I Was Ordered to Take Anger Management in Jersey City, New Jersey
Your Complete Guide to Completing Court-Ordered Anger Management from the Jersey City Municipal Court — Lewis S. McRae Justice Complex, 365 Summit Avenue — Including How to Enroll, What the Court Expects, Where to Park, and How to Get Your Case Dismissed
If the Jersey City Municipal Court just ordered you to complete anger management, you are not alone — and you are not without options. Maybe you were arrested after an argument on Newark Avenue, a confrontation outside a bar on Grove Street, or a domestic dispute in one of the high-rises along the waterfront. Maybe a road rage incident on the Pulaski Skyway, Route 1&9, or the Turnpike Extension brought the police. Maybe a neighbor dispute in the Heights, a shoving match in Journal Square, or a domestic violence call from one of the apartment complexes in Bergen-Lafayette ended with handcuffs and a court summons. Whatever happened, the court has spoken: complete anger management or face consequences including jail time, extended probation, or a permanent criminal conviction on your record.
This page walks you through the entire process from enrollment to completion, with specific details about the Jersey City Municipal Court — the Lewis S. McRae Justice Complex at 365 Summit Avenue, the multiple courtrooms and judges, and exactly what documentation the court needs from your anger management provider. Jersey City runs one of the highest-volume municipal courts in New Jersey with six courtrooms and seven judges. No generic advice can prepare you for that environment. This page will.
Your Court: Jersey City Municipal Court
Jersey City Municipal Court — Lewis S. McRae Justice Complex
Address: 365 Summit Avenue, Jersey City, NJ 07306
Location: The Lewis S. McRae Justice Complex is a dedicated courthouse building near Journal Square. Security screening upon entry.
Phone: (201) 209-6700
Court Director: Wendy Razzoli, (201) 209-6741
Assistant Court Director: Jennifer Drago
Chief Municipal Prosecutor: Jacob V. Hudnut, (201) 209-6755
Court Sessions: Monday through Friday, both in-person and virtual (via Zoom). Multiple courtrooms operate simultaneously. Your court notice specifies your VH Room number for virtual appearances.
Call Center Hours: Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM
In-Person Hours: Monday, Wednesday – Friday, 8:30 AM – 3:00 PM. Tuesday, 8:30 AM – 7:00 PM.
Court ID: 0906
Payment Methods: Cash, check, credit card, or money order in person. Certified check or money order by mail. Online payments accepted via NJMCdirect.com. A 2% surcharge applies to credit card payments.
Adjournment Requests: Must be submitted in writing or in-person at least three (3) working days before your scheduled court date. Email requests to JCMC@jcnj.org. Adjournments are not automatic — they require written approval from a judge.
Interpreter Services: Available at no cost. With over 40 languages spoken in Jersey City and nearly 46 percent of the population foreign-born, interpreters for Spanish, Arabic, Tagalog, Hindi, Gujarati, and many other languages are regularly coordinated through the court.
What Charges Lead to Anger Management Orders in Jersey City
The Jersey City Municipal Court handles disorderly persons offenses, petty disorderly persons offenses, traffic violations, and city ordinance violations. The charges that most commonly result in anger management orders include simple assault under N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a), harassment under N.J.S.A. 2C:33-4, criminal mischief under N.J.S.A. 2C:17-3 when property is damaged during an argument, disorderly conduct under N.J.S.A. 2C:33-2, and any domestic violence offense at the disorderly persons level where the court has jurisdiction.
If your charge is an indictable offense — aggravated assault, terroristic threats, or a weapons offense — it will transfer from Jersey City Municipal Court to the Hudson County Superior Court. The Superior Court currently operates out of the Hudson County Administration Building at 595 Newark Avenue and the William J. Brennan Courthouse at 583 Newark Avenue, both in Jersey City near Journal Square. Our anger management program is accepted at both court levels. If your case has been transferred, see our guide to how Hudson County cases move from Municipal Court to Superior Court for a full breakdown of that process.
How Anger Management Gets Ordered in Jersey City
Anger management enters your case at one of three points. The best outcome is a conditional dismissal under N.J.S.A. 2C:36A-1 — you agree to complete anger management and other conditions, and if you satisfy everything, the charge is dismissed entirely. No conviction. No criminal record. The second scenario is a plea agreement where you plead guilty to a lesser charge — often petty disorderly persons harassment — with anger management as a sentencing condition. The third scenario is probation after conviction, where anger management is a mandatory condition of your probation term.
“Jersey City Municipal Court is one of the busiest in the entire state — six courtrooms, seven judges, and a docket that moves fast. If you show up without an enrollment letter in hand, your case goes to the back of the line and you lose your best chance at a conditional dismissal. In a courthouse this busy, preparation is everything. Enroll the day you find this page — not the day before your next court date.”
— Santo Artusa, NJAMG Program Director, Rutgers Law 2009About Jersey City: Understanding the City
Jersey City is the second most populous city in New Jersey and the county seat of Hudson County. Covering approximately 14.7 square miles along the western bank of the Hudson River, it is home to over 300,000 residents. Jersey City has been recognized as the most ethnically diverse city in the United States: approximately 27 percent of residents identify as Asian, 26 percent as White, 20 percent as Black or African American, and 26 percent as Hispanic or Latino. Over 40 languages are spoken in more than half of all households, and approximately 46 percent of the population was born outside the United States. The median household income is roughly $101,000, and the median age is 34.
The city is divided into distinct neighborhoods, each with its own character and its own set of circumstances that lead to arrests. Downtown Jersey City along the waterfront includes the high-rise luxury towers of Exchange Place, Paulus Hook, and the Newport area. The Heights sits atop the Palisades ridge. Journal Square is the transportation and civic hub where the courthouse stands. Bergen-Lafayette, Greenville, and the West Side are established residential neighborhoods. The city borders Hoboken to the north, Bayonne to the south, Newark Bay and Kearny to the west, and the Hudson River and New York City to the east.
Why Jersey City’s Size and Density Matter for Your Case
In a city of over 300,000 people packed into 14.7 square miles, you have roughly 20,000 people per square mile. That density creates friction — noise complaints in shared-wall apartments, parking disputes on packed streets, confrontations on crowded sidewalks and transit platforms. The PATH train platforms at Journal Square, Grove Street, Exchange Place, and Newport bring together tens of thousands of commuters every day. The bars and restaurants along Newark Avenue, Grove Street, and the waterfront are flashpoints for late-night confrontations. The sheer volume of human interaction in this city means the municipal court processes more cases than almost any other municipality in the state.
This density also means you will likely encounter the other party again — at the same PATH station, at the same grocery store, in the same apartment building. NJAMG’s program includes specific modules on navigating ongoing proximity to the other party: what to do when you see them in the elevator, how to handle mutual friends who bring up the incident, how to manage your emotional response when you pass the location where the arrest occurred.
Our remote format addresses a practical concern as well. In a city with limited parking, heavy traffic, and a court that runs multiple sessions daily, adding an in-person anger management appointment to your week creates logistical strain. Our live video sessions are conducted from the privacy of your home, your office, or any quiet space with an internet connection. No commute. No parking hunt. No waiting room.
Directions to Jersey City Municipal Court
Getting to 365 Summit Avenue — Lewis S. McRae Justice Complex
The courthouse is a dedicated building near Journal Square. You will pass through security screening upon entering. Bring your court summons, a valid photo ID, and any anger management documentation.
From the South (Bayonne / NJ Turnpike)
Take Routes 1 & 9 North (Pulaski Skyway) into Jersey City. Take the exit for 1 & 9 North / Lincoln Tunnel / Tonnele Avenue. At the traffic light at the end of the ramp, turn right onto Tonnele Avenue. From Tonnele Avenue, turn left onto Newark Avenue (4 blocks, 2 lights down). Follow Newark Avenue to the second traffic light and the 3-way intersection with Summit and Hoboken Avenues. Make a right turn onto Summit Avenue. The courthouse is just past the fourth light on Summit Avenue.
From the NJ Turnpike
Take Exit 14C and use the Christopher Columbus turnoff. Coming off the ramp, follow the sign for Montgomery Street. Turn left onto Montgomery Street. From Montgomery Street, turn right onto Summit Avenue (approximately 7 blocks). Proceed on Summit Avenue 4 blocks to the Municipal Court at 365 Summit Avenue.
From the North (Hoboken / North Bergen / Route 3)
From Hoboken, take JFK Boulevard or Observer Highway south into Jersey City and connect to Newark Avenue heading west toward Journal Square. Turn right onto Summit Avenue. From North Bergen or Route 3, take Tonnele Avenue south to Newark Avenue, then follow the directions above.
PATH Train
The Journal Square PATH station is the closest stop, located between Kennedy Boulevard and Summit Avenue. Take the Summit Avenue exit (rear of station) and turn right (south) onto Summit Avenue. Walk approximately 3 blocks to the courthouse at 365 Summit Avenue. PATH provides direct service from Manhattan (33rd Street and World Trade Center) and from Newark.
NJ Transit Bus & Hudson-Bergen Light Rail
Multiple NJ Transit bus routes serve Journal Square, including routes 1, 10, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 87, and others connecting from across Hudson County and beyond. The Hudson-Bergen Light Rail stops at the Journal Square Transportation Center. From the HBLR platform, walk east to Summit Avenue and south to 365 Summit Avenue — approximately a 5-minute walk.
Parking
Street parking around the courthouse is extremely limited and metered. The Journal Square area has several parking garages, including the Journal Square Transportation Center parking deck. Do not rely on finding street parking on Summit Avenue or Newark Avenue near the courthouse — these blocks are heavily trafficked during business hours. If you are driving, budget time for a parking garage and a short walk. Arrive at least 30 minutes before your scheduled court time.
When to Arrive
Your court notice will specify your exact date, time, and courtroom (VH Room number for virtual appearances). Plan to arrive at least 30 minutes early to clear security, find your courtroom, and check in. Bring your court summons, a valid photo ID, and any anger management documentation (enrollment letter, progress reports, or completion certificate). Cell phones must be silenced. Dress business casual — no shorts, tank tops, or hats in the courtroom.
Weather and Seasonal Considerations
Jersey City sits on the Hudson River waterfront in northeastern New Jersey. The proximity to the water adds wind chill in winter and humidity in summer. Here is what to plan for across the seasons:
Weather is one of the strongest arguments for NJAMG’s remote format. A nor’easter that shuts down PATH service and makes the Pulaski Skyway treacherous does not cancel your anger management session. A July heat wave does not force you onto a packed, un-air-conditioned bus to Journal Square. You attend from home via secure video, rain or shine, snow or heat. This keeps your completion timeline on track regardless of what the weather does.
Your Anger Management Program: Structure and Pricing
NJAMG Program Details for Jersey City Court Orders
Format: Live, one-on-one sessions via secure video platform. Every session is facilitator-led — never pre-recorded video modules.
Facilitator: Santo Artusa, JD (Rutgers School of Law, 2009). 15+ years working with New Jersey courts across all 21 counties, including Hudson County Municipal Courts and Hudson County Superior Court.
Session Length: 50 minutes per session.
Schedule: Flexible scheduling including evenings and weekends. Weekly sessions are standard, but accelerated tracks are available if your court deadline is close.
Documentation: Enrollment confirmation letter (same day), progress reports (on request), and formal completion certificate. All documents are accepted by Jersey City Municipal Court and Hudson County Superior Court.
Language: Sessions conducted in English. Bilingual coordination available for Spanish-speaking participants who need assistance with enrollment and documentation.
| Program Option | Cost | Timeline | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment + 1 Session | $150 | Same day | Start here. Includes same-day enrollment letter for court. |
| 8-Session Standard | $375 | ~8 weeks | Most Municipal Court orders. Conditional dismissals. |
| 8-Session Expedited | $485 | ~3 weeks | Tight court deadlines. Multiple sessions per week. |
| 12-Session Program | $525 | ~12 weeks | DV-related charges. Extended court orders. |
| 16-Session Program | $675 | ~16 weeks | Superior Court PTI conditions. Indictable offenses. |
| 26-Session Comprehensive | $950 | ~26 weeks | Batterers intervention. Extended probation conditions. |
The Best Move You Can Make Today
If you have a court date coming up at 365 Summit Avenue, enroll now. The Assessment & First Session ($150) includes a same-day enrollment confirmation letter. When you walk into the Lewis S. McRae Justice Complex with that letter in hand — or when your attorney presents it at a virtual hearing via Zoom — you show the court you are already in motion. In a courthouse that handles one of the largest dockets in the state, that single document can be the difference between a conditional dismissal (charge dismissed, no record) and a guilty plea (permanent criminal conviction).
Call (201) 221-2522 or enroll online at newjerseyangermanagementgroup.com/enroll. We will have your letter ready the same day.
Case Studies: Jersey City Anger Management in Practice
The Grove Street Friday Night
The situation: Two men bumped into each other at a crowded bar on Grove Street near the pedestrian plaza on a Friday night. Words were exchanged. One man shoved the other into a table, knocking over glasses and causing a minor cut. Jersey City Police responded and charged the aggressor with simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a)) and disorderly conduct (N.J.S.A. 2C:33-2).
The strategy: The defense attorney contacted NJAMG the following Monday and enrolled the client in the 8-session program. An enrollment confirmation letter was sent the same day and presented to the court at the first appearance.
The outcome: The disorderly conduct charge was dropped. The court agreed to a conditional dismissal on the simple assault: complete 8 anger management sessions and maintain no further violations for 12 months. The defendant completed all sessions over two months, with particular focus on alcohol-related conflict triggers and de-escalation in social settings. The simple assault charge was dismissed entirely. No conviction. No record.
The Downtown High-Rise Argument
The situation: A couple living in one of the luxury high-rises along the waterfront in the Exchange Place area got into an argument that escalated. The building’s concierge called police after hearing shouting from the hallway. Jersey City Police arrived, observed a broken phone screen and redness on the girlfriend’s arm, and arrested the boyfriend under New Jersey’s mandatory DV arrest statute (N.J.S.A. 2C:25-21). Charge: simple assault, domestic violence context.
The strategy: The charge was a disorderly persons offense, so it stayed in Jersey City Municipal Court rather than transferring to Hudson County Superior Court. The girlfriend did not pursue a restraining order. Defense counsel enrolled the boyfriend in NJAMG’s 12-session program immediately and provided the enrollment letter at the first virtual court appearance.
The outcome: The court ordered a conditional dismissal with 12 sessions of anger management as the primary condition. The boyfriend completed all sessions, focusing on communication under stress, managing arguments in shared living spaces, and recognizing personal escalation patterns. The charge was dismissed upon completion. No criminal record.
The Pulaski Skyway Incident
The situation: A Jersey City resident was driving on the Pulaski Skyway when a lane dispute with another driver escalated. Both drivers exited at the Tonnele Avenue ramp. The Jersey City resident got out of his car and punched the other driver through the window, fracturing his cheekbone. The injury severity elevated the charge to third-degree aggravated assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)(1)). The case was transferred from Jersey City Municipal Court to Hudson County Superior Court at 595 Newark Avenue.
The strategy: Defense counsel enrolled the client in NJAMG’s 16-session program immediately after indictment. By the time the PTI application was submitted, the client had already completed 10 sessions with full progress documentation.
The outcome: PTI was granted. The defendant completed all 16 sessions and the two-year supervision period without incident. The aggravated assault indictment was dismissed. The same anger management program that would have satisfied the courtroom at 365 Summit Avenue satisfied the Hudson County Superior Court at 595 Newark Avenue.
The Jersey City Resident Arrested in Hoboken
The situation: A Jersey City resident was at a restaurant in Hoboken with his wife when an argument escalated. He grabbed her wrist, leaving a mark. Hoboken Police responded and made a DV arrest. The criminal charge (simple assault) was filed in Hoboken Municipal Court, since the incident occurred in Hoboken. But the wife filed a TRO through the Hudson County Family Division, since both parties live in Hudson County.
What this means: The defendant now has a criminal case in Hoboken Municipal Court and a restraining order proceeding in Hudson County Family Division — two different proceedings, but both within Hudson County. One anger management program satisfies both. Because the parties live in Jersey City but the incident occurred in Hoboken, the criminal case stays in Hoboken while the family court matter is handled at the Hudson County Superior Court. See our multi-county domestic violence guide for an in-depth explanation of how these parallel proceedings work.
The outcome: The defendant enrolled in NJAMG’s 12-session program. The enrollment letter was presented at both the Hoboken Municipal Court appearance and the FRO hearing in Hudson County Family Division. One program, one enrollment, two courtrooms satisfied.
The Journal Square Rush Hour Confrontation
The situation: During the evening rush at the Journal Square PATH station, two commuters collided on the platform. One shoved the other against a pillar. NJ Transit Police and JCPD responded. The aggressor was charged with simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a)). Because the incident occurred within Jersey City limits, the case was filed in Jersey City Municipal Court.
The strategy: The defendant, who commutes daily from Jersey City to Manhattan for work, could not afford a criminal conviction. Defense counsel enrolled him in NJAMG’s 8-session program the same week. The enrollment letter was presented at the first virtual court appearance.
The outcome: Conditional dismissal granted. Eight sessions completed with focus on stress management in high-density environments, commuter-specific triggers, and physical space awareness in crowds. Charge dismissed. No record. The defendant still takes the PATH from Journal Square every day — without incident.
What If Your Jersey City Case Involves a Restraining Order?
When a Jersey City arrest involves a domestic relationship — spouse, partner, former partner, household member, or someone you have a child with — a restraining order can be filed in addition to the criminal charge. Where the TRO is filed depends on where the parties live, not necessarily where the incident occurred.
If both parties live in Jersey City (Hudson County), the TRO will be filed through the Hudson County Family Division at the Superior Court complex on Newark Avenue. If the other party lives in a different county — Bergen County, Essex County, Middlesex County — the TRO may be filed in that county’s Family Division, creating a true multi-county case. Either way, NJAMG’s program is accepted in all 21 New Jersey counties. One enrollment, one program, every court satisfied.
⚠ If a Restraining Order Has Been Filed Against You
Do not contact the protected party. Do not go to the shared residence without court permission. Do not post about the situation on social media. Violating a restraining order is a separate criminal offense (contempt under N.J.S.A. 2C:29-9) that carries up to 18 months in prison and will severely damage your position in both the criminal case and the family court proceeding. If you have questions about what you can and cannot do, talk to your defense attorney. And enroll in anger management immediately — it demonstrates to the family court judge that you are taking concrete steps toward change.
Your Step-by-Step Path from Arrest to Case Closed
Step 1: The Arrest and Release
You are arrested by Jersey City Police (JCPD), booked, and released with a summons listing your court date at 365 Summit Avenue. Your summons will include a VH Room number if your appearance is virtual. Court sessions run Monday through Friday — your specific date and time are on the summons.
Step 2: Retain an Attorney and Enroll in Anger Management (This Week)
Contact a criminal defense attorney who practices in Hudson County courts. Simultaneously, call NJAMG at (201) 221-2522 to enroll. The Assessment & First Session ($150) gets you started and produces the same-day enrollment letter your attorney needs.
Step 3: Your Attorney Presents the Enrollment Letter
Your defense attorney presents the NJAMG enrollment letter to the court at your first appearance — whether in person at 365 Summit Avenue or via Zoom virtual hearing. This document signals to the judge and prosecutor that you have already begun addressing the underlying behavior. In a high-volume court like Jersey City, it opens the door to a conditional dismissal or favorable plea before your case gets buried in the docket.
Step 4: Complete Your Sessions
Attend your weekly (or accelerated) sessions via secure video. Stay on schedule. If you need a progress report for an interim court date, request one from NJAMG and we will provide it immediately. Every session builds toward the skills that prevent re-offense and the documentation that satisfies the court.
Step 5: Submit Your Completion Certificate
Upon completing all sessions, NJAMG provides a formal completion certificate. Your attorney submits this to the Jersey City Municipal Court — either in person or via email to JCMC@jcnj.org. If the court ordered a conditional dismissal, the charge is dismissed upon receipt of your certificate and verification that you have met all other conditions. Case closed. No record.
Virtual Court in Jersey City: What You Need to Know
Jersey City Offers Both In-Person and Virtual Court Appearances
Jersey City Municipal Court was one of the first in New Jersey to implement virtual court proceedings. If your court notice includes a VH Room number, you may appear via Zoom using your computer, smartphone, tablet, or by phone. Check your court notice for your specific VH Room number and corresponding Zoom Meeting ID.
To attend virtually by computer: Go to Zoom.us, click “Join a Meeting,” and enter your name and Meeting ID associated with your VH number.
To attend virtually by phone: Dial (415) 762-9988 and enter your Meeting ID.
Important: Virtual appearances do not change what you need. Your attorney should still have your NJAMG enrollment letter, progress report, or completion certificate ready to present. Documents can be emailed to the court or submitted via the Judiciary Electronic Document Submission (JEDS) system.
Ordered to Take Anger Management in Jersey City?
Start today. Same-day enrollment letters. Live sessions via secure video. Accepted at Jersey City Municipal Court, Hudson County Superior Court, and every court in New Jersey.
📞 Call (201) 221-2522 Enroll Online Now
Assessment + First Session: $150 • Same-Day Letter • Live Facilitator • All 21 NJ Counties
Frequently Asked Questions: Jersey City Anger Management
Nearby Hudson County Town Pages
Other Hudson County Communities We Serve
Jersey City is the county seat of Hudson County. If you have cases in multiple towns, one NJAMG enrollment covers all of them:
Hoboken • Bayonne • Union City • West New York • North Bergen • Kearny • Harrison • Secaucus • Weehawken • Guttenberg • East Newark • Hudson County Superior Court
Related Guides
Municipal Court to Superior Court in Hudson County — How Hudson County cases move between court levels
Multi-County DV Cases in New Jersey — When your criminal case and restraining order are in different counties
Cyber Crimes and Anger Management — Online threats, cyber harassment, and digital offenses
Conditional Dismissals in New Jersey — How to get your charge dismissed through anger management
PTI and Anger Management — Using anger management to strengthen your PTI application
