According to NRS 209.4236, the Director of each prison and the Division of Public and Behavioral Health of the Department of Health and Human Services work together to establish what the Nevada prisons term “therapeutic communities”. A therapeutic community is an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program within the prison.
An alcohol and drug abuse treatment program will provide each prisoner with:
Prisoners in an alcohol or drug abuse treatment program are housed separately from the other prisoners. Sometimes they are segregated into a different area of the prison, and sometimes they are housed in a separate facility altogether.
A substance abuser – whether of a controlled substance, alcohol, a poison, drugs, a toxic inhalant, or of a solvent, must participate in the alcohol and drug abuse treatment program for one year and an aftercare program for an additional year.
To participate in an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program, you must meet be evaluated according to the procedure set up by the Director and Division. They must decide whether you’re truly a substance abuser by definition and whether you’ll benefit from participation in the program. If these are answered in the positive, the Director will decide whether to assign you to the therapeutic community or not.
This determination will be based one a few things. One is the severity of your problem, and the other is whether there is any space available in the program for another intake.
Nick Wooldridge has a long track record of representing clients accused of serious federal and state crimes in Nevada.
Also, the Division must give preference to the prisoners who seem most willing to participate in and complete the alcohol and drug abuse treatment program. If you’re not showing a desire to do the program, you may not get accepted.
Lastly, you will only be eligible to participate in the program if you’re within two years of your expected release date.
You are not eligible for alcohol and drug abuse treatment in a Nevada prison if:
An “aftercare program” is an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program that you must participate in after completing your treatment in the therapeutic community. As mentioned earlier, the aftercare program is one year long. It can be completed before or during your parole. If you complete it during parole, it will be a condition of your parole.
You can get yourself kicked out of a therapeutic community or aftercare program for disobeying the law or any other lawful purpose or reason.
When I initially met with Mr. Wooldridge, he took the opportunity to sit and go over my problem with me. He described details in my case which he found disturbing and explained why he I should have him on my side.
There are also other reasons you can be removed from an alcohol or drug abuse treatment or aftercare program. These can be temporary or permanent dismissals and are decided by the Director. These removals usually have to do with a failure to follow the conditions set forth for remaining in the program.
Where the Director and his officers are not qualified to evaluate prisoners and administer these programs, the Director will contract someone who is. You will have quality care from someone who is a professional in that field.
The Director has to report directly to the Legislature every other year on how many prisoners are currently in a therapeutic community or aftercare program, the number of prisoners who have begun and stopped either program before completed (for whatever reason) and ended up reincarcerated, and the number of prisoners who have graduated both programs and been reincarcerated. In other words, the Director has to report where the program has succeeded and where it has failed. This alone will push him to push “his people” to be the best they can be for you.
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