Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

They Broke the Law - You Be the Judge: True Cases of Teen Crime

Rate this book
A judge provides a look at the juvenile justice system.

213 pages, Library Binding

First published January 1, 2003

22 people are currently reading
159 people want to read

About the author

Thomas A. Jacobs

25 books4 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
36 (34%)
4 stars
33 (32%)
3 stars
20 (19%)
2 stars
11 (10%)
1 star
3 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
1 review
March 30, 2023
They Broke the Law--You be the Judge: True cases of teen crime by Thomas A, Jacobs. like many stories one that stood out to me was Adams, 15 and made a threat at school, and I have to try and give him a punishment according to his baackground and his crime. Conflict he faces was threating the school, I think he overcomes this by doing better in school and dealing with the cosequences and trying to become better. Out of all the book I think Adam was my favorite, the book made me feel good because it was super intersting and although this book is based off real life people it made me becolme more open minded with these type of situations. Me personally I love true crime and althought these arent harsh crimes I still love it because I goit to decide on the ounsihment and it made me feel like a real life judge for a bit. I woul;d recommen d this book to anyone who has interest in crime, maybe kids my age as well.
Profile Image for ☠︎︎༒︎✞︎ ѕℓιм ☠︎︎༒︎✞︎ .
1,536 reviews102 followers
March 24, 2018
This book wasn't used for this class, I am not sure why it was required at all. But I liked this book. And how it talked about the crimes and cases of different teenagers. I kept this book in the section where the books like romance, crime, etc are located in my house. I didn't want to put it near all of my college books. Because I thought this book was a bit more interesting than the others, and I wanted to learn and read more on the cases of these teenagers.
Profile Image for Cris.
2,304 reviews26 followers
April 20, 2019
Judge Thomas Jacobs writes about preteens and teens who have committed different offenses and landed before him. He gives background informant on each child, age, home life, previous run ins, if any, siblings, financial stability. Then he tells you how the crime happened, asks what you you think should happen. He follows up with what he did, why he did it. Usually there is a letter from the child, and a follow up letting you know how the child turned up. It was a very interesting book.
Profile Image for Myrtle.
290 reviews1 follower
November 13, 2025
If I was in a class that used this book, then maybe it would appeal more but not really for me. Also, some of it like the letters definitelyyyy seemed made up.
Profile Image for Lorena Gomez.
10 reviews
April 13, 2009

This book "They Broke The Law You Be The Judge"
It is actaually an intresting Book because your actually knowin TRUE teen crimes and what they did. But what I like most about this book is that it not only tells you what they did but how they felt during probation and it shows a actaull letter they wrote to the judge about sending them home.. And then after they go to jail but some fo home it writes about how their live changed or if they kept doing crimes
To me it is a fasnating book i relly enjoyed it and i read it again!
But the secound time wasent boring but i alredy knew what was gonna happen ! =)
Its a fasanating book with non stop action and wired expections
Akid 7years old treatning his mom ??
What I dint Like was how the author dint inclufe how they changes like if their relationship change after going to probation what I mean is that in the book it has a crime of a boy treatnig a mom but it dosent mention after words is he still mad at the mom what happens??
You can find it in the non-fiction bins !
38 reviews1 follower
March 11, 2015
Nonfiction
Grades Eight- Twelve
Summary:
These are real cases of teen crimes that came through Judge Thomas Jacobs' courtroom.
Evaluation:
This is an introduction to the juvenile system. Teen are mostly scared when entering the court but on the end find themselves also sorry.There were twenty-one cases of teens being charged with crimes such as robbing people, breaking into houses, car thief, drug possession and a host of others. The judge listed the cases and went through each one giving the sentencing he felt best in solving the case. This was a good overview of things a teenager can do to get into trouble with the law. This judge seem to be caring but he has to pick his sentences from a list. The title and front book cover will catch your attention. Student may not have being in the system but they are aware of others. I see the book as a source of information, entertainment or maybe a warning.
Profile Image for Faith.
20 reviews2 followers
November 6, 2008
This book is listed as a choice for reluctant readers. I can definitely see why. Besides the obvious appeal of teen delinquency, this book has a very interactive lay out. There are insets, handwritten letters, graphics etc., that would help hold a reluctant or unskilled reader's attention. The book portrays real cases of teen crime, and the punishments these teens received from the judge/author. The best part is, the book has a lot of critical thinking questions for students to consider. These questions help students recognize actions and their consequences, predict outcomes, make inferences, justify their own moral reasoning, and it even allows for role play! I think it is a great tool to engage a single student or a class. If they can do these things with real situations, they can learn to apply the same skills academically to books for class!
Profile Image for Amy Diop.
47 reviews5 followers
January 14, 2014
I thought True Cases of Teen Crime was really interesting. It was so astonishing to think that these kids who are my age are getting in to lots of trouble out of serious crimes for example getting caught with marijuana, crystal meth, cocaine, assaulting their parents, stealing things with an expensive value, hiding pipe bombs, threatening to murder a whole school, burglary, selling drugs, getting caught with a gun and drinking under age. It is kind of crazy to think how kids my age could do all these crazy things when they are so young. Some of these kids who committed these crimes just made a silly mistake and learned their lesson from consequences. Most of the kids though continued to do these horrible things after they completed their consequences time. Which caused them to suffer longer.
Profile Image for Duane.
1,448 reviews19 followers
July 18, 2010
This book focuses on teen crimes and how judges can try to intervene so they can turn their life around. Done with great group discussion questions, this book would be a great book to read as a group. The author does a great job of giving the reader plenty of information about the teen, so the reader can make their own decisions on how best to rule in the teens case. An interesting side to this book is that it actually covers real cases, so the author gives us information on why he made those rulings and if they worked or not in helping the teen turn themselves around. A great book for anyone interested in juvenile crime or casework. This book does not read as a typical boring non-fiction, but rather would be good for reluctant teen readers.
Profile Image for stephanie.
1,209 reviews473 followers
November 1, 2007
this is kind of genius. really. i have a feeling this is going to totally engage my kids. the concept is great: real, true stories of kids who have faced sentencing.

you get the background on the kid, you get the law, you get the options of sentencing, and all the stuff that is necessary for actual judge to sentence someone. and then there's what the judge actually decided, and the outcome - how the kids were years after.

it's totally awesome. really. and for my kids, who at 12, can recite all the reasons you want to get in the juvenile system, this is possibly what i can get them totally engaged in.

i LOVE this book.
Profile Image for Mark Flowers.
569 reviews24 followers
April 5, 2010
A juvenile court judge offers the true life stories of 21 teens seen by him in his court in this interactive book, which asks readers to participate in the process of sifting through evidence to try to find an appropriate sentence for each offender. Unexamined is the concept that some teens who come before a juvenile court judge may actually be innocent.
19 reviews2 followers
Read
June 4, 2012
at first i thought that this book would suck but it was turned out to be ok because of the way it had some interesting stries of teen crime. the one thing I did not like about this book was that it asked you what you would have done, and i always felt very uneasy and unsure so i always skipped that part, which made the book considerably better
Profile Image for Amber.
27 reviews
March 8, 2009
I completely loved this book. It told of true teen crimes,the before,after,and an update of the teens.It made me feel like i was actually a judge,like i could make the actual decision. It was just AMAZING.
Profile Image for Ruth.
71 reviews
July 10, 2015
I wasn't too fond of this book. I thought it would be really interesting--I'd get to read about juvenile court cases, decide whether I thought they got what they deserved or not. But it was actually quite boring. All the stories started to sound the same very soon on.
1 review
November 5, 2012
its a very good book it teaches you about being a judge and a lawyer
1 review
April 2, 2014
i love this i like how the author is descriptive in case my most like case is Adam case i think u should publish another or similar book like this.
1 review1 follower
September 24, 2014
I would recommend this book to a friend because this book was really good.I think they would like it because this book makes u wonder why, this book makes u wan't to read more and more.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.