Abstract
The article deals with the role of early family education in shaping the identity of a juvenile offender. The authors stress the importance of emotional and physical contact with the mother, and while growing older, with other family members, as well as criminal significance of hostility to unborn child and especially after childbirth. There is a paranoid state from a violent offender and the absence of financial condition of the lucrative offender. A child does not acquire a sense of emotional comfort, security, safety. The article shows a representative study of the relationship of future violent offenders with their families, especially mothers. These data are compared with the results of a survey of juvenile lucrative criminals. In committing offences violent criminals have increased anxiety, they expect outside threats that we don't mention when considering lucrative criminals, which can cause various disorders of mental activity, when an individual is unable to define his own identity. In the genesis and structure of the individual perpetrators of theft, there is inevitably a defect of socialization of emotions of fear, but the mere existence of selfish criminals suggests that this socialization is not always successful. Narrowing the scope of child status at later stages of ontogenesis lead to pathological adaptations type psychosomatic symptoms, to various forms of anti-social behaviour. The motives of committed lucrative crimes often lie in the plane of the unconscious feelings of its insolvency in social terms. Studies confirm previously known fact that the less close family ties, however, the more likely connections outside the family, the value of the family is decreasing. Juvenile convicts of lucrative crimes did not lack attention of father and mother, otherwise, they loved and cared of them, but this communication with parents was not morally close enough. For lucrative criminals it is not the acceptance or rejection of their parents which is important but some material need.