Visitation at District Vi Juvenile Detention Center, ID

How to visit, scheduling, dress code, and visitor requirements

Overview

Visiting District Vi Juvenile Detention Center starts with getting approved. You'll need to submit a visiting application and pass a background check before you can schedule a visit. Once you're cleared, staff will notify the resident. Visits may be in-person, non-contact, or video-based. The available formats, hours, and scheduling method can vary, so confirm the current options before you go. Adult visitors need valid photo identification. Minors typically need a minor application plus documents like a birth certificate or guardianship papers. If a youth is kept in detention, a Detention Hearing is scheduled within 24 hours (except weekends and holidays) to review continued detention. If you're on probation or parole, get written approval from your officer first. Do not attempt to visit if a no-contact order applies.

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Quick Facts

  • A Detention Hearing for a youth held in detention must be scheduled within 24 hours, excluding weekends and holidays.
  • You must complete a visiting application and pass a background check and receive approval before visiting.
  • Adult visitors need a valid photo ID; minors usually require a minor application and documents such as a birth certificate or guardianship papers.
  • Visits may be in-person, non-contact, or video; scheduling methods and hours vary, so confirm the facility's current options before you go.

Visitation Guides

Visitation

How to Visit District Vi Juvenile Detention Center, ID (ID)

If your child is held at District Vi Juvenile Detention Center, one deadline matters immediately: a Detention Hearing must be scheduled within 24 hours (weekends and holidays excluded). At that hearing, the court decides whether your child stays in detention, goes home, or is placed in an alternate setting until the next court date. Expect the early intake steps to move fast. Families are notified of custody as soon as possible, and youth may be fingerprinted and photographed during processing. In some cases, a youth can be released to a parent who signs a written promise to bring them to court at a stated time, unless a judge orders otherwise or release is not considered to promote the welfare of the community or the youth. This page covers what's confirmed about the detention timeline. Visiting hours, approval requirements, ID rules, and what you can bring are not addressed by the available information here. You'll need to confirm those details directly with the facility or the juvenile court.

Common Questions

How do I get approved to visit District Vi Juvenile Detention Center, ID?

Complete the facility's visiting application and submit to the required background check. Once you're approved, staff will notify the resident. Then you can schedule your visit using the facility's process (confirm the current format and hours first).

What ID and documents do I need to bring to a visit?

Adults need valid government-issued photo identification. Minors typically need a minor application along with documents like a birth certificate or guardianship papers.

If my child is detained at District Vi Juvenile Detention Center, when will there be a detention hearing?

A Detention Hearing is scheduled within 24 hours of detention, except on weekends and holidays. The hearing decides whether the youth stays in detention until the next hearing.

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