Montgomery County Judge Garrett D. Page traveled to
Tulpehocken Township, Berks County, on July 31 to attend the graduation
ceremony at the Teen Challenge Training Center, a faith-based, residential
substance abuse rehabilitation program.
Montgomery County Judge Garrett D. Page/Photo by Carl Hessler Jr. |
“It was a 14-month intensive program. It’s no playground. It’s a faith-based solution for the adult drug epidemic,” Page explained.
When Page sentenced Thomas for a probation violation and
paroled him directly to the Teen Challenge program in April 2014, he said, “I
may be seeing you at Teen Challenge. Maybe I’ll pay a visit. I would recommend
that the district attorney’s office get familiar with this program. I may even
go there and visit them.”
Kudos to Page for keeping his promise.
Page believed Thomas’ graduation would be the perfect time
to visit the training center, which despite its name does not just offer
programs for teens. Page visited the program and attended the graduation on his own time.
Thomas, Page said, received an award for being “the most
improved graduate” and was presented with a large wooden cross as he left the
graduation podium.
“It was moving,” Page said about the ceremony, adding Thomas embraced him when he caught up with him after the graduation. “It was very emotional. This experience was nothing but positive energy.”
Cross awarded to Michael Thomas/Photo courtesy Judge Garrett Page |
The judge said he was pleased to have made a difference in
the life of someone who once stood before him to be punished for his crimes.
“Judges can make a difference,” Page said. “This was
important for me as well as him, to educate me (about the program).”
Page grew up in the east Germantown section of Philadelphia
in the 1970s, an area then frequented by gangs and an area he often describes
as “the hood” when he addresses defendants who come before him in court.
“A number of my friends were shot, killed. Back in the 70s
the gangs were big,” Page told me in April as he prepared to speak at the Peacemakers
Pottstown Youth Violence Prevention Summit, adding his mother, a home and
school coordinator, and his father, a postal worker and community activist for
safe streets, “kept us away from that” and ingrained in him a spirit of
nonviolence. “I want (defendants) to know that I’ve been in the middle of it. I’m
a survivor. Maybe that can give them some hope.”
In October 2013, Thomas was sentenced to 11 ½ to 23 months
in the county jail, to be followed by three years’ probation, after he pleaded
guilty to a criminal trespass charge stemming from an incident in Norristown,
according to court records. Thomas was back in court on April 14, 2014, in
front of Page for violating his sentence, according to court records.
At the April 14 violation hearing, Thomas’ lawyer told Page that Thomas used pot since he was 11 or 12 and admitted to having a cocaine problem. An evaluation, according to testimony, showed Thomas had a dysfunctional childhood, escaped through drugs and alcohol and committed crimes related to his drug abuse.
“Your honor, I think we all too often see in these
courtrooms the tragic tendency that underlies a lot of criminal behavior, and
that is drug addiction and the power of drug addiction,” defense lawyer William
Weiss said at that time. “I think that Mr. Thomas recognizes that about himself
and that he has had that drip over his life, unfortunately, for far too long.”
Weiss told Page at that time that Thomas, who admitted to
violating his previous sentence, didn’t want to be paroled directly to the
streets but rather wanted to be paroled into a treatment program where he could
get help. Page gave Thomas credit for the year he had been in jail awaiting
sentencing for the violation and ordered that he couldn’t be released until a
bed was ready for him at Teen Challenge.
“I witnessed your demeanor on the stand. I do believe that
you are possibly on the right track,” Page told Thomas.
Page also ordered Thomas to complete two years’ probation
after he’s paroled from the 14-month Teen Challenge program.
“So do what you have to do to get through this thicket
called life and get into this program and you prove to me, because I’m going to
have probation on you after that,” Page told Thomas at the time. “If I hear you
mess up, I’m going to mess you up.”
“You’re young enough to be able to get involved with your grandkids and your children. Get involved with your own life, but after 14 months is over, I’m going to trust that you’ll make it through, this is lifetime. This is not 14 months,” Page told Thomas, telling him outpatient rehab must follow his Teen Challenge graduation. “And you need a safety net all around you.”
Page said he was impressed with the Teen Challenge program.
“A lot of people don’t know about it. I’m going to introduce
it to our judges. I’m going to bring it up at a judicial meeting,” Page said.
“Sometimes it’s a good thing to attend a graduation so you get the full flavor of
where are we sending these defendants.”
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