Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP)

Описание к видео Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP)

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Justin Paperny shares strategies to earn up to 18-months off your prison sentence.

My baseball coach at USC loved to say with a proven process comes predictable results. Now, think about anything you’ve done successfully in life and been able to repeat with these, perhaps is your golf swing, or growing your business. With anything you’ve done well, you’ve created a process.
At White Collar Advice our proven process has produced predictable results since 2008, when I got into this business. This process of ours won’t just ensure that you get accepted into the residential drug abuse program, but that you actually complete the program. After all, as many as 50% of white collar defendants and some prisons quit or get thrown out of the program, or are forced to retake one of the three phases. So, if you have interest in succeeding through this program, and can visualize and you’re willing to work towards an outcome that can get you home up to 18 months sooner, let my team and I of White Collar Advice prepare and educate you on the coveted residential drug abuse program.
Recently I received a call from Alice. Her husband John, a former doctor, is serving 60 months in prison for insurance fraud. Now, shortly before Alice called me, she said she had received a call from John and received some terrible and distressing news. Despite trying, John had finally and officially been told that he was denied access into the residential drug abuse program. As a result, he was serving extra year in prison. Apparently, I learned from Alice that upon his surrender, John finally learned about the residential drug abuse program. From there of course, he took aggressive steps, including retaining a consultant from the inside to try to get in. So, wanting to learn more about their case, knowing that we can learn from failure as much as success and with Alice's permission to interview her I’m going to share this story with all of you. And through my interview I learnt that John in his pre-sentence investigation failed to disclose that he had been a drinker for many years. He drank before his arrest, as well he even smoke marijuana and didn’t disclose any of it. As is the case with so many white collar offenders, John was afraid and felt that opening up about his substance and alcohol use would make him appear unfavorably before the court, the prosecutor, the judge- all of the stakeholders. He simply believed that had he opened up about it, it would lead to further complications and also I learn he was just too embarrassed to talk about it. He put his family through enough; he was going to prison; now he had to talk about a substance abuse- it was just too much to bear. He just chose to stay quiet. And, as I just mentioned upon his surrender he learned about RDAP. And he learned had he honestly disclosed his issues and collected the proper evidence, he would have qualified, and based on the length of his sentence he would have been released from prison 18 months early.

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