California Law (Last Updated: March 4, 2014) |
Welfare and Institutions Code - WIC |
Division 2. CHILDREN |
Part 1. DELINQUENTS AND WARDS OF THE JUVENILE COURT |
Chapter 2. Juvenile Court Law |
ARTICLE 1. General Provisions |
Section 207.2.
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(a) A minor who is held in temporary custody in a law enforcement facility that contains a lockup for adults pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 207.1 may be released to a parent, guardian, or responsible relative by the law enforcement agency operating the facility, or may at the discretion of the law enforcement agency be released into his or her own custody, provided that a minor released into his or her own custody is furnished, upon request, with transportation to his or her home or to the place where the minor was taken into custody.
(b) In addition to the liability established by any other provision of law, a parent or guardian of a minor who has been held in temporary custody in a law enforcement facility pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 207.1 shall be liable for the reasonable costs of transporting the minor to a juvenile facility and for the costs of the minor's food, shelter, and care at the juvenile facility when all of the following circumstances are applicable:
(1) The parent or guardian has received actual notice by telephone or by written communication from the law enforcement agency that the minor is scheduled for release and that the parent is requested to take delivery of the minor at the law enforcement facility, in person or through a responsible relative, by a time certain which shall be no later than six hours from the time the minor was placed in temporary custody at the law enforcement facility. The notice shall inform the parent or guardian of the financial liability created by this section.
(2) It is reasonably possible for the parent or guardian to take delivery, in person or through a responsible relative, of the minor at the law enforcement facility within the custody time limit identified by the law enforcement agency in the request to take delivery of the minor.
(3) The parent or guardian states a refusal to accept release of the minor or fails to make a reasonable effort to take timely delivery of the minor, in person or through a responsible relative, in accordance with the request of the law enforcement agency.
(c) The liability established by this section, when combined with any other liability arising under Section 903, shall not exceed one hundred dollars ($100) for each 24-hour period, beginning when notice of release was actually received, in which a notified parent or guardian has failed to make a reasonable effort to take custody of the minor, in person or through a responsible relative, at the law enforcement facility or at a juvenile facility to which the minor is subsequently transferred.
(d) The liability established by this section shall be limited by the financial ability of the parents, guardians, or other persons to pay. Any parent, guardian, or other person who is assessed under this section shall, upon request, be entitled to an evaluation and determination of ability to pay under Section 903.45. Any parent, guardian, or other person who is assessed under this section shall also be entitled, upon petition, to a hearing in the juvenile court on the issues of liability and ability to pay.