PARC s advocacy for Sexual Assault Awareness Month — the line of work from the lens of its leaders thejustice.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thejustice.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In acknowledgement of sexual assault awareness month, WVU’s Division of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion held a series of events to raise awareness about sexual assault on campus.
they help you stay straight, you know. i wanted to stay straight. i didn t want to go back to prison. i always, you know, participated. and so they finally gave me a job. my job title was peer advocate. and i basically helped ex-offenders. jones was doing well. he says he would ride his bicycle to various other halfway houses to recruit participants for programs at noah house. but eight months into his parole, things went horribly wrong one day when he decided to take a shortcut home through a large hole in a fence. i didn t know that that was a crime to cross over the railroad tracks because the whole neighborhood goes through that way, back and forth. children go to school back and forth from school that way. i see grown folks going through that way all the time. a police officer saw jones cut through the hole and cited him. when he discovered jones was on parole, he arrested him. out of all these years that i was on drugs and alcohol, i m finally clean, doing good.
another prison. when i got to the other prison i started making n.a. and a.a. meetings. i starting going to church, reading the bibland studying. jones served 18 years of a 25-year sentence at a florida state prison before he was released on parole. he moved into the noah house, a residential substance abuse program in tampa. they help ex-offenders get a fresh start in life. they help you to stay straight. you know, i wanted to stay straight. i didn t want to go back to prison. i always, you know, participated, and so they finally gave me a job. my job title is peer advocate. and i basically help ex-offenders. jones was doing well. he says he would ride his bicycle to various other halfway houses to recruit participants for programs at noah house. but eight months into his parole, things went horribly wrong one day when he decided to take a short cut home through a large hole in a fence. i didn t know that that was a crime to cross over the railroad tracks because the whole
said it s time to get your life right. i stayed in that confinement cell for 90 days. then they transferred me to another prison. when i got to the other prison, i started making aa and m.a. meetings. i started going to church. i started reading the bible more, studying. jones served 18 years of a 25-year sentence at a florida state prison before he was released on parole. he moved into the noah house, a residential substance abuse program, in tampa. they help ex-offenders get a fresh start in life. they help you stay straight, you know. i wanted to stay straight. i didn t want to go back to prison. i always, you know, participated. and so they finally gave me a job. my job title was peer advocate. and i basically helped ex-offenders. jones was doing well. he says he would ride his bicycle to various other halfway houses to recruit participants for programs at noah house. but eight months into his parole, things went horribly wrong one day when he decided to