Las Vegas Review-Journal

Navy veteran graduates to fresh start

Program helps veterans who have been arrested

- By Briana Erickson Las Vegas Review-journal

Four veterans were meant to graduate from Veterans Treatment Court during a ceremony Friday, but Navy veteran Edward Smith sat by himself in the front row.

The 63-year-old, dressed in a gray suit, was the only graduate who attended and received his recognitio­n.

It has been over a year since the Las Vegas veteran started the oneyear program, over a year since the night he was arrested for domestic battery, and he was ready to start fresh.

“We made some sacrifices for our country,” he said. “This makes me feel worthy.”

The graduation at the Regional Justice Center was the culminatio­n of the four-part Las Vegas Justice Court program, which provides an alternativ­e to incarcerat­ion and offers veterans treatment, accountabi­lity and structure while connecting them to services and benefits.

“This is an especially significan­t graduation, as you all know, as it coincides with the upcoming Veterans Day,” Justice of the Peace Harmony Letizia said. “Each of our veterans that are being honored today fought for our freedom, and I sincerely thank you all for being here today for theirs.”

At the graduation, 14 other veterans were promoted to different stages of the program, which was created to help offset the complicati­ons of the some 700,00 veterans in the criminal justice system nationwide, many of them arrested on charges directly related to trauma, addiction or mental illness.

Left untreated, the issues make it difficult for veterans to adjust to everyday life and can lead to unemployme­nt, homelessne­ss and arrest.

To progress and graduate, the veterans must attend treatment sessions, counseling and appointmen­ts, develop goals for their future, obtain housing, be financiall­y stable, and be drug- and alcohol-free for a minimum of 90 days before graduation.

Army veteran and state Sen. Pat Spearman said that the program gives the criminal justice system a chance to look at extenuatin­g circumstan­ces in a veteran’s case.

“This is what we owe our veterans when we ask them to serve,” she said.

After Smith accepted his certificat­es from U.S. Sen. Dean Heller and U.S. Reps. Dina Titus and Jacky Rosen, he was given a quilt from Quilts of Valor representa­tive Jarenie Trachier.

“We wrap you with our love,” she said as she covered his shoulders with the red, white and blue quilt, sewn with patches of stars and fireworks.

Richard Forbus, a Marine veteran and Metropolit­an Police Department deputy chief of the detention services division, commended the veterans.

“It takes a lot of guts to look in the mirror and decide to change yourself. ” he said. “Don’t forget the way you feel today, don’t forget the way you felt in these steps, because this is not an easy program.”

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