Title 18 › Part PART IV— - CORRECTION OF YOUTHFUL OFFENDERS › Chapter CHAPTER 403— - JUVENILE DELINQUENCY › § 5038
Keep juvenile court records private and only share them when needed. Records can be given to other courts, to agencies writing presentence reports, to law enforcement for investigations or hiring, to treatment facility directors in writing, to agencies checking someone for a job that affects national security, or to victims (or the victim’s immediate family) about the final court result. The court must tell the child and their parent or guardian in writing about record rights. During a case, only the judge, the child’s and government lawyers, or others allowed above can see the records. If a juvenile is found guilty of a crime that would be a violent felony or one of the drug offenses listed in sections 401, 1001(a), 1005, or 1009, the child must be fingerprinted and photographed. If the child stays in juvenile court, those prints and photos are released only as above. If prosecuted as an adult, they are treated like adult records. A juvenile with two past adjudications for those serious crimes, or one after his 13th birthday for the offense referenced in the second sentence of the fourth paragraph of section 5032, must have the adjudication details (name, date, court, offenses, sentence) sent to the FBI and marked as juvenile adjudications.
Full Legal Text
Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 5038
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73