Community Corner
Two Veterans To Graduate From Cobb Veterans Treatment Court
Cobb's VTC began in 2014, joining a nationwide surge of accountability courts tailored for veterans suffering from PTSD and other disorders.

MARIETTA, GA -- The Cobb County Veterans Court is scheduled to graduate two veteran participants during a 9 a.m. ceremony Friday, Jan. 18, at the Cobb County Superior Court Building. This will be the seventh graduating class of successful veterans, bringing a total of 29 local participants who have completed the 18-month intensive treatment program.
The Cobb County VTC began in 2014, joining a nationwide surge of accountability courts specifically tailored for veterans, addressing issues of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, substance abuse and other mental health issues via counseling, job training and additional needed services to achieve success.
The Veterans Treatment Court mission is to increase public safety by reducing recidivism; alleviate the tax burden of incarcerating law-breaking veterans by assisting participants to become productive taxpayers versus inmates, to provide intensive case management to address mental health issues and offer the familiarity of structure and accountability, similar to what they encountered during military service.
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An estimated 774,464 veterans reside in Georgia, with 47,000 of them living in Cobb County. Locally, 4,500 active duty and reserve troops are assigned to Dobbins Air Reserve Base. VTC Presiding Judge Reuben Green states, “On average, one veteran is arrested daily in Cobb County. Many of these veterans have sacrificed greatly for our country, and are suffering from post-service issues that have not been addressed or treated.”
According to data collected from the Department of Veteran Affairs, nationwide more than 39 veterans attempt to commit suicide daily and 20 a day take their lives. Approximately 70 percent of veterans who took their own lives, did not access services provided by the VA which could have possibly prevented a majority of these suicides. The tragic daily deaths of 20 veterans is potentially a number that is under-reported, since many of these veterans were embarrassed or unwilling to report their veteran status prior to ending their lives.
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Together with the Atlanta VA, Cobb County VTC participants receive alcohol and drug treatment in Decatur and are given additional treatment locally via a private provider. When a participant is stable in their recovery and treatment, the assigned VTC team addresses other issues which hinder an enrollee’s success, such as unemployment, lack of stable housing, the need for continuing education, or the benefits of family counseling.
One of the most unique aspects of the VTC is the Mentor Program. Each VTC participant is paired with a veteran who understands the challenges encountered by their assigned veteran to succeed in the program and graduate. Mentors must be honorably discharged from military service, have no prior criminal record and willing to commit to the duration of assisting a minimum of one veteran for the entirety of their 18-month VTC program.
With their mentors by their sides, these veterans will turn what once seemed like a dismal path, into a very bright future for themselves, and also their families.
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