No one said coming home would be easy.
Nick Stefanovic, a Marine combat veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, had been warned by a Vietnam War veteran who let him know about the combat wounds that never heal.
“You made a sacrifice,” Stefanovic recalls being told. “This is something you have to live with.”
For Nick, that meant living out of his car, homeless and alienated, with a crippling addiction to the painkillers he popped to keep the demons away.
“I’m just going to take these pills until I die,” he remembers thinking.
Out of cash and pills, the former sergeant E-5 walked into a bank in 2009 with a stolen checkbook. He flashed his own ID and signed his name on the check at the counter.
Nick was busted. It saved his life, he says. “Being arrested is the first way of getting help.”
Rather than serve time jail, Stefanovic, along with the thousands of other veterans suffering from addiction and mental health problems, was offered a lifeline. Like the civilian drug and mental health courts that pull offenders with documented medical issues out of the traditional criminal court dockets, veterans treatment courts apply the same principles to former service members. Judges across the country are allowing the growing number of ex-military men and women to choose a treatment program instead of serving time.
“When you come home, what helped you survive on the battlefield doesn’t turn off immediately,” said Col. David Sutherland, co-founder of the Dixon Center and a former special assistant to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injury are “the signature wounds of these wars,” Sutherland told msnbc. Nearly a third of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans treated at V.A. hospitals have been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and one in six suffers from a substance abuse disorder.
Judge Robert Russell helped craft the national model for drug and mental health courts in his Buffalo, N.Y. courtroom, then developed the nation’s first-ever veterans treatment court in 2008. Where just a handful of these courts existed five years ago, at least 130 are existence now, with the growth rate booming in the past year. As the U.S. prepares to draw down the military operation in Afghanistan by the end of 2014, more returning veterans are expected to rely on them.
On Tuesday afternoons, veterans appear before Judge Russell with their veteran mentors, in the presence of a representative from the Department of Veterans Affairs. It is a community effort, with representatives from the housing agencies, community colleges and local small businesses present. Some veterans even appear on their own–without any arrest–to take advantage of the resources.
“We redirect the path they’re starting to go down,” Russell said, by creating structure and requiring accountability.









