to ‘get in trouble’ or ‘go to jail.’ Although Youth’s decisions were tragically flawed, his statements to police demonstrate awareness regarding the nature of the criminal act, the degree of his participation in the criminal act, and an awareness of the consequences of the criminal act if apprehended by authorities.”
In considering the issue of whether retention of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction over youth was in the best interests of youth and of society, ORS 419C.349(4), the juvenile court paid considerable attention to youth’s history of unlawful and sometimes violent conduct, beginning at the age of nine. It also contrasted youth’s behavioral difficulties in
Youth appealed the judgment and order of waiver,3 primarily arguing that the juvenile court had misunderstood what the “sophistication and maturity” requirement of ORS 4190.349(3) entailed and, consequently, had incorrectly determined that that requirement was satisfied. Youth specifically argued that the legislature intended to impose a requirement that a youth have a “more adult-like” understanding of the conduct and its consequences than an average 13-year-old would possess.
In an en banc decision, the Court of Appeals rejected youth’s interpretation of ORS 4190.349(3) along with youth’s ultimate contention that the juvenile court’s decision was in error. It opined that the legislature had drawn the provision’s “nature and quality” wording from the common-law test for criminal capacity as it relates to the insanity defense, which has been held to require only that the person understand the physical nature and criminality of the act.
II. THE STATUTE AND THE PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
Youth is eligible for waiver under ORS 419C.352, which provides:
“The juvenile court, after a hearing, * * * may waive a youth under 15 years of age at the time the act was committed to circuit court for prosecution as an adult if:
“(1) The youth is represented by counsel during the waiver proceedings;
“(2) The juvenile court makes the findings required under ORS 419C.349(3) and (4); and
Page 570“(3) The youth is alleged to have committed an act or acts that if committed by an adult would constitute one or more of the following crimes;
“(a) Murder or any aggravated form thereof * * *;
“(b) Rape in the first degree * * *;
“(c) Sodomy in the first degree * * *; or
“(d) Unlawful sexual penetration in the first degree [.] ”
(Emphasis added.) Subsection (2) of ORS 419C.352 refers to provisions from a different waiver statute, ORS 419C.349, that authorizes waiver of youths “15 years of age or older at the time of the commission of the alleged offense” who have committed any one of a number of specified criminal acts—but only if
“(3) The youth at the time of the alleged offense was of sufficient sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved', and
“(4) The juvenile court, after considering the following criteria,5 determines by a preponderance of the evidence that retaining jurisdiction will not serve the best interests of the youth and of society and therefore is not justified.”
The state contends that ORS 419C.349(3) requires that a youth have “enough knowledge of the world and enough of the qualities associated with a normal adult that the youth can understand what he physically did and that it was wrong.” So understood, the state acknowledges, the requirement sets a low threshold, based on historical notions of criminal capacity, that only a few intellectually challenged adolescents would be expected to fail. Generally, the state asserts, ORS 419C.349(3) is a rule of inclusion, and, therefore, youths of average abilities can be expected to meet the statutory standard.
Youth, on the other hand, argues that the provision sets a higher bar, permitting adult prosecution only of those juveniles who possess greater maturity and sophistication than the average adolescent—an adult-like ability to appreciate the gravity and wrongfulness of their conduct and its consequences on a deeper intellectual and emotional
III. LEGAL BACKGROUND
Before we analyze the parties’ arguments, we think it helpful to describe the relevant legal framework in place at the time that the legislature enacted ORS 419C.349, along with the changes that the legislature made in that framework. That legal framework includes the common-law and statutory standards for determining criminal capacity and the statutes defining the juvenile court’s jurisdiction and governing the waiver of that jurisdiction.
A. Criminal Capacity
In 1985, when ORS 419C.349 was enacted, a youth could be considered lacking in criminal capacity either because the youth was too immature to be held criminally responsible or because the youth had a mental disease or defect that constituted a defense to criminal responsibility. The concepts are similar but their origins and the particular terms used to describe them are somewhat different.
1. Immaturity
At common law, the law used a child’s age to assist in determining whether the child was too immature to have criminal capacity, distinguishing between children under and over the age of 14. Children under the age of 14 were presumed to lack criminal capacity that would justify holding them criminally responsible for their actions. For children under seven, that presumption was conclusive; for children between the ages of seven and 14, the presumption could be rebutted in individual cases. Wayne R. LaFave, 2 Substantive Criminal Law § 9.6(a) (2d ed 2003); State v. Nice, 240 Or 343, 345, 401 P2d 296 (1965); State v. Ewing, 174 Or 487, 506, 149 P2d 765 (1944). For the latter class of children, a jury was required to decide whether the child was “in possession and exercise
In 1971, the Oregon legislature codified the defense of immaturity, making the presumption of lack of criminal capacity conclusive for children who were under the age of 14 when the conduct occurred. ORS 161.380 (1971). The 1971 statute provided that a person being tried “in a court of criminal jurisdiction,” i.e., as an adult, was not “criminally responsible” for any conduct that occurred when the person was under 14 years of age.7 Thus, at that time that ORS 419C.349 was enacted, youths who were 14 and older at the time that they committed an allegedly criminal act were not entitled to claim immaturity and were deemed criminally responsible for their conduct.
2. Insanity
At common law, the insanity defense was first described in an 1843 case, M’Naghten’s Case, 10 Clark & Fin 200, 8 Eng Rep 718 (1843). The original M’Naghten rule, which early Oregon cases often quoted verbatim, set out a two-part test, one having to do with knowledge of the “nature and quality” of the act and the other having to do with the actor’s knowledge of the act’s wrongfulness:
“If at the time of committing an act, the party was laboring under such a defect of reason from disease of the mind as not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing, or if he did know the nature and quality thereof, that he did not know that he was doing what was wrong, he should not be held responsible under the criminal law.”
State v. Layton, 174 Or 217, 226, 148 P2d 522, cert den, 323 US 728 (1944) (emphasis added). See also State v. Wallace, 170 Or 60, 78, 131 P2d 222 (1942) (same); State of Oregon v. Zorn, 22 Or 591, 597, 30 P 317 (1892).
“A person is guilty except for insanity if, as a result of mental disease or defect at the time of engaging in criminal conduct, the person lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate the criminality of the conduct or to conform the conduct to the requirements of the law.”
B. Juvenile Court Jurisdiction and Waiver
1. Before 1985
Prior to 1959, juveniles, i.e., persons under 18 years of age, could be prosecuted in courts of criminal jurisdiction provided that they were of sufficient maturity to be criminally responsible. Beginning in 1907, however, juveniles also were subject to the jurisdiction of separate juvenile courts which emphasized rehabilitation rather than crime control. Reynolds, 317 Or at 567-68 (describing history). In 1959, the legislature gave those separate juvenile courts exclusive jurisdiction over juveniles and specified that adjudication by a juvenile court was not a criminal conviction. Or Laws 1959, ch 432, §§ 2, 36. Still, under the 1959 Juvenile Code, any juvenile 16 or older at the time of a “remand” hearing could be “remanded” to circuit court for prosecution as an adult on any criminal charge, based solely on a juvenile court’s determination that retaining jurisdiction would not serve the child’s best interests. See ORS 419.533 (1983) (providing for waiver of any youth 16 years old or older upon a finding by the juvenile court that retaining jurisdiction would not serve the best interests of the child).
As noted, in 1971, the legislature adopted ORS 161.380 (1971), providing that juveniles under age 14 at the time of an offense could not be held criminally responsible for the offense. That immaturity statute set a practical limit on a juvenile court’s “remand” authority. Even if a juvenile were 16 years old at the time of a remand hearing,
2. Legislative changes in 1985
In 1985, the legislature enacted the waiver provision at issue in this case. Or Laws 1985, ch 631, § 1. The 1985 statute, now codified as ORS 419C.349(3),9 permitted the juvenile court to “waive” a youth10 into adult court provided that the youth was 15 or older at the time an act was committed and that three additional conditions were met: (1) the youth was represented by counsel during the waiver proceedings; (2) the juvenile court made certain findings; and (3) the youth was alleged to have committed an act that if committed by an adult would constitute one or more of certain specified crimes. The two findings that the juvenile court was required to make were: (1) that “the youth at the time of the alleged offense was of sufficient sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved, ORS 419C.349(3); and (2) that, considering specified criteria, retaining jurisdiction in the juvenile court “will not serve the best interests of the youth and of society and therefore is not justified,” ORS 4190.349(4).
Thus, under the 1985 statute, youths who were 14 at the time of an act remained immune from criminal
IV. ANALYSIS
Having set out the foregoing background, we return to the issue at hand. To determine what the legislature intended when it enacted ORS 4190.349(3) in 1985, we examine the statutory text in its context, along with its legislative history. State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 171-73, 206 P3d 1042 (2009).
A. Text
We begin with the statute’s text, examining the ordinary meanings of its terms. In this case, the relevant text resolves naturally into three parts, which we analyze separately. The text requires that a youth have (1) “sufficient sophistication and maturity” to (2) “appreciate” the (3) “nature and quality of the conduct involved.”
The words in part one of the text describe adult-like qualities. The term “maturity,” when viewed in isolation, describes a quality that is associated with normal, well-adjusted adults. See Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 1395 (unabridged ed 2002) (defining “maturity” as, among other things, “having and expressing the mental and emotional qualities that are considered normal to an adult socially adjusted human being”). “Sophistication” is similar, but carries with it a connotation of heightened worldliness and discernment.11 “Sufficient” sophistication and maturity refers to the amount of those qualities necessary to a particular
Part two of the text requires that the youth have the ability to “appreciate” the nature and quality of the conduct at issue. The word “appreciate” ordinarily means to “comprehend [it] with knowledge, judgment and discrimination” or “to judge [it] with heightened perception or understanding.” Webster’s at 105.
Part three of the text describes the object of the youth’s appreciation—the “nature and quality of the conduct involved.” In ordinary parlance, both “nature” and “quality” refer to a thing’s “essential character.” See Webster’s at 1507, 1858 (defining “nature” as, among other things, “the essential character or constitution of something” and defining “quality” as “a peculiar and essential character”). In this instance, the “thing” is the conduct that constituted the alleged offense.
Based on the dictionary definitions of the words used in ORS 419C.349(3), the state argues that that provision requires that a youth have a level of understanding equivalent to the common-law concept of criminal capacity. The state uses the term “criminal capacity” to mean a minimal level of understanding of limited aspects of a criminal act—a mental grasp of the physical nature of an act and its wrongfulness. Thus, taking an example from LaFave, the state uses the term criminal capacity to mean that a person knows that he or she is holding a flame to a building, that holding a flame to a building will make it burn, and that burning a building is wrong. LaFave, 1 Substantive Criminal Law § 7.2(b)(3). In making that argument, the state acknowledges that the words “maturity” and “sophistication” describe adult-like qualities. However, focusing on the qualifying word “sufficient,” and the object of the understanding, the “nature and quality” of the conduct, the state contends that the statute requires no more than an adult-like mental grasp of the physical nature of an act and its wrongfulness.
Second, the understanding necessary to establish criminal capacity—a mental grasp of the physical nature of an act and its criminality—is a basic awareness that would be better described by the word “know” than the word “appreciate.” As noted, 359 Or at 577, the word “appreciate,” describes an ability to comprehend with heightened understanding and judgment. The word “know” describes an awareness of a fact or concept.13 The statute’s use of the word “appreciate” rather than “know” is an indication that the legislature intended to require that a youth have a deeper ability to understand than a basic mental awareness.
Based solely on their ordinary meanings, the legislature’s choice of the words “sophistication,” “maturity,” and “appreciate” suggests an intent to require an adult-like understanding of the nature and quality of an act that is beyond what ordinarily would be associated with criminal capacity.
B. Context
In interpreting a statute we also consider context. Gaines, 346 Or at 171. A statute’s context includes other
1. The Insanity Defense
The state argues that the statute’s use of the words “nature and quality” is informed by the use of those terms in the insanity defense. As noted, 359 Or at 573, the insanity defense was first described in an 1843 case, M’Naghten’s Case, 10 Clark & Fin 200. And, as also noted, 359 Or at 573, the original M’Naghten rule set out a two part test, one having to do with knowledge of the “nature and quality” of the act and the other having to do with the actor’s knowledge of the act’s wrongfulness:
“If at the time of committing an act, the party was laboring under such a defect of reason from disease of the mind as not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing, or if he did know the nature and quality thereof, that he did not know that he was doing what was wrong, he should not be held responsible under the criminal law.”
The state argues that the statute’s use of the words “nature and quality” is drawn from that test and thus indicates an intent to require a minimal showing of criminal capacity as the state explains that concept.
As an initial matter, we note that, although the phrase “nature and quality” was used in M’Naghten to refer narrowly to the nature of the act and its physical consequences, later cases and commentators suggested (in an era when psychiatry was expanding notions of mental incapacity) that the phrase was not so limited. For example, some suggested that the phrase “gives important emphasis to the realization of the wrongfulness of the act,” Abraham S. Goldstein, The Insanity Defense 50-51.(1967); State v. Esser, 16 Wis 2d 567, 115 NW2d 505, 521 (1962). Oregon’s most
We agree that the words “nature and quality” may well have roots in the M’Naghten rule and that that context is helpful to understanding what we have denominated as part three of the statutory phrase—the object of the youth’s appreciation. However, we are not persuaded that, when it enacted ORS 419C.349(3), the legislature intended to use that phrase to require only the limited understanding of an act and its consequences described in the M’Naghten rule. We think it significant that, although M’Naghten and other common-law criminal capacity cases referred almost uniformly to a capacity to “know” the nature and wrongfulness of the conduct, the Oregon legislature, in enacting ORS 4190.349(3), chose a different word—“appreciate.” At the time that ORS 419C.349 was enacted, jurists and lawmakers had for some time been taking note of how the choice to use one or the other of those words tended to affect the criminal capacity test. For example, Goldstein noted, in his 1967 treatise on the insanity defense, that the bulk of the critics read the word “know”
“as referring to formal cognition or intellectual awareness alone. They distinguish this, the ‘law’s’ meaning, from what they describe as the ‘psychiatric’ meaning—which they take to connote a fuller, deeper knowledge, involving emotional as well as intellectual awareness.”
“the act must necessarily involve more than mere knowledge that the act is being committed; there must be an appreciation of the factors involved in the act and a mental capacity to measure and foresee the consequences of the violent conduct. In this view, the word ‘appreciate’ draws most psychosis under the M’Naghten rules, because it addresses itself to the defendant’s awareness of the true significance of his conduct.”
Id. at 50. And closer to home, the Oregon Criminal Law Revision Commission had written commentary to accompany ORS 161.295, the 1971 statutory revision of the common-law insanity defense.14 After explaining that the new statute was based on section 4.01(1) of the Model Penal Code, which in turn represented a modernized version of the M’Naghten rule, combined with the so-called “irresistible impulse” test, the commission noted that “the draft section substitutes ‘appreciate’ for M’Naghten’s ‘know,’ thereby indicating a preference for the view that an offender must be emotionally as well as intellectually aware of the significance of his conduct.” Commentary to Criminal Law Revision Commission Proposed Oregon Criminal Code, Final Draft and Report § 36 (July 1970). Particularly in light of the latter commentary, which was directed to the Oregon legislature, it seems reasonable to assume that, when the legislature later enacted a requirement that a juvenile “appreciate” the nature and quality of the conduct involved, it intended to require more than the minimal knowledge that was required to establish criminal capacity for purposes of the M’Naghten rule.
2. The Kent decision
Youth argues that the words “sophistication and maturity” in ORS 419C.349(3) are informed by their use in a United States Supreme Court case, Kent v. United States, 383 US 541, 86 S Ct 1045, 16 L Ed 2d 84 (1966). In Kent, the United States Supreme Court was confronted
Youth observes, quite correctly, that the Oregon legislature borrowed from the Kent criteria when it adopted the waiver criteria set out at ORS 419C.349(3) and (4). The connection is evident from a cursory comparison of the criteria set out in ORS 419C.349(3) and (4) and the Kent criteria set out above, 359 Or at 575 n 8.16 Accordingly, youth asserts, the “sophistication and maturity” wording of ORS 419C.349(3) must be read in the context of the waiver criteria set out in the appendix to Kent.
The “sophistication and maturity” criterion set out in Kent contemplated a fairly open and extensive examination of the mental, social and emotional development of the youth in question: The broad group of sources that it instructed courts to consider (“[the juvenile’s] home, environmental situation, emotional attitude and pattern of living) are evidence of that. Moreover, in Kent, the “sophistication and maturity” criterion was free standing. It required a court to consider “the sophistication and maturity of the juvenile” as an independent criterion relevant to a waiver decision, indicating that the court should consider the full panoply of a youth’s capabilities that indicate “maturity” and “sophistication.” Based on the ordinary meaning of those terms, those capabilities would be the capabilities of normal adults that evidence heightened worldliness and
As we have indicated, however, under ORS 419C.349(3), a trial court does not consider a youth’s sophistication and maturity in isolation. That statute requires a court to consider a youth’s sophistication and maturity “to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved.” The issue under ORS 4190.349(3) is not the youth’s general sophistication and maturity as it relates the waiver decision (as it is under the Kent criterion), but the particular aspects of “sophistication and maturity” that are involved in “appreciating] the nature and quality” of one’s own criminal
3. Other common-law and statutory context
Youth also directs our attention to notions of the capacities of juveniles reflected in the law as it stood when ORS 419C.349(3) was enacted, and the logic of ORS 4190.349(3) in that context. In 1985, there was a broad understanding among jurists and lawmakers that, because youths are mentally, socially and emotionally less formed, they are inherently less capable of making critical decisions and require society’s protection. The case law of the time is replete with statements to that effect. See, e.g., Eddings v. Oklahoma, 455 US 104, 115-16, 102 S Ct 869, 71 L Ed 2d 1 (1982) (“Our history is replete with laws and judicial recognition that minors, especially in their earlier years, generally are less mature and responsible than adults [.] ”); Bellotti v. Baird, 443 US 622, 634, 99 S Ct 3035, 61 L Ed 2d 797 (1979) (limitations on rights and privileges of juveniles stem from their peculiar vulnerability, their inability to make critical decisions in an informed, mature manner, and the importance of the parental role). A plethora of statutes placing age restrictions on the exercise of important privileges, in
In fact, the idea that children are morally undeveloped and, therefore, less criminally culpable, has long been a feature of Oregon law. As noted, at the time that ORS 419C.349(3) was enacted, Oregon law provided that juveniles under age 14 at the time of their conduct could not be held criminally responsible for that conduct. ORS 161.380 (1983). But even juveniles aged 14 and older who were deemed criminally responsible for their conduct generally were not criminally prosecuted for that conduct. Instead, they were held responsible for their conduct in juvenile court, where the law emphasized rehabilitation rather than crime control. Reynolds, 317 Or at 569-71. Juveniles aged 16 and older could be “remanded” to adult court, but the age of remand—16 at the time of the remand hearing—was independent of the age of criminal capacity—14 at the age of the offense—and dependent only on the best interests of the child. ORS 419.533 (1983).
In 1985, with the enactment of the statute at issue here, the legislature lowered the age at which youths could be waived into adult court to 15 (at the time of the offense). The drafters had originally proposed to lower that age to 14. SB 414 (1985). That proposed change would have made the age that a youth was subject to waiver the same as the age at which a youth was deemed to be criminally responsible— age 14. ORS 161.380; Reynolds, 317 Or at 566. However, the legislature rejected that proposal and permitted a
Significantly, although the law treats all youths 14 years of age and older as being criminally responsible, it assumes that those under 18 generally will be held responsible for their conduct in juvenile, rather than adult, court. Under ORS 419C.005, the juvenile court has exclusive original jurisdiction in any case involving a person under 18 years of age who has committed an act that, if done by an adult, would constitute a crime. ORS 419C.349, allows some youths under 18 to be waived into adult court, but only two things distinguish a 15- to 17-year-old youth who is eligible for adult adjudication from one who is not: the type of crime with which the youth is charged, ORS 4190.349(2), and the youth’s possession, under ORS 4190.349(3), of “sufficient sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved.” Given that fact, it is logical to assume that that threshold “sophistication and maturity” requirement demands an ability to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved that is different from the criminal capacity that all 15- to 17-year-olds already are deemed to have.
The state, however, draws a different conclusion from that statutory framework. The state suggests that it is significant that the same “sufficient sophistication and maturity” requirement applies to 13-year-olds under ORS 419C.352(2) and 17-year-olds under ORS 4190.349(3). The state argues that that equal applicability shows that the legislature intended the “sufficient sophistication and maturity” requirement as a straightforward individualized determination of a youth’s mental capacity to understand what he or she was doing and that it was wrong, and not as a determination of the youth’s capacity in comparison to other
C. Text and context combined
The upshot of the foregoing discussion of text and context is that ORS 419C.349(3) represents a combination of terms and phrases, which, when given both their ordinary and specialized meanings and considered together, convey a requirement for waiver that is more demanding than the one that the state proposes. If, as the state argues, the legislature intended to require only that the youth know what he or she is doing in a physical sense and that it is wrong, then it could have expressed that intent in the terms of the classic M’Naghten rule. And even if we agree that the legislature took the phrase “nature and quality” from that rule, it is obvious that the legislature chose to combine a piece of that rule with other terms and phrases that require a deeper and more “maturfe]” and “sophisticat[ed]” understanding than a typical youth would have. To give meaning to each of those terms and phrases, as we must, ORS 174.010, we interpret the text of ORS 4190.349(3) to require that a youth have sufficient adult-like intellectual and emotional capabilities to appreciate the nature and wrongfulness of the conduct to justify his or her prosecution as an adult.
The statutory context, including other provisions of the waiver statute and the common-law and statutory context in which ORS 419C.349 was enacted, support that construction. As discussed, the meaning that jurists attached to the word “appreciate” in discussions of the M’Naghten insanity standard likely informed the legislature’s choice of that word in ORS 4190.349(3), and suggests that it intended to require a deeper intellectual and emotional
Thus, it is not difficult for us to conclude that the legislature did not intend to make waiver of juvenile court jurisdiction turn on a youth’s criminal capacity. What the legislature did intend is more difficult. Although it seems that the legislature intended to require that a juvenile court make a finding that a youth have adult-like intellectual and emotional capabilities indicative of blameworthiness, it did not set out with any specificity the standard that a court should use to decide what those capabilities entail and whether a youth has a “sufficient” modicum of those capabilities. It is likely that the adult-like capabilities with which the legislature was concerned were the capabilities that a typical adult would have and that a court would consider in deciding whether a youth is sufficiently blameworthy that adult prosecution is warranted, such as capacities for premeditation and planning, impulse control, and independent judgment. However, the legislature did not specifically describe those capabilities and the words that the legislature used do not permit us to decide, as a matter of law, the capabilities that distinguish a typical adult from a typical youth. As a result, based on its text and context, we interpret ORS 419C.349(3) to permit a juvenile court to determine, as a matter of fact, what those capabilities are and whether a particular youth possesses them to a sufficient extent that the court can conclude that the youth can “appreciate the
D. Legislative History
1. 1985 legislative history
Finally, we examine the provision’s legislative history for evidence that supports or undermines that tentative conclusion. As discussed above, 359 Or at 576, ORS 4190.349(3) is part of a 1985 statute that both lowered the age when a juvenile might be waived into adult court and adopted more stringent standards for all waivers. When the legislature considered the underlying bill, SB 414 (1985), it did not discuss the specific wording of ORS 4190.349(3) that is at issue here in a way that is helpful.18 However, some more general comments by proponents of the bill are suggestive. For example, Senator Nancy Ryles, who introduced the bill, described the bill’s intent as providing a waiver option “for those more mature 14- and 15-year-olds so that those who commit a violent crime will not be prematurely released back into society.” Testimony, Senate Judiciary Committee, SB 414, Apr 25, 1985, Ex B (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles). And other testimony in support of the bill in the 1985 legislature reiterated the theme that the bill was directed at particularly mature 14- and 15-year-olds. Keith Meisenheimer of the Multnomah County District Attorney’s office testified that
“when we retain within the juvenile system individuals whose characteristics and attitudes are more adult than juvenile, who are hardened and immune to programs designed to meet youthful needs, we not only fail to treat those individuals appropriately, but we undermine the program for the youths who are appropriate for it.”
“by reason of advanced maturity, sociopathic character, past record of failure in juvenile court programs, established history of criminal conduct, large size, independence of parental or other adult authority or influence, etc. are dangerous to the community and not amenable to significant rehabilitation in juvenile programs.”
Id. (emphasis added).
Those comments are contrary to the state’s view that the statute only excludes exceptionally immature youths who do not have the mental capacity to understand their conduct and its criminality from the possibility of waiver. They suggest that the legislature intended to require that, to obtain waiver, the state establish that a youth have adult-like capabilities different than those of other youths, who, at age 14, are deemed to have criminal capacity.
We also note that, although the legislature was considering a bill that was directed in part at lowering the age when a youth could be waived into adult court, it continued to be deeply concerned with protecting youth offenders, whom legislators saw as being amenable to rehabilitation and in need of protection. In that respect, it is significant that the bill, for the first time, imposed specific legal requirements as a prerequisite to waiver. Legislators were made aware that, prior to the bill’s enactment, Oregon had one of the highest rates of remand to adult court in the country, as well as a highly inconsistent use of the procedure, largely due to the fact that the existing remand statute provided no standards for remand other than that the juvenile court find that retaining jurisdiction was not in the best interests of the child. By limiting the juvenile court’s authority to remand to specified, more serious offenses, and by providing specific criteria to be considered by the juvenile court when evaluating the remand option, the proponents of SB 414 believed that they would eliminate such “abuses” of the remand option. Testimony, Senate Judiciary Committee, SB 414, Apr 25, 1985, Ex B (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles).
While not wholly incompatible with the interpretation of ORS 419C.349(3) for which the state contends, the generally protective attitude reflected in the foregoing legislative history is more consistent with the idea that juveniles who are cognitively and emotionally average should be adjudicated within the more protective juvenile justice system. In that respect, the legislative history of ORS 419C.349(3) adds some support to the idea that the provision demands an adult-like rather than child-like understanding of the nature, consequences and wrongfulness of a youth’s conduct.
The parties’ other arguments about the 1985 legislative history are, however, unpersuasive. The state finds significance in the fact that, during consideration of the bill, the ACLU suggested that criminal responsibility sufficient
Youth’s primary appeal to SB 414’s legislative history is similarly unpersuasive. It focuses on the fact that proponents of the bill repeatedly stated that, if the bill were enacted, only a few 14- to 15-year-olds would be eligible for waiver each year. In youth’s view, the necessary premise underpinning those statements must have been that the bill set an extremely high threshold for remand—a level of maturity and sophistication that very few 14- and 15-year-olds could possess. However, when the cited statements are read in the context in which they were made, it is clear that the speakers were not referring to the stringency of the “sophistication and maturity” requirement but to the fact that very few 14- and 15-year-olds were committing the kinds of crimes that would trigger eligibility for waiver under the bill. The statements, therefore, add nothing to our present analysis.
2. 1995 and 1983 legislative history
The legislative history associated with two other bills is also potentially relevant here. First, it is important to acknowledge that the waiver statute that applies directly to youth in this case and that incorporates by reference the
The state does rely, however, on the legislative history for another bill—HB 2955 (1983)—which was passed by the House in the 1983 legislative session but which ultimately died in the Senate. SB 414 (1985) was introduced in the 1985 legislature as identical to the engrossed version of the bill that had failed in the prior session. Testimony, Senate Judiciary Committee, SB 414, Apr 25, 1985, Ex B (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles). The state argues that, because the substance of the 1983 bill is the same as the 1985 bill that actually was enacted, the legislative history of the earlier bill is relevant to the legislature’s intent in enacting the later bill. The state begins by noting that, when Senator Ryles introduced HB 2955 (1983) to the House committee to which it had been assigned, she described that bill’s central directive—that the age of waiver be lowered to 14 for violent crimes—as an “exception” to the
“general philosophy that juveniles may be lacking in understanding and information and therefore may not be fully responsible for the crime they have committed and that they should not be typed by past misdeeds but should have the opportunity to grow and change.”
Testimony, House Committee on Judiciary, Subcommittee 1, HB 2955, May 18, 1983, Ex A (statement of Sen Nancy
“We cannot persist in defining juveniles by an arbitrary age limit, ignoring the fact that maturation is a gradual process and that some 14 and 15-year olds may well understand the serious nature of the violent crimes they have committed.”
Id. In the state’s view, those and other comments by Senator Ryles establish that the 1983 bill sought to lower the age of waiver for violent crimes in a way that focused less on the youth’s age and more on the youth’s actual maturity. For instance, the state points to a number of comments by Senator Ryles that suggest that, in her view, most normally-abled 14- and 15-year-olds would pass the threshold test of sophistication and maturity provided in the bill. She explained that the “sufficient sophistication and maturity” criteria would “have the effect of eliminating any consideration of remand if, for example, the juvenile was retarded, too immature to understand the nature of the act, etc.” Testimony, House Committee on Judiciary, HB 2955, June 6, 1983, Exhibit P (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles) (emphasis added). She later testified that the “sufficient sophistication and maturity” criteria was
“the first step one had to do. If you had a child that didn’t know what they had done and couldn’t understand what they had done one really didn’t even need to move to any other criteria. *⅜* I think it should be the number one criteria and the number one thing that we have in there because in case there is a case of a mentally retarded child or someone that is extremely emotionally disturbed or something like that that it’s the criteria the court first looks at and then you begin to measure all these other things to see if remand is the appropriate policy.”
Audio Recording, House Committee on Judiciary, HB 2955, June 6, 1983, Tape 408, Side A (comment of Sen Nancy Ryles) (emphasis added).
The problem with relying on most of those statements is that they were made in the context of the legislature’s consideration of the 1983 bill, which was not enacted,
The state also observes that, during a legislative committee’s consideration of the 1983 bill, the American Civil Liberties Union suggested amendments to the part of the bill that contained the “sufficient sophistication and maturity” requirement. Specifically, the ACLU suggested wording and placement of that requirement that was more in line with those of the Kent criteria: It would be removed from its place as a separate requirement and placed with other criteria to be considered when determining the “best interests” of the youth and the public, and it would look generally at “the sophistication and maturity of the child as determined by consideration of the child’s home environmental situation, emotional attitude and pattern of living!’ Testimony, House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee 1, HB 2955, May 18, 1983, Ex E (statement of George Eder, ACLU). In response to the suggested amendment, Senator Ryles voiced her preference for the original wording and placement because, as a separate requirement, the provision would “have the effect
Again, we do not agree with the state’s assessment of the cited history. The offer and rejection of the ACLU amendment in 1983 shows only that the legislature wished to retain the “sophistication and maturity” wording as a separate threshold provision. Nothing about the fact of the rejection suggests any particular view of the level of sophistication and maturity that the original (retained) wording required. Moreover, the fact that the committee discussed the provision’s origins in the Kent criteria and whether the bill should adhere to Kent's, placement and wording confirms our understanding, expressed above, 359 Or at 584-85, that the legislators understood the provision as being strongly related to Kent’s “sophistication and maturity” criterion.
V. INTERPRETIVE SYNTHESIS
After considering the foregoing legislative history, we affirm our initial conclusion, based on the statute’s text and context, that the requirement that ORS 4190.349(3) imposes is not equivalent to a requirement that a youth have criminal capacity. Rather, to authorize waiver of a youth who otherwise is eligible for waiver under ORS 419C.349 or ORS 419C.352, a juvenile court must find that the youth possesses sufficient adult-like intellectual, social and emotional capabilities to have an adult-like understanding of the significance of his or her conduct, including its wrongfulness and its consequences for the youth, the victim, and others.
In making that determination, a juvenile court will be called on to consider its own knowledge and assessment of the capabilities of typical adults and the capabilities of the particular youth who is subject to waiver and any evidence on that subject that the parties may offer, such as the evidence that the juvenile court in this case considered. With regard to the capabilities of typical adults, a court could, for instance, consider its own understanding and evidence that the parties might offer indicating that adults have an ability to “measure and foresee consequences,” Goldstein, The Insanity Defense at 50, and are significantly better than adolescents at accurately perceiving and weighing risks and benefits. Lita Furby and Ruth Beyth-Marom, Risk Taking in Adolescence: A Decision-Making Perspective, 12 Developmental Rev 1, 17 n 4, 9-11 (1992); Bonnie L. Halpern-Felsher & Elizabeth Cauffman, Costs and Benefits of a Decision: Decision-Making Competence in Adolescents and Adults, 22 J Applied Dev Psych 257 (2001); Barry C. Feld, Adolescent Criminal Responsibility, Proportionality and Sentencing Policy: Roper Graham, Miller /Jackson and the Youth Discount, 31 Law and Ineq 273, 284-90 (2013).
We cite those types of considerations and that type evidence not as fact, but as illustrative of considerations and evidence that, under our interpretation of ORS 419C.349(3), a juvenile court may find helpful in deciding what constitutes an adult-like capacity to “appreciate,” or comprehend, with heightened understanding and judgment, an act’s consequences and wrongfulness. After arriving at
VI. APPLICATION
In this case, the juvenile court did not undertake that kind of analysis. The court’s findings, boiled down to their essence, were that youth understood and acknowledged his own role in the murder and knew that it constituted a crime and would carry criminal consequences. Those findings demonstrate the youth’s knowledge of his physical conduct and its physical consequences and criminality. They do not demonstrate or even relate to the question of whether the youth had the adult-like capacities that would allow him
The judgment of the juvenile court and the decision of the Court of Appeals are reversed, and the case is remanded to the juvenile court for further consideration.
1.
In its introduction to the issues to be decided, the juvenile court stated:
“If at the time of the alleged offense Youth was older than age 12 and under the age of 15, the state must establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the best interest of the youth and society justify that Youth be prosecuted as an adult. The foregoing consideration is informed by the youth’s sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct of the alleged offense together with an evaluation of the amenability of youth to rehabilitation and treatment available to the juvenile court and the adult court. Specific consideration is given to the nature of the alleged crime, the youth’s prior history treatment and efforts, youth’s prior record of behavior that would be crimes if committed by an adult, the violent and willful naturePage 567of the alleged acts, the physical, emotional and mental health of the youth, and the premeditated, willful nature of the alleged offense.”
(Emphasis added.) As youth observes, that statement suggests that the juvenile court may have viewed the “sophistication and maturity” determination of ORS 4190.349(3) as one of many considerations going to the discretionary “best interest of the youth and of society” determination required by ORS 419C.349 (4), rather than—as the legislature clearly intended it—a stand-alone requirement for waiver.
2.
Although the aggravated murder charge was the only charge against youth that was waivable under ORS 419C.352, the nonwaivable robbery and weapons charges were consolidated “for purposes of conducting the adjudicatory hearing” under ORS 419C.358.
3.
In the meantime, youth’s criminal prosecution proceeded in Washington County Circuit Court. He was adjudged guilty of aggravated murder and other crimes and sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 30 years. The Court of Appeals has ordered that his appeal from that conviction and sentence be held in abeyance pending resolution of the present case.
4.
The Court of Appeals opinion was not unanimous. In a dissenting opinion, Judge Egan, joined by Judge Ortega, took the position that the majority’s reliance on the common-law predecessor to the criminal insanity defense statute was inappropriate and that an interpretation based on the ordinary meaning of the statutory terms supported youth’s view that ORS 419C.349(3) required an “individualized consideration of a youth’s developmental capabilities—and not just a low-threshold inquiry of the youth’s intellectual ability to ‘know’ or ‘understand’ that he or she committed a criminal act.” 268 Or App at 555 (Egan, J., dissenting).
5.
The criteria referenced in ORS 419C.349(4) are:
“(a) The amenability of the youth to treatment and rehabilitation given the techniques, facilities and personnel for rehabilitation available to the juvenile court and to the criminal court which would have jurisdiction after transfer;
“(b) The protection required by the community, given the seriousness of the offense alleged;
“(c) The aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner in which the offense was alleged to have been committed;
“(d) The previous history of the youth, including:
“(A) Prior treatment efforts and out-of-home placements; and
“(B) The physical, emotional and mental health of the youth;
“(e) The youth’s prior record of acts which would be crimes if committed by an adult;
“(f) The gravity of the loss, damage or injury caused or attempted during the offense;
“(g) The prosecutive merit of the case against the youth; and
“(h) The desirability of disposing of all cases in one trial if there were adult co-offenders.”
6.
In 1994, voters adopted Measure 11, which required that youths 15 year of age or older who were charged with Measure 11 crimes be tried in adult court. In 1995, in response to Measure 11, the legislature amended the waiver statutes to permit waiver of youths under the age of 15 on the condition (1) that the youth was represented by counsel during the waiver proceedings, (2) that the juvenile court made the findings specified in ORS 4190.349(3) and (4); and (3) that the youth was alleged to have committed an act that if committed by an adult would constitute one or more of four specified crimes, one of which was murder. Or Laws 1995, ch 422, § 78. Those provisions of the 1995 statute are codified at ORS 419C.352. The statute also lowered the age of criminal responsibility to 12, so that children under that age would not be exposed to the newly adopted possibility of waiver for youths “under the age of 15.” Or Laws 1995, ch 422, § 58. Thus, the 1995 statute made the requirement of ORS 4190.349(3) at issue in this case, that the “youth at the time of the alleged offense was of sufficient sophistication and maturity to appreciate the nature and quality of the conduct involved” applicable to 12-, 13-, and 14-year-old offenders who are charged with murder. However, as discussed later in this opinion, there is no evidence in the 1995 statute itself or its legislative history of an intent to alter the meaning given to ORS 4190.349(3) by the 1985 legislature.
7.
That statute remained in effect until 1995, when the legislature amended it to lower the age of criminal responsibility to 12. Or Laws 1995, ch 422, § 58.
8.
The current juvenile code includes a provision that permits a juvenile court to find a juvenile responsible except for insanity if the court determines that the youth “as a result of mental disease or defect at the time the youth committed the act alleged in the petition, the youth lacked substantial capacity either to appreciate the nature and quality of the act or to conform the youth’s conduct to the requirements of law.” ORS 419C.411(2). That provision was not a part of the juvenile code when ORS 4190.349(3) was enacted.
9.
In 1985, the statute was codified as ORS 419C.533(l)(c).
10.
We generally use the term “waiver” in lieu of the term “remand.” The term “remand” was used in the 1985 legislation.
We generally use the modern term “youth” to refer to a person under the age of 18. The terms “child” and “juvenile” have also been used for that purpose and the term “child” was used in the 1985 legislation.
11.
“Sophistication” is defined primarily by reference to the related adjective, “sophisticated.” To be “sophisticated” is to be “deprived of native or original simplicity” or “worldly-wise, knowing.” Webster’s at 2174.
12.
“Sufficient” means to be “marked by quantity, scope, power or quality to meet with the demands, wants, or needs of a situation or of a proposed use or end.” Webster’s at 2284.
13.
Webster’s, at 1252, defines “know” as “to have cognizance, consciousness, or awareness of something : be aware of the existence or fact of something.”
14.
The text of ORS 161.295 is set above, 359 Or at 574.
15.
The criteria were set out in a policy memorandum, which the Court appended to its decision. They included:
“1. The seriousness of the alleged offense to the community and whether the protection of the community requires waiver.
“2. Whether the alleged offense was committed in an aggressive, violent, premeditated or willful manner.
“3. Whether the alleged offense was against persons or against property, greater weight being given to offenses against persons especially if personal injury resulted.
“4. The prosecutive merit of the complaint, i.e., whether there is evidence upon which a Grand Jury may be expected to return an indictment (to be determined by consultation with the United States Attorney).
“5. The desirability of trial and disposition of the entire offense in one court when the juvenile’s associates in the alleged offense are adults who will be charged with a crime in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.
“6. The sophistication and maturity of the juvenile as determined by consideration of his home, environmental situation, emotional attitude and pattern of living.
“7. The record and previous history of the juvenile, including previous contacts with the Youth Aid Division, other law enforcement agencies, juvenile courts and other jurisdictions, prior periods of probation to this Court, or prior commitments to juvenile institutions.
“8. The prospects for adequate protection of the public and the likelihood of reasonable rehabilitation of the juvenile (if he is found to have committed the alleged offense) by the use of procedures, services and facilities currently available to the Juvenile Court.”
Kent, 383 US at 566-67.
16.
In addition, the legislative history of the bill that eventually was enacted as ORS 419C.349 shows that the bill’s proponents repeatedly referred to the Kent criteria as a source for its waiver criteria, see, e.g., Minutes, Senate Judiciary Committee, SB 414, Apr 25, 1985 (Judge Albin Norblad maintained that the sophistication and maturity criteria from Kent was absorbed into portion of bill that became ORS 4190.349(3)), and that the chief proponent, Senator Nancy Ryles, specifically alluded to sophistication and maturity as a test taken from the Kent decision, see Testimony, House Committee on Judiciary, Subcommittee 1, SB 414, May 30 1985, Ex. A-l (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles). We provide this legislative history somewhat out of order in our analysis of ORS 4190.349(3) only to establish that Kent and its waiver criteria are important context for understanding what the legislature intended by the provision’s “sophistication and maturity” wording.
17.
One student of the issue has observed that juvenile courts use the concepts of sophistication and maturity in a number of ways when making remand decisions, leading to a conclusion that courts are interested in
“whether youth have been committing crimes ‘like adults’ or whether youth’s crimes have occurred in the context of immature impulsiveness and without adult capacities to weigh the consequences before they acted. The implication is that youth who are less mature, and therefore less capable of understanding the implications of their actions and regulating their behavior, are less appropriate subjects for criminal adjudication.
“Commentators have proposed that courts may see very immature youth as less appropriate subjects for criminal court for two reasons. They may be perceived as less blameworthy because of their immaturity, so that the more severe sentences associated with criminal prosecution are less appropriate. Less mature youth might also be perceived as less competent to participate in criminal proceedings. That is, their immature cognitive and emotional characteristics raise doubt about their capacities to participate in their trials in a manner that satisfies due process regarding the competence of defendants to stand trial.”
Thomas Grasso, Clinicians’ Transfer Evaluations: How Well Can They Assist Judicial Discretion?, 71 La L Rev 157, 181-82 (2010) (emphasis in original; footnote omitted).
18.
With regard to the “sufficient sophistication and maturity” wording, Senator Nancy Ryles did, at one point, attempt to explain: “So you’re really saying yes, the person knew what they did, they knew the consequences of what they did, and they were of sufficient maturity to understand that at the time.” Audio Recording, House Committee on Judiciary, Subcommittee 1, SB 414, May 30, 1985, Tape 692 (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles). That statement, however, does not advance our inquiry because it does not discuss what is necessary to establish “sufficient maturity.”
19.
Senator Ryles did repeat, in her opening statements to committees considering the 1985 bill, her suggestion that the bill proposed an exception to the general philosophy that juveniles lack understanding and therefore “may not be fully responsible” for their crimes, and her statement that some 14- and 15-year-olds “may well understand the serious nature of the violent crime they have committed.” Testimony, Senate Judiciary Committee, SB 414 (1985), Apr 25, 1985, Ex B (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles); Testimony, House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee 1, SB 414 (1985), May 30, 1985, Ex A-l (statement of Sen Nancy Ryles). Those statements are rather general, however, and do not appear to undermine our general sense that the 1985 legislature continued to have a generally protective attitude toward juveniles and that it had more adult-like capacities in mind when it enacted the “sophistication and maturity” wording of ORS 419C.349 (3).