“In 1917, Minnesota created its juvenile justice system with the goal of protecting and caring for juveniles. The Minnesota Supreme Court interpreted the state's right to "step in and save the child" as more important than the juvenile's right to freedom. Consistent with this parental role, Minnesota designed its juvenile justice system based on the rehabilitative philosophy which held that the juvenile justice system was "designed to secure the welfare of delinquent children and not to punish them." The courts recognized that there were "many wayward, incorrigible, and neglected children" who needed to be "humanely cared for, guided into paths of rectitude and right living, and protected from
“In 1917, Minnesota created its juvenile justice system with the goal of protecting and caring for juveniles. The Minnesota Supreme Court interpreted the state's right to "step in and save the child" as more important than the juvenile's right to freedom. Consistent with this parental role, Minnesota designed its juvenile justice system based on the rehabilitative philosophy which held that the juvenile justice system was "designed to secure the welfare of delinquent children and not to punish them." The courts recognized that there were "many wayward, incorrigible, and neglected children" who needed to be "humanely cared for, guided into paths of rectitude and right living, and protected from