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Judge Michael Jackson, a combat veteran, had the power to send veterans convicted of crimes to prison. But he had a better idea about how to return them to their status of upstanding citizens.
Working as a Common Pleas Judge in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Judge Jackson, now 80, decided it was better to customize a rehabilitation program for veterans who had offended — and surround them with other veterans.
Jackson went to Vietnam after graduating from college in 1966, serving as a U.S. Marine Corps lieutenant. He spent 13 months in-country, commanding a platoon and then a company and earning two Bronze Stars and a Purple Heart.
That gave him some credibility when he set up a Veterans Treatment Court. The most important word in the name was the middle one, he told AARP Experience Counts. “We aren’t going to send these people to prison unless they absolutely need to be there.”
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Jackson said that some people would push back and say that veterans shouldn't be given a free pass. But the program was sometimes harder than going to jail. Some didn’t want to do the work. Others went to prison first before agreeing to pursue the program.
The court divided cases into risk levels of reoffending, Jackson explained. “I felt very strongly about taking the hardest cases,” he said. “If we can make that change in someone with those kinds of issues, it’s going to be better for all of the community.” Not only would it lead to a lower crime rate but a reduction in the need for mental health services.
“If we could get them back into a stable living arrangement and personal life and having a schedule in place and a treatment program in place to deal with their addiction and mental health issues, then that person has an opportunity to be a more worthwhile person,” Jackson said.
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