Court-Ordered Anger Management in Dover Morris County NJ
If a Dover court or your attorney has raised anger management on a Morris County matter, you need a program the court will actually accept. NJAMG runs live, one-on-one, court-accepted anger management — calibrated to your order, with a same-day enrollment letter.
Text ENROLL to (201) 205-3201Call (929) 788-6382
How anger-management orders happen in Dover
Simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1a) is the charge most likely to carry an anger-management condition, typically as a disorderly-persons offense. These matters are heard in Dover’s municipal court, with indictable cases moving to the Morris County Superior Court in Morristown. A first offense often runs through Conditional Dismissal (N.J.S.A. 2C:43-13.1) — complete the conditions, frequently including anger management, and the charge is dismissed. It can also arrive through a plea downgrade, probation, or (for indictable matters) a Pretrial Intervention condition.
What NJAMG provides for Dover clients
Live, private, one-on-one sessions — never a self-paced online class and never a group room. Programs of 4, 8, 12, or 16 sessions calibrated to your exact court order, available in English and Spanish, on evenings and weekends with no commute. Most clients get a same-day enrollment letter to show the court, a completion certificate meeting New Jersey standards, and direct verification to courts and probation officers on request.
Manejo de la Ira en Dover — en Español
Ofrecemos manejo de la ira en vivo, privado y en español para residentes de Dover y el Condado de Morris. Adaptamos el programa a su orden judicial (4, 8, 12 o 16 sesiones) y recibirá una carta de inscripción el mismo día. Escriba ENROLL al (201) 205-3201.
Text ENROLL to (201) 205-3201Call (929) 788-6382
NJAMG is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. New Jersey Anger Management Group, 97 Newkirk Street, 2nd Floor, Jersey City, NJ 07306 · njangermgt@pm.me. Court acceptance is determined by each court; confirm requirements with your attorney, judge, or probation officer.
