Child Endangerment in Criminal Law

Child endangerment is a criminal offense that involves the subjection of minor children to inappropriate or dangerous situations. It is not the same as child abuse, which involves direct harm to children, but carries a similar penalty in the American judicial system.

Often, parents and others responsible for children break child endangerment laws without realizing that their behavior is criminal. For example, a father who has too many drinks while he is watching his four-year-old son could be prosecuted for child endangerment because he was inebriated
 while he was responsible for a child. Other examples might include exposing children to illegal drugs, pornography, firearms, chemicals, criminal activity and domestic violence. The purpose of child endangerment laws is to keep children from witnessing adult or illegal activity, and to protect them from situations in which they might get hurt.

Most child endangerment cases are discovered during the investigation of other crimes. For example, people who operate methamphetamine labs out of their homes often have children, and when the meth labs are discovered, the owners are additionally charged with child endangerment. On a lesser scale, parents who are pulled over for speeding can also be charged with child endangerment if infants are not secured in car seats or if children are not wearing their seat belts.

Another controversial area of child endangerment law concerns the decision of parents who neglect to provide their children with medical treatment for religions reasons. Christian Science parents, for example, believe in the healing power of prayer and do not seek medical attention when their children fall ill or become injured.

In some states, parents cannot be charged with child endangerment because of religious beliefs, but recent statistical analyses might change those laws in the near future. For example, a young boy in Utah died last year because he had juvenile diabetes and his condition was not monitored by a professional. When the medical examiner found that the child was suffering from diabetes, an investigation was launched.

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My neighbor has placed a basketball hoop for his children on the street. Now they treat the street as if it is their basketball court and stop traffic. Isn't this endangerment, to encourage children to play in the street?

Posted on 05/29/2009 at 7:05:01 PM

Pardon typos in previous comment. In NM walls are as common as fences. It is an old Spanish tradition. Who would be responsible for an injury if a child fell off the wall and landed on my property?

Posted on 05/22/2009 at 6:05:46 PM

The neighbors 4 year old daughter and her friends play on the wall that separates our properties. I asked the oldest son (16 or 17) to please stop allowing them to get on the wall. It is 6 feet high. They craw on itand hang off it. In addition, they taunt my dogs. The son told me that I have no business telling his family to keep children off the wall. I built the wall for privacy. Is allowing these children on the wall child endangerment?

Posted on 05/22/2009 at 6:05:55 PM

what if your grandkids are in a house where there is a sell of drugs and mental and verbal and physical abuse to their caregiver but she is in denial? what would you do?

Posted on 05/17/2009 at 12:05:29 AM

Jayson, I doubt very seriously that you are guilty of any crime. Things like that are accidents, not meant to cause any harm. There was no criminal intent in what you did, no willful act of negligence.

Posted on 05/10/2009 at 2:05:55 PM

i was babysitting my niece and she found out how to open the front door and she ran a couple blocks while i was in the basement for about 5 minutes... it was the worst day of my life by far because i love her so much and i never want anything bad to happen to her... i'm a minor at the age of 16 so i was wondering what will i get charged with? and her parents wont get charged right?

Posted on 05/10/2009 at 1:05:06 PM

ryan your pretty safe from my point of view from what ive been reading....you had no intention of causing harm physically mentaly or morally. and thus you were not driving like a mad man..

Posted on 05/08/2009 at 9:05:42 PM

ohhh yes you are scared

Posted on 05/08/2009 at 9:05:09 PM

I am a teacher. I loaned my keys to a student who I thought was a liscensed driver in order to repair a project that was part of his grade in a nother class. He totaled my car and it turned out he was not a liscensed driver. Am I at risk for child endagerment charges?

Posted on 05/01/2009 at 8:05:01 PM

I took my 16-month daughter literally to the street behind my house and back on my motorcycle going under 10mph. Yes I know it may have been unsafe and a witness called the police and they are thinking about giving me a child endangerment charge. Is there anything I can do, I am a safe parent.

Posted on 05/01/2009 at 6:05:23 PM

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