6340 - Consent decree.

     § 6340.  Consent decree.        (a)  General rule.--At any time after the filing of a     petition and before the entry of an adjudication order, the     court may, on motion of the district attorney or of counsel for     the child, suspend the proceedings, and continue the child under     supervision in his own home, under terms and conditions     negotiated with the probation services and agreed to by all     parties affected. The order of the court continuing the child     under supervision shall be known as a consent decree.        (b)  Objection.--Where the child or the district attorney     objects to a consent decree, the court shall proceed to     findings, adjudication and disposition.        (c)  Duration of decree.--A consent decree shall remain in     force for six months unless the child is discharged sooner by     probation services with the approval of the court. Upon     application of the probation services or other agency     supervising the child, made before expiration of the six-month     period, a consent decree may be extended by the court for an     additional six months.        (c.1)  Terms and conditions.--Consistent with the protection     of the public interest, the terms and conditions of a consent     decree may include payment by the child of reasonable amounts of     money as costs, fees or restitution, including a supervision fee     and contribution to 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), and     shall, as appropriate to the circumstances of each case, include     provisions which provide balanced attention to the protection of     the community, accountability for offenses committed and the     development of competencies to enable the child to become a     responsible and productive member of the community.        (d)  Reinstatement of petition.--If prior to discharge by the     probation services or expiration of the consent decree, a new     petition is filed against the child, or the child otherwise     fails to fulfill express terms and conditions of the decree, the     petition under which the child was continued under supervision     may, in the discretion of the district attorney following     consultation with the probation services, be reinstated and the     child held accountable as if the consent decree had never been     entered.        (e)  Effect of decree.--A child who is discharged by the     probation services, or who completes a period of supervision     without reinstatement of the original petition, shall not again     be proceeded against in any court for the same offense alleged     in the petition or an offense based upon the same conduct.     (Apr. 28, 1978, P.L.202, No.53, eff. 60 days; Dec. 11, 1986,     P.L.1521, No.165, eff. 60 days; Nov. 17, 1995, 1st Sp.Sess.,     P.L.1127, No.33, eff. 120 days; Nov. 30, 2004, P.L.1703, No.217,     eff. imd.)        2004 Amendment.  Act 217 amended subsec. (c.1).        1986 Amendment.  Act 165 amended subsec. (b).        1978 Amendment.  Act 53 amended subsec. (c).        Suspension by Court Rule.  Subsection (c) was suspended by     Pennsylvania Rule of Juvenile Court Procedure No. 800(13),     amended December 30, 2005, insofar as it is inconsistent with     the requirement of Rule 373 relating to conditions of consent     decree.