October 15, 2012 - When the state Department of Veterans' Affairs recently advertised a job opening for a veterans' service officer, 73 veterans applied, many of them younger men and women who had served in Iraq and Afghanistan.While they came from different backgrounds and zip codes, many had a common trait, Veterans' Affairs Commissioner Linda Schwartz said: "They are wound tighter than a clock. They've deployed two or three times, had a successful military career, and now here they are home, struggling with the aftereffects, looking for jobs. . . We are seeing a large group of people who are really on the edge."
Some of those people -- more than 1,000 a year, according to estimates -- have landed in Connecticut's criminal justice system, often charged with lower-level crimes such as DUI, disorderly conduct or breach of peace.
Starting this month, Connecticut will follow a number of other states in beginning a program aimed at identifying veterans who are arrested for minor crimes and diverting them from jails to treatment. The state's initiative has an unusual twist, allowing veterans to use the Accelerated Rehabilitation (AR) program twice, rather than just once. AR allows low-risk defendants to complete community treatment programs and avoid prosecution. read more>>>
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