How Do You Fight a Parole Officer Who Wants to Put a Mother in Jail Who Needs Chemical Dependency Treatment?
Question by So Wild: How do you fight a parole officer who wants to put a mother in jail who needs chemical dependency treatment?
This is in Ramsey County Minnesota. The mother has no violent crime history, and is a felon due to the fact that there was crystal meth in her car when they arrested her for shoplifiting some chicken salad from a grocery store. She has horrible ADD, like I have never seen or heard of, truly, she can’t recall or focus on ANYTHING. Anyhow, she needs a good long treatment, not to be thrown into a population of other felons, which is totally proven to not help her in any way as far as I have ever read or seen. The parole officer is an angry-seeming bloke who is hell-bent on putting her behind bars. She is an IV drug user as of a few months ago, having moved it up from smoking meth for years past. What is goofy is that he wants her in jail first, then treatment. HELP
Best answer:
Answer by Chase
Well she shouldnt shoplift and she shouldnt have crystal meth. Its not the parole officers fault she did something stupid. If you cant do the time, dont do the crime, end of f*cking story.
Add your own answer in the comments!
Los Angeles Drug Rehab | Drug Rehab Centers | Los Angeles Drug Rehab – http://www.drugrehabla.net/ Los Angeles Drug Rehab treatment centers help you get you life back. Drug Rehab Centers help people in getting detox in Los Angel…
Health System Strategy: Remaining Relevant by Building Primary Care Delivery …
Filed under: drug treatment centers in minnesota
… of online diagnosis and treatment services. Examples include VirtuWell, owned by the integrated system Health Partners in Minnesota, and Teledoc, which is partnering with Highmark in Pennsylvania, Aetna in Alaska and Blue Shield of California …
Read more on Becker’s Hospital Review
Father charged with murder after son's overdose
Filed under: drug treatment centers in minnesota
Under Minnesota law, evidence that is part of a grand jury indictment is not public information, even after indictments are filed, and is only disclosed as part of court proceedings. "What has been presented to the grand jury cannot be … Typically …
Read more on Winona Post