Law Practice
Sep. 20, 2010
Mentoring Parolees: A Truly Essential Project
It's certainly not easy for ex-felons to get their lives back on track. Being a mentor to parolees can do wonders.





James P. Gray
ADR Services Inc.Business and commercial contracts, real estate, construction, employment, PAGA, probate, legal malpractice
19000 MacArthur Blvd #550
Irvine , CA 92612
Phone: (949) 863-9800
Fax: (949) 863-9888
Email: jimpgray@sbcglobal.net
USC Law School
James is a retired judge of the Orange County Superior Court, a private mediator and arbitrator with ADR Services Inc., the author of "Wearing the Robe: the Art and Responsibilities of Judging in Today's Courts" (Square One Press, 2009), and the 2012 Libertarian candidate for vice president, along with Gov. Gary Johnson as the candidate for president.
One thing I learned from my extended involvement with the criminal justice system is that each case is different, and, although it sounds silly to have to say it, each case involves an individual human being. So many times with prosecutors and judges, there can be a tendency to categorize cases simply as a burglary, a hand-to-hand drug sale, or tax fraud, etc. As a criminal defense attorney in the Navy JAG Corps, I learned to understand that each case involved a real human being, and tha...
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