What Is the Willard Drug Program?

Question by diamonds f: what is the willard drug program?
my baby father did 4yrs for assault, basically he got off 6month ago and he is on parole, he violated parole when undercovers had a warant for his appartment and he was arrested for ilegal substances, he got off on 1500$ bail but when he went to his parole program he got arrested and he has been at rikers for a month, what do u think he might get

Best answer:

Answer by Penguin_Bob
You should find your answer about the program at one of these sites …

http://criminaljustice.state.ny.us/ofpa/pdfdocs/parconrx.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willard_Drug_Treatment_Center
http://worldcat.org/wcpa/ow/582e323c991d21d4a19afeb4da09e526.html

As far as what sentence he might get, there is no way to tell in advance. It depends on how he comes across to the judge, what impression he can project when he gets to court, what his probation officer/counsellor says, how strongly the prosecutor pushes things, and what mood the judge is in. Sorry to be blunt, but as a regular drug user unable to control himself he is really a loser and no good to you or the baby. Either dump him outright or get a family lawyer who may be able to help you find some support or other assistance. You have to think of the child first, yourself second, and the loser a distant third. Good luck!

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1. What Is Biomedical Engineering? – Frontiers of Biomedical Engineering (BENG 100) Professor Saltzman introduces the concepts and applications of biomedical engineering, providing an overview of the course syllabus, reading materials for lecture and labs and grading logistics. Various pictures are shown to highlight the current application of biomedical engineering technologies in daily life (eg. chest x-ray, PET scan, operating room, gene chip, transport). Next, living standards and medical technologies of the past and present are compared to point out the impact of biomedical engineering as well as areas for improvement in the field. Finally, Professor Saltzman draws references from the poem “London Bridge” to illustrate some societal issues in making materials and devices in biomedical engineering. 00:00 – Chapter 1. Introduction 02:36 – Chapter 2. Biomedical Engineering in Everyday Life 18:43 – Chapter 3. A Brief History of Engineering 22:58 – Chapter 4. Biomedical Engineering in Disease Control 31:09 – Chapter 5. Course Overview and Logistics 39:23 – Chapter 6. Conclusion Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Spring 2008.

 

Meth maker sent to slammer

Filed under: willard drug treatment program

On June 29, she was ordered to complete the Christian-based Teen Challenge substance abuse program as part of her three years of intense probation. "I believe she is in rehabilitation, drug treatment," Collier's defense attorney, Daniel Wightman, said …
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