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Guidebook Helps Mentors Care For Veterans In MI Criminal Justice System

soldiers with weapons
WKAR Photo.
Michigan operates 27 veterans treatment courts as an alternative for veterans who commit nonviolent offenses.

There’s a new resource in Michigan to support veterans who enter the criminal justice system for nonviolent offenses. 

 

In 2013, Michigan created a network of treatment courts as an alternative for veterans who commit low-level crimes.  Many suffer from addiction or mental illness.  Veterans are paired with their peers who serve as mentors along their road to rehabilitation.  Now, a new guidebook is available for mentors to help them develop best practices.

Brigadier General (Ret.) Michael McDaniel is the associate dean of WMU-Cooley Law School in Lansing.  He says being a veteran mentor is a 24/7 commitment.

“You don’t want it to necessarily be a free-flowing environment that demands all your time,” McDaniel says.  “But to know when there’s a true emergency, a true event; how you react to that…just as you would for a friend, a family member or a battle buddy.”

Michigan currently operates 27 veterans treatment courts.  It’s one of the largest such systems in the U.S.

 

 

 

 

Kevin Lavery served as a general assignment reporter and occasional local host for Morning Edition and All Things Considered before retiring in 2023.
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