Prosecutor - Defense Attorney - Parole and Probation - JUDGE - Think This Group Can Do It
Rickey StokesViewed: 4347
Posted by: RStokes
[email protected]
3347901729
Date: Mar 15 2019 9:47 AM
HOUSTON COUNTY: Not going to beat this dead horse. But...
How prosecutors, defense attorneys, Parole and Probation Officials and a Circuit Judge could expect a 8 week program run by the Alabama Department of Corrections will serve a kid better than a 365 day program with Teen Challenge is beyond comprehension.
TODAY on AL.com the following article - "Alabama prison inmate killed". How many does that make this year?
The same management of the Alabama Department of Corrections management that manages the prisons where people are killed is the same management over the SAP program. The program that the prosecutor, defense attorney, and Parole and Probation Officials feel is best to solve this young man’s drug and alcohol addiction.
How many people have been killed this year in the Alabama Department of Corrections in 12 months? And you think the SAP program is better than Teen Challenge and the 8 week program is best for this young man and solving his problems?
In everyone that I have spoken to the only thing SAP accomplishes is a waste of 8 weeks of someone’s life. And I am beyond pissed for such stupid decisions.
In the Judge’s defense, after each had been told, (1) the prosecutor, (2) the defense attorney, (3) the Parole and Probation Officers, never let you know the young man had been approved for Teen Challenge. All that was left was the interview ( done yesterday and completed), and his blood work.
SAP will do nothing and each one of you know SAP does nothing. And none of you have the goal of saving the young man’s life and getting his addiction under control.
READ the following article about the abilities of the Alabama Department of Corrections. They can not even keep you safe.
1 Alabama prison inmate killed in stabbing, another takes his own life in separate incident
Two more Alabama prison inmates are dead, one who took his own life, and another killed by a fellow prisoner.
The Alabama Department of Corrections on Thursday announced the deaths of Rashaud Dederic Morrissette, 24, and Quinton Ashaad Few, 27.
Morrissette, who was serving a three -year sentence on a third-degree burglary conviction in Mobile County, was found unresponsive in a housing area about 11:45 a.m. Friday.
Federal Judge Myron Thompson has made it clear that if Alabama doesn’t do something soon, the federal courts will.
But the 20th Judicial Circuit thinks this same group, Alabama Department of Corrections can solve the drug addiction.
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