In August 2020, in the midst of a national conversation about racism in the United States, news of a Black eight-year-old boy being arrested for sitting improperly in the school cafeteria spread through the country.1 Body-camera footage showed police attempting to place the boy in handcuffs that slipped from his wrists before they took him to a juvenile detention facility where he was charged with felony battery. The boy's mother and lawyer reported that following arrest, he experienced somatic and trauma symptoms, including headaches, nightmares, and insomnia. His story, and the attention it garnered, illustrate the importance of the growing movement to establish a national minimum age of juvenile justice jurisdiction-an age below which a child cannot be prosecuted in juvenile court. We call upon child and adolescent psychiatrists to join this movement as a critical tool for promoting mental health and racial equity for children.
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