As the Memorial Day weekend comes to a close, so does the first weekend of Baltimore's youth curfew.
The long awaited plan by Mayor Brandon Scott has been met with a lot of pushback regarding the enforcement of it.
Since a juvenile being transported to a connection center during curfew hours is voluntary, many argue the curfew won't reduce crime.
Community activist Kinji Scott said the plan is useless.
“It shouldn’t be called a curfew, it shouldn’t be called nothing," said Scott.
Scott told FOX45 News she believes the idea of a connection center for teens who are prone to crime is not a solution.
“Taking a kid off the streets and saying ok, we’re gonna take you and put you in a center at night and give you some cookies and ice cream and let you play games, the kids do want to do that. The games they want to play include carrying guns and carjackings and shooting each other," said Scott.
FOX45 News was tracking several reports of crimes possibly being committed by juveniles over the weekend.
The reports included several disturbances, a carjacking and a robbery, police said.