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Drug Rehab New Jersey
is here to help people with drug and/or alcohol abuse problems in New Jersey. find treatment options. Due to our diverse networking system we can find a treatment option tailored to each individuals specific situation and needs. We are able to provide all phases of recovery included but not limited to, alcohol and/or drug intervention, drug and/or alcohol detox, in-patient treatment, out-patient treatment, short term treatment (30 days or less), long term treatment (90 days or longer).

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We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in New Jersey. At Drug Rehab New Jersey we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in New Jersey, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in New Jersey. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.

We realize that each individual in New Jersey. is in a different financial situation and we will find treatment options for each individual regardless of their financial situation. No matter what your financial situation everyone will receive the treatment help they are looking for.

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New Jersey Seeks to Stem Gang Violence

EWARK, New Jersey Oct. 22 — Denouncing the growth of violent street gangs in New Jersey, state legislators from Essex County on Wednesday proposed creation of both a task force to study why youths join them and a statewide office to repel the gangs.

Three days after a 19-year-old robbery suspect was killed in an apparently gang-related beating in a county jail annex in North Caldwell, New Jersey the legislators and other New Jersey officials offered a gloomy assessment of gang activity and stressed the need to do more to stop it.

During a news conference, New Jersey State Senator Ronald L. Rice called gangs a "terroristic subculture" engaged in murder, money laundering, drug sales and auto theft. The Essex, New Jersey County sheriff, Armando B. Fontoura, said gang-related killings or drive-by shootings occur in the county almost every week. The acting county prosecutor, Paula T. Dow, said gang violence and crime had "the potential to cripple" the state and county's criminal justice systems, partly through intimidation of witnesses.

State Senator Nia H. Gill said gangs have started spreading from the cities to the suburbs and rural areas. "We need to beat them and beat them soon, or they are going to keep growing and getting stronger until they eventually beat us," Senator Gill said.

New Jersey State Senator Sharpe James, who is also Newark's mayor, said gangs were a statewide problem and called for more coordination of antigang policies among law enforcement agencies.

After the news conference, Ms. Dow announced that 10 inmates at the jail annex had been charged with murdering the robbery suspect, Lamonte Gallemore of Newark, by beating him during an initiation into a street gang known as the Crips. The attack occurred about 45 minutes after Mr. Gallemore was transferred to the annex from the main county jail in Newark. Inmates in another gang, the Bloods, are housed in the main jail. Mr. Gallemore had told jail officials he belonged to the Crips and wanted to be separated from members of the Bloods and detained in the annex with other members of the Crips.

Legislators, including United States Representative Donald M. Payne, whose district includes part of Essex County, and Neil M. Cohen, a state assemblyman, said they planned to introduce a bill soon to create a 25-member task force. They said it would include the New Jersey attorney general; the head of the state police; the commissioners of education, corrections and human services; members of federal law enforcement agencies; a psychologist; a criminal-justice professor; and experts on families and drug abuse.

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