A court may issue an order or orders setting conditions as part of release pending further hearing; as part of an informal adjustment; as part of a grant of probation; as part of a probated commitment; as part of court-monitored probation; or for any other reason during the pendency of a case.
Ky. Prov. Juv. Ct. R. P. & Prac. JCRPP 18
Commentary
Contempt is neither a status nor a public offense. KRS 600.020(65) and (51). The court designated worker is authorized to process "complaints" which allege either a public or status offense. KRS 600.020(15). Allegations must be sufficient to initiate formal court action. Contempt is not an offense which initiates a formal court action since the child is already in court.
Commentary
The inherent contempt power of the court is not diminished by the statutes referenced in the JCRPP because the statutory language simply defines the process to be applied in a dispositional option under KRS 635.060, and sets a timeframe for the imposition of detention for contempt. As a matter of policy the graduated sanctions that are to be applied to children on probation shall also be applied by the court on pendente lite orders.