1. Summary offenses. (a) Review.-- (1) Upon notice being certified to the court that a child has failed to comply with a
Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes
Section: 63041
Jurisdiction: PA
Bluebook Citation: 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 63041
§ 6304.1. Summary offenses. (a) Review.-- (1) Upon notice being certified to the court that a child has failed to comply with a
lawful sentence imposed for a summary offense, a probation officer shall review the
complaints and charges of delinquency pursuant to section 6304 (relating to powers
and duties of probation officers) for the purpose of considering the commencement
of proceedings under this chapter. (2) A proceeding commenced under the review in this subsection is a separate action from
the underlying summary conviction. For the purposes of proceedings commenced under
this section, failure to comply with a lawful sentence imposed for a summary offense
is an alleged delinquent act. (3) Any reference to the underlying summary conviction is solely for the purpose of the
certification from the magisterial district judge to the court of common pleas that
the juvenile was convicted of the summary offense and failed to comply under section
4132(2) (relating to attachment and summary punishment for contempts). (b) Administration of money.-- Any money subsequently paid by the child pursuant to the disposition of the charges
shall be administered and disbursed in accordance with written guidelines adopted
by the president judge of the court of common pleas. The court may direct that any
portion of the money received from the child shall be deposited into a restitution
fund established by the president judge of the court of common pleas pursuant to section
6352(a)(5) (relating to disposition of delinquent child). (Nov. 30, 2004, P.L.1703, No.217, eff. imd.; June 28, 2018, P.L.361, No.49, eff. 60
days) 2018 Amendment. Act 49 amended subsec. (a). 2004 Amendment. Act 217 added section 6304.1.
Chat with this statute using AI
Ask CiteLaw's AI Navigator anything about this statute, verify citations, and research related authorities. Sign up for CiteLaw free today to get started.