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Tahlequah attorney, Ryan Cannonie, delves deeper into what is an adjudication. So adjudication, in a juvenile deprived case, is kind of like a beginning trial. So you can have a hearing on it. You don't get to have a jury, it'd be with a judge, or you can agree and say, "Yep. I agree with whatever the issues are, that I have problems with drugs or alcohol or domestic violence is a problem in the home, or there was some type of medical neglect, and I want to work a treatment plan," or if you're in tribal court, a case plan, "to get my kids back." So at adjudication, it's basically like finding you guilty of child abuse or neglect without actually a finding of guilt. That means that it's not a criminal offense. You're not going to be sentenced for it or punished for it. What it's doing is you acknowledging that yes, something was wrong, I want to work this plan and fix it. Or if they don't have the evidence and we fight it and we go to trial on it, and the judge disagrees and says there is evidence, then it's the court saying, "Nope, something's wrong. I want you to work this plan." So that's how adjudication works, or what it means. Adjudication happens near the beginning of a case. So you have your emergency custody, then you have your adjudication after that. So what are your options in adjudication? Well, you can fight it and have a hearing on it. If you win, you get your kids back. If you don't win, you work a plan. You can agree If the evidence is overwhelming, there are some times where it's better just to agree and start working your plan. There are some times it's better to fight it. It just depends on what the evidence is against you, and all that comes down to a case-by-case basis. Need An Attorney? Give us a call at 918-879-1681 or submit a legal question at https://www.tahlequahattorney.com/ Want The Transcript? https://www.tahlequahattorney.com/tah... Join The Group! Have an Oklahoma legal question? There's a Facebook Group for that. Join me and the discussion by clicking the link and hitting "Join:" / oklahoma.legal.questions