‘Very Dedicated’ NA Member Sent to Prison for Dealing Heroin

Looks like the judge was not impressed with this heroin dealers NA meeting attendance. 

Heroin dealer who was ‘very dedicated’ to NA program is sent to prison

Judge says he sent Norwalk man to prison to send message to community that selling heroin won’t be tolerated.
CARY ASHBY APR 19, 2014

A Norwalk man who sold heroin to a confidential informant was sentenced to 17 months in prison Tuesday. Donnie Moore runs again for commissioner in Holly Hill Florida.

David A. Burrows, 23, of 47 Welton Ave., pleaded guilty in mid-February to one count of trafficking in heroin in exchange for prosecutors dismissing a second, similar charge. The Aug. 9 controlled drug buy, which was coordinated by the Norwalk Police Department, happened just days after Burrows was placed on intensive probation through Norwalk Municipal Court and made him eligible for a prison term.

Huron County Public Defender David Longo said Burrows was still “strung out” when he committed the crime, but since then he’s been doing well in a treatment program. Longo showed Huron County Common Pleas Judge Jim Conway the defendant’s folder of documents with NA and AA attendance sheets and certificates before the judge announced his sentence. Daytona AA and NA meetings in Holly Hill Florida Parks.

“He’s been working hard,” Longo added. Marina Grande Condo complaint Daytona Fl.

Burrows, who has been seeking employment, has a sponsor and two “home groups.”

“I’ve been very dedicated to the Narcotics Anonymous program,” he told the judge.

Huron County Assistant Prosecutor Daivia Kasper recommended substance-abuse treatment for Burrows as a condition of probation.

“He does have a substantial substance abuse history,” Kasper added.

After hearing from each attorney and Burrows, Conway said he was sentencing him to prison for two reasons: First, to send a message to the community that selling heroin won’t be tolerated and also to show Burrows “the inside of a prison” to see if that’s where he wants his life to head.

Burrows, whose driver’s license was suspended for six months, must reimburse police $80 to cover the cost of drug testing.

http://www.norwalkreflector.com/article/4374296

When AA Hurts by Juliet Abram in Psychology Today

An Excellent article and first hand account about how AA Hurts.

When AA Hurts

A woman suffered abuse at home, from a rapist, and in AA — all were related

(This is a guest column from Juliet Abram)

This is my personal story of being abused, first by my mother, then by a rapist-“boyfriend,” and then by AA.  Each form of abuse predisposed me to be a victim of the other, and I had to escape all of them. NA Daytona meetings in Port Orange, Holly Hill and Ormond Beach.

I learned in therapy that my low-self esteem and vulnerability left me open to being hurt.  I got these feelings at home, from my mother. Then other abusers found me.  Abusers like easy targets, such as people who are starved for love or attention or who fear being abandoned.  I also used alcohol to tamp down my feelings of shame and disgust from being emotionally, physically, and sexually abused. AA Daytona Beach Meetings.

Then, I went to Alcoholics Anonymous, where I really suffered abuse. I was sentenced to AA after escaping a guy who raped me, refused to let me go free, and made me steal for him.  I either went to AA, or I’d be thrown in jail.  But AA only made me remember his death threats and heightened my helplessness and despair. One woman explained to me that you had to expect to be raped when you’re drunk.  I needed to accept my “part in it.”  If I ever criticized AA, I was being an “AA Basher.”

In therapy, I was preoccupied with my issues with AA.  I drank rather than fighting my battles in AA.  After my third DUI, my AA boyfriend kicked me out and kept our four-year-old daughter, leaving me to move back to my parents’ house with my ten-year-old son from a previous relationship. Then the court ordered me into residential treatment the winter of 2011-2012.  On visitation days, my mom would give elaborate speeches to the group about being a heartbroken mother.  Her theatrics resulted in other parents applauding her.  The family counselor noticed my reactions: Gripping the seat of my chair, hugging my stomach, and keeping my head down.  The counselor made me aware for the first time that my mother had a personality disorder.

My mother carried the delusional view that she was a very good person and everyone was out to destroy her.  My mom arrived at rehab with photographs of my bedroom full of unpacked boxes (she wouldn’t allow me to unpack), which she said proved that I hated her.  She demanded to know why I suddenly began hating her at age fifteen.  At that age I asked her for help because I was cutting myself.  The next year she accused me of being on drugs and staged an intervention.  “Julie needed tough love,” she said, “She’s like this because of what my brother did to me.”  My feelings were ignored because my mom had to make it about her.

And so, the AA accusation that alcoholics are people unable to recognize their wrongdoings and character defects sounded familiar to me.  The “fellowship” had the same symptoms as a narcissist! And, once again, I was defenseless. A narcissist is never wrong, just as if you relapse in AA it is your fault, never AA’s fault.  Narcissists see everyone as their mirror, and if you agree with them all is well.  If you disagree, you are an enemy.  The AA members I met became instantly defensive whenever I criticized AA.  They were like my mother!

Whenever I tried to clear up my confusion or argued at AA, I was assailed with accusations that “you’re headed for a relapse.”  (I drank a few times during the four-month period following rehab, but never to the point of getting into trouble.) If I asked questions, I was told “You think you know it all, but your own best thinking got you here.”  Hearing that I was powerless and that without AA I would die sounded very familiar to me.  AA rules by the same fear and confusion abusers like my mother and my rapist use to keep their victims under control.

Continue reading

AA Member Sentenced to 375 Years for Sexually Assaulting and Impregnating 14 Year Old He Met at an AA Meeting

Willis Demond Carwell (Source: Anderson County District Attorney)

 Another story about a child who was sexually assaulted by a man she met in Alcoholics ANonymous when she attended AA Meetings with her Mother. This man was on parole at the time and had a lengthy CRIMINAL record.

Anderson County man sentenced to 375 years in prison for sexual assault of child

Posted: Oct 31, 2013  by Marshall Stephens – bio | email

From the Anderson County District Attorney’s Office:

PALESTINE, TX – Willis Demond Carwell, 32, of Palestine was sentenced to a total of 375 years in prison on five counts of sexual assault of a child on Tuesday afternoon at the Anderson County Courthouse. Daytona Beach AA Meetings Schedule.

A jury of eight men and four women reached verdicts of 75 years on each count at 1:13 p.m. on Tuesday following a sentencing hearing which started on Monday.

Carwell showed little emotion as District Judge Pam Foster Fletcher who presided over trial read the jury’s substantial verdict. Holly Hill Commissioner complaints.

Anderson County Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Watkins represented the State of Texas with assistance from District Attorney Doug Lowe.

Carwell had earlier pleaded guilty to the assaults which are second degree felony. However, the possible punishment range was increased to a minimum of 5 years and maximum of 99 years or life because Carwell had been to prison for burglary of a habitation. Holly Hill Police Complaints in Holly Hill Florida.

The female child victim testified in response to questioning by Assistant District Attorney Watkins about how she came to know Carwell.

“My mom took me with her to a meeting of Alcoholic’s Anonymous and we met and I talked to him (Carwell).  He came over to our house after that,” the victim said. Continue reading

AA Member Arrested For Voyeurism in Target Dressing Room Using His Cell Phone

(Photo credit: Perkins Township Police)

Another AA member with sexual problems attending meetings and still getting into trouble.

PERKINS TOWNSHIP, Ohio — A female victim physically restrained a man who had been using his cell phone to videotape her as she changed in a Target dressing room, Fox 8 News reports. Daytona Beach NA Meetings in Port Orange, Ormond Beach and Holly Hill.

According to a Perkins Township Police report, Zachary Ray Van Zandt, 21, of Sandusky, has been charged with voyeurism and disorderly conduct.

The 26-year-old female victim was changing pants Tuesday night in a Target dressing room when she saw “a phone under the door that appeared to be recording a video of her.” She grabbed the phone and exited the room. That’s when she saw Van Zandt, who demanded that she return his phone. Stop 13 Stepping in Daytona AA and NA.

The victim refused, instead using the phone to call authorities. Continue reading

Quicksand: The Darker Side Of 12 Step Programs by C.A. Sheckels

  

Quicksand: The Darker Side of 12-Step Programs

The way 12-Step programs are presented is often not what people find after they become involved. You will be expected to surrender your will, your mind, and your life to “The Program.”

http://www.lulu.com/shop/c-a-sheckels/quicksand/paperback/product-21543010.html

AFTERWORD

When I began writing this book in October, 2011, my
knowledge of other people’s experiences was minimal. That
changed. Men and women throughout the United States have
related their own personal experiences in 12-Step programs–
experiences which clearly meet the definition of “horror stories.”

My experiences are by no means unique– and by no
means uncommon. People who turn to 12-Step programs for
help, friendship, answers, solutions, often find themselves in
dangerous situations with dangerous individuals– and no one to
turn to for assistance. There have been various incidents of
murder; rape and sexual assaults are very common; and, what
has been the universal experience of countless numbers of men
and women: psychological abuse.

Because of these experiences, many former 12-Step
program members suffer from, are receiving help for, and cope
with depression, anxiety disorders, and even Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder– not because of their ‘childhoods,’ not because
of their ‘relationships,’ not because of their ‘pasts,’ but because of
their experiences in these Programs.

Many former members have also been attempting
deprogramming. As most average people cannot afford
professional services for this often-misunderstood process, there
are few resources other than individuals trying to work these
issues out themselves, seeking help from support groups and
similar contacts. The fact is the abuse and psychological tactics
that occur within the programs are so widespread and so extreme
that it brings a new meaning to the word “recovery.”

What it comes down to: is there any legitimate
reason human beings should be in the position of tolerating all
kinds of abuses or worse, the destruction of their families, the
destruction of their lives– and feel they must either remain silent
or put themselves in further danger?

One would think that in the United States of America,
human beings not only have “certain unalienable rights,” but that
those rights must be taken seriously.

AA Member Convicted for Selling Drugs at AA Meetings gets Probation

The outside of Michael Shepard’s treatment facility, where the 65-year-old held AA meetings — and also dealt painkillers to patrons.

How common is this practice of dealing drugs at AA Meetings?

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Sunday, April 6, 2014,

House arrest given to Seattle man accused of dealing painkillers at AA meetings

Michael Shepard, 65, avoided jail on charges he provided painkillers to people who supposedly sought treatment at a facility he owns. The prosecutor said Shepard, whose health is deteriorating, was in such bad health that he could not serve a prison sentence. Holly Hill NA Meetings in the Parks.

A 65-year-old Seattle man — who admitted to dealing prescription drugs to addicts he met through a treatment center he managed — was spared prison due to his deteriorating health. AA Daytona Beach Meetings in Ormond By The Sea and Port Orange.

Federal prosecutors recommended Michael Shepard, a Vietnam veteran who was wounded during the war, receive probation, according to KOMO News, which reports the alleged drug dealer is barely mobile and has severe heart trouble.

“But for his severe and deteriorating medical condition … he would be incarcerated,” wrote Assistant U.S. Attorney Kate Vaughan in court papers.

A judge sentenced Shepard to one year house arrest and five years of probation Friday, reports TV Station KIRO.

He told the station “of course” he feels bad about what he did and would tell others to think twice before dealing drugs. Holly Hill Florida Police Department Complaints.

Shepard was arrested last year for selling painkillers from the Nomadian Community Resource Center in Seattle, which he owned. The nonprofit facility hosted Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous meetings, and Shepard would sell the drugs to the supposedly reformed addicts after the meeting, the website reported.

Authorities began coming to the center in November 2012 and Shepard sold more than 800 pills to undercover officers, KOMO News reported.

“Although he appears to have viewed himself as providing some kind of service to the community, in fact he preyed on the vulnerable by selling prescription narcotics to drug addicts, thus fueling the very disease they sought to escape,” the prosecutor wrote.

Shepard joined the Army when he was 17 and was awarded the Purple Heart after he was blown out of a helicopter, the website reported. But he was ultimately dishonorably discharged after being caught stealing.

Although he appears to have viewed himself as providing some kind of service to the community, in fact he preyed on the vulnerable by selling prescription narcotics to drug addicts.

When he returned he spent many years homeless and addicted to drugs, the website reported. Daytona Beach Police Complaints.

And with his debilitating health, his defense attorney Jesse Cantor said in court papers his client does not pose a threat to the community. Orange Papers Anti-AA Site.

“He spends most of his day either sleeping or at the hospital,” Cantor wrote. “Mr. Shepard is not in any condition that would cause one to be concerned that perhaps he would repeat his offenses.”

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/man-accused-dealing-painkillers-aa-meetings-article-1.1747447#ixzz2yAEj8FFo

Have You Been 13th Stepped?

This comes from the Leaving AA Website www.leavingaa.com

Have you been 13th Stepped?

Posted on 
I’m a producer for CBS NEWS. We’re working on a story that focuses on safety issues coming out of contacts made at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.  If you feel you’ve  been harassed or “13thStepped” by someone you met at an AA meeting, I’d like to talk with you. Also, if you discovered that person was “court-mandated” to attend AA, please contact me.   

Please call me at (212) 975-5842,  or email clarkl@cbsnews.com

Man Who Shot Dog in Face Attended 100 AA Meetings Before Sentencing

AA has animal abusers convicted of animal cruelty in their midst as well.

Kennedy man could spend nearly 2 years in jail for shooting dog in face

Published: Tuesday, March 25, 2014, 12:15 p.m.

An Allegheny County judge on Tuesday sentenced a Kennedy man to six to 23 months in jail for shooting his girlfriend’s dog in the face just a few feet from their 5-week-old son.

“The facts of this case, to me, are outrageous,” Common Pleas Judge Anthony M. Mariani told Brian Foley, 29, whom the judge convicted in January of cruelty to animals and recklessly endangering another person. “Maybe you were drunk. But being drunk was no excuse for shooting a dog in a cage in the face.” Holly Hill Police Department Complaints.

Foley, who has attended more than 100 Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and received his nine-month sobriety coin since the May 18 incident at his then-fiancee’s home along Moon Run Road in Robinson, got his commercial driver’s license and planned to start a job this week, said his attorney, Kenneth Fryncko Jr. Daytona AA Meetings Sunrise Park.

Foley said he is working to become a better person, by staying sober and having a good family life. Daytona Beach Narcotics Anonymous Meetings in Holly Hill and Daytona.

“There is not a day that goes by that I (don’t) think about that night,” he told the judge.

Police said Foley was drinking heavily at a backyard campfire the night of the shooting, before going inside the house. Brandi Francis, his former fiancée with whom he since has reconciled, told police she was outside smoking when she heard a gunshot. She walked inside to find her 6-month-old shepherd mix, Molly, shot in the face and a .22-caliber rifle in Foley’s hands. Orlando NA Meetings in Florida getting complaints.

Foley told police he was unloading the weapon and it accidentally went off. The dog survived but is partially blind. Their son was not injured. Marina Grande Condos.

When Foley’s father, Robert Foley, characterized the shooting as an “accident,” Mariani interrupted and told him he wouldn’t listen if he was going to proclaim his son’s innocence.

“He did mean to do this. (The gun) was pointed at a dog in a cage. That dog had no ability to move,” Mariani said. “You can’t make up for this after the fact.” Holly Hell Holly Hill Fl.

http://triblive.com/news/adminpage/5829931-74/foley-dog-shooting#axzz2xaMWvhUI

AA is Ruining The World Says Addiction Expert Stanton Peele

AA is Ruining the World

I was invited to the UK and Denmark to speak by harm reduction activists who are worried about the impact of AA and the 12 steps in their countries. Both Patrick O’Hare, who founded in Liverpool the organization now called Harm Reduction International, and Nanna Gotfredsen, founder and director of Copenhagen’s Street Lawyers, who run a clean needle program and other services for drug users and addicts, watch with alarm as the gains they have made dealing with addicts over previous decades erode. You see, both the British and the Danish governments are increasingly buying into the AA line that abstinence is the best and most achievable goal, both for individual addicts and for their nations. Daytona NA meetings in Daytona Beach, Port Orange, Holly Hill and Ormond.

Oddly, in Denmark, the newly-elected socialists are most susceptible to AA’s abstinence uber alles message, while in Britain it is David Cameron’s conservatives who seem to be swallowing the AA message hook, line and sinker. Politicians of all stripes tend to like magic bullet solutions, especially ones that hold out the promise that their constituents will stop taking drugs. Drinking is a thornier matter, since politicians and public health servants themselves drink, and the issue there is obviously over-drinking. (Of course, in reality, drugs present the same problem.)

Here are four reasons AA is harmful and will hurt their societies.

AA denies reality. I present data generated by the American government’s own research showing that each age cohort after the 18-25 age group has a substantially lower percentage of problematic drinkers and drug users — including alcoholics and addicts. Yet, the large majority of former abusers do not enter treatment or join AA — they have simply “matured out.” Since the 12-step mantra is that substance use problems only grow worse without their intervention, AA members must deny this reality (“All the youthful drug users have died!”). I then ask how many members of the audience have quit smoking — which they acknowledge to be the hardest drug addiction to quit. Of the large number who raise their hands, I then ask how many did so due to medical treatment (e.g., nicotine gums and patches) or support groups. If 1 in 10 former smoking addicts present raise their hands, it’s a lot. Continue reading