Treatment & Program Services
Specialized dockets are defined by the Supreme Court of Ohio as:
“a particular session of court that offers a therapeutically oriented judicial approach to providing court supervision and appropriate treatment to individuals.”
Sometimes referred to as Drug Courts or problem-solving courts, they are specialized court-based programs designed to work with non-violent offenders who are experiencing alcohol and/or drug addiction and dependency problems.
Participants in the Logan County Treatment Courts are:
“a particular session of court that offers a therapeutically oriented judicial approach to providing court supervision and appropriate treatment to individuals.”
Sometimes referred to as Drug Courts or problem-solving courts, they are specialized court-based programs designed to work with non-violent offenders who are experiencing alcohol and/or drug addiction and dependency problems.
Participants in the Logan County Treatment Courts are:
- Provided with intensive treatment and other services they require to get and stay clean and sober.
- Held accountable by the Treatment Court Judge for meeting their obligations to the court, society, themselves, and their families and children.
- Regularly and randomly tested for drug use.
- Required to appear in court frequently so that the judge may review their progress.
- Rewarded for doing well or sanctioned when they do not live up to their obligations.
Disclaimer
The information contained within this site is intended to be accurate, reliable, complete as well as timely, however, Logan County Family Court reserves the right to make changes and assumes no liability for damages, nor does the Logan County Family Court warrant the accuracy, reliability, completeness and or the timeliness of any of the information contained within this website, and shall not be held liable for losses caused by the reliance on the accuracy, reliability, completeness and or the timeliness of any of the information contained within this website. It is not intended to be nor should it be interpreted as legal advice.