Imagine having your entire career put on hold because a state agency found out you were involved in a fight in high school. Suddenly this schoolyard fight, labeled as an “aggravated battery” in law enforcement records, has cost you employment. It’s a story juvenile justice advocates like Carolyn E. Frazier hear every day. The incidents might have been minor, but their labels look serious. One client had “felony robbery” on his record because he was with a friend who took another boy …