“…The Comprehensive Strategy for Serious, Violent, and Chronic Juvenile Offenders and the notion of progressively graduated sanctions (Howell, ; Wilson and Howell, ), encompassed by the “risk principle” of matching the intensity of services to the risk to reoffend level of the youth, provides a core model of how cases should be handled within a juvenile justice system. Reserving the deepest end placements for the highest risk youth who have been unsuccessful in less intensive placements is not only fiscally responsible, by targeting limited resources to those most in need of services and who pose the highest risk to society, but has been demonstrated to optimize overall system effectiveness (Andrews and Bonta, ; Andrews and Dowden, ; Andrews, Zinger, Hoge, Bonta, Gendreau, and Cullen, ; Baglivio, Greenwald, and Russell, ; Lipsey, ; Lowenkamp and Latessa, ). As poorly implemented interventions lead to undermining the entire evidence‐based approach, a central concern in this framework is the notion of whether interventions are implemented effectively.…”