NJAMG take the plea anger management monmouth

Strategy Guide • Monmouth County • Accept the Offer

Stop Fighting a Battle You Already Won — Accept the Plea, Finish Anger Management, and Walk Away Clean

New Jersey Anger Management Group | 201-205-3201

Your lawyer worked the case. They reviewed the discovery, spoke with the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office, evaluated the evidence, and came back to you with an offer: complete anger management, satisfy a few conditions, and the whole thing goes away. You are sitting outside the courtroom at the Monmouth County Courthouse on Monument Street in Freehold, or you are on the phone after leaving Asbury Park Municipal Court, Red Bank Municipal Court, Long Branch Municipal Court, or Middletown Municipal Court — and you do not want to accept it. You want to fight. But across Monmouth County’s 53 municipalities and 643,000 residents, defense attorneys have watched this exact stubbornness destroy careers, empty bank accounts, and send people to the Monmouth County Correctional Institution on Waterworks Road. The deal on the table is not a punishment. It is an exit. Take it.

Why the Numbers Make This an Easy Decision

⚠ The Math Behind Criminal Trials in America

Between 90% and 95% of all criminal cases nationwide resolve through negotiated agreements — not trials. Fewer than 5% of defendants ever sit before a jury. Of those who do go to trial on assault-related charges, roughly 45% are convicted. At the federal level, full acquittals occur in fewer than 1% of cases that proceed to verdict.

The offer your defense attorney brought to you — the one that includes completing a court-approved anger management program — exists because the system recognized a path to resolution that does not require incarceration, does not require a conviction, and does not require you to gamble your future on the unpredictable judgment of strangers. That path closes the moment you reject it and demand trial.

Monmouth County — New Jersey’s fifth-most-populous county — processes thousands of criminal and disorderly persons cases annually through its Superior Court in Freehold and more than 50 municipal courts spread from the Bayshore to the Shore towns. The Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office at 132 Jerseyville Avenue in Freehold does not extend plea offers casually. When an assistant prosecutor agrees to PTI, conditional dismissal, or a reduced charge with anger management as a condition, that agreement reflects a prosecutorial calculation that this resolution serves the interests of justice. Rejecting it does not signal strength. It signals a defendant who does not understand the risk they are assuming.

What the Plea Offer Actually Contains in Monmouth County

PTI (Pretrial Intervention) — Your Record Stays Clean

N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12 • Rule 3:28

Available for first-time offenders facing indictable charges at Monmouth County Superior Court (71 Monument Street, Freehold). You complete anger management (typically 8–12 sessions), perform community service, submit to 1–3 years of supervision, and when the period ends, every charge is dismissed. No guilty plea. No conviction. No criminal record. Eligible for expungement six months after successful completion. Your attorney did not negotiate this lightly. PTI in Monmouth County requires approval from both the PTI coordinator and the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office. They agreed. Do not undo their work.

Learning how anger management actually works helps you approach the program with intention instead of resentment.

✅ PTI = all charges dismissed, zero convictions, clean record, expungement-eligible.

Conditional Dismissal — The Disorderly Persons Pathway

N.J.S.A. 2C:43-13.1

For first-time disorderly persons offenses processed through any Monmouth County municipal court — Freehold Township (1 Municipal Plaza), Asbury Park (One Municipal Plaza), Red Bank (90 Monmouth Street), Long Branch (279 Broadway), Middletown (1 Kings Highway), Neptune (25 Neptune Boulevard), Howell (300 Old Tavern Road), Marlboro (1979 Township Drive), and every other municipal court in the county. Finish anger management, remain arrest-free for one year, and the charges are dismissed entirely. This is a one-time benefit — conditional dismissal can only be used once in your lifetime.

Covers simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a)), harassment (N.J.S.A. 2C:33-4), criminal mischief (N.J.S.A. 2C:17-3), and disorderly conduct (N.J.S.A. 2C:33-2).

✅ Conditional dismissal = charges erased, no conviction, one-time lifetime benefit.

Downgraded Charges With Anger Management as a Probation Condition

When PTI or conditional dismissal is off the table — because of a prior record, a DV designation, or the severity of the charge — your attorney negotiates a plea to a lesser offense. Third-degree aggravated assault (3–5 years state prison) gets reduced to simple assault (disorderly persons, 6 months max). The gap between those two outcomes is measured in years behind bars, tens of thousands in fines, and a felony record that follows you for life. Anger management as a probation condition is the reason that gap exists for you. Do not close it.

Five Excuses Monmouth County Defendants Use to Reject the Offer — And Why Every One of Them Backfires

1. “I’m Innocent — Why Should I Accept Anything?”

Because innocence does not guarantee acquittal. The courtroom at 71 Monument Street in Freehold does not run on moral clarity. It runs on evidence, testimony, and the subjective interpretation of twelve jurors who were not present when the incident occurred. PTI and conditional dismissal are not guilty pleas. You are not confessing. You are not admitting wrongdoing. You are agreeing to conditions that produce the single outcome that matters: charges dismissed, record clean. Innocent people are convicted at trial every day in every county in America. Your attorney is not asking you to lie. They are asking you to be smart.

2. “They Swung First — I Was Defending Myself”

New Jersey’s self-defense statute (N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4) requires you to prove four elements simultaneously: you did not provoke the confrontation, you faced an imminent physical threat, your response used proportional force, and you held a reasonable belief of danger. New Jersey also imposes a duty to retreat outside your home. If the state disproves even one element, the defense collapses. Your attorney reviewed the self-defense angle before recommending this offer. If they are still telling you to accept the deal despite a potential self-defense claim, they see a fatal weakness in the argument. Trust the person who knows your case better than anyone.

3. “I Don’t Have an Anger Issue — This Is Insulting”

Nobody is diagnosing you. Court-ordered anger management is not a clinical assessment of your mental health. It is administrative paperwork that makes your criminal charges disappear. The evidence-based CBT curriculum covers communication, de-escalation, stress management, and cognitive reframing — skills that are useful for anyone, regardless of whether they “have an anger problem.” Completing 8–12 sessions through NJAMG produces a court-accepted completion certificate. Refusing the offer because you find the anger management requirement demeaning is like refusing antibiotics because you do not think you deserve to be sick. The charge is already here. The anger management makes it leave.

4. “I Want to Tell My Side of the Story in Court”

Your “side” will be presented through the filter of cross-examination, evidentiary rules, objections, and a prosecutor who has tried hundreds of cases before yours. You will sit on the second floor of the Monmouth County Courthouse while witnesses contradict your version, while body camera footage is played without context, and while the judge instructs the jury on legal standards that have nothing to do with who was “right.” At the end of that process, you have zero control over the outcome. The plea deal gives you total control. You know exactly what happens: you complete the conditions, your charges are dismissed. Trial replaces certainty with a coin flip.

5. “Accepting the Deal Means They Win”

Dismissed charges are not a defeat. Dismissed charges are the finish line. PTI and conditional dismissal produce the exact same practical result as a trial acquittal — no conviction on your record. The direct-pay model through NJAMG means no insurance claim, no mental health diagnosis, no medical record entry beyond the court certificate itself. What you are calling “losing” is actually the only path that guarantees you walk away with nothing on your record. A conviction at trial — that is losing. And losing at trial after you rejected a deal that would have given you a clean record? That is a mistake you carry forever.

The Cost of Losing at Trial in Monmouth County

⚠ Once the Verdict Comes In, Negotiation Is Over

Simple Assault Conviction (Disorderly Persons): Up to 6 months at the Monmouth County Correctional Institution (1 Waterworks Road, Freehold). $1,000 fine. Criminal record visible on every employment screening, housing application, and professional licensing inquiry.

Aggravated Assault — Third Degree: 3–5 years in New Jersey State Prison. $15,000 fine. Permanent felony conviction. Automatic loss of firearm rights. Professional license revocation. Deportation proceedings for non-citizens. Presumption of non-incarceration for first offenders — but that presumption disappears the moment the judge sees the trial record.

Aggravated Assault — Second Degree: 5–10 years State Prison with a presumption of incarceration — meaning the court must impose prison unless truly extraordinary circumstances are present.

After a guilty verdict, the plea deal your attorney negotiated does not come back. The anger management that would have been your entire obligation under PTI or conditional dismissal is now irrelevant. You are being sentenced by a judge, not diverted into a program. The door you walked past is locked. And you locked it yourself.

Anger Management Is the Lightest Obligation in the Entire Agreement

Consider everything the court could require: community service, random drug testing, electronic monitoring, curfew restrictions, mandatory counseling, restitution payments. Now compare that to anger management through NJAMG: private, one-on-one sessions conducted via secure video from wherever you are — your home in Middletown, your office in Red Bank, your car in the parking lot at Freehold Raceway Mall during lunch. No group rooms. No strangers from your town. No uncomfortable waiting areas. Sessions cover the suppress-explode cycle, how substances amplify aggression, keeping your hands down under provocation, sleep deprivation and irritability, and cognitive restructuring through journaling. You receive a completion certificate. The court dismisses your charges. The whole thing takes weeks. That is what you are prepared to reject in exchange for a trial that could send you to state prison.

💰 NJAMG — Program Details & Pricing

4 sessions from $180 ($45/session) — voluntary, pre-court, proactive enrollment

8 sessions from $360 — standard conditional dismissal or PTI condition

12+ sessions — call for pricing, probation-specified requirements

Accelerated completion: up to 4 sessions/week. Finish 8 sessions in 2 weeks. 12 sessions in 3–4 weeks.

No diagnosis. No insurance billing. No medical record. Private one-on-one via secure video.

Same-day enrollment letter for your defense attorney to file with the Monmouth County court.

Call 201-205-3201 — enroll now, begin this week.

Monmouth County Court Directory — Where Your Offer Is Waiting

⚖ Asbury Park Municipal Court

One Municipal Plaza
Asbury Park, NJ 07712

Phone: (732) 775-1765

Asbury Park — a Shore city with a vibrant nightlife scene on Cookman Avenue and along the boardwalk. Bar-related altercations, summer crowd incidents, and domestic disputes drive a significant assault and harassment docket. If your case originated here after a night out, your attorney has already factored in the witness reliability issues that Shore town cases create. Accept the deal.

⚖ Red Bank Municipal Court

90 Monmouth Street
Red Bank, NJ 07701

Phone: (732) 530-2716

Red Bank — Monmouth County’s most walkable downtown, with Broad Street restaurants and bars generating late-night confrontations. A college-town energy without the campus. Simple assault and disorderly conduct cases spike on weekends.

⚖ Long Branch Municipal Court

279 Broadway
Long Branch, NJ 07740

Phone: (732) 571-6500

Long Branch — population 31,900+, the largest city in coastal Monmouth County. Pier Village, the beachfront, and a dense residential core generate a high-volume docket for assault, DV, and harassment.

⚖ Middletown Municipal Court

1 Kings Highway
Middletown, NJ 07748

Phone: (732) 615-2036

Middletown Township — the most populous municipality in Monmouth County with 67,000+ residents. Suburban sprawl, highway corridor disputes, and neighborhood altercations produce a steady caseload.

⚖ Freehold Township Municipal Court

1 Municipal Plaza
Freehold, NJ 07728

Phone: (732) 294-2150

Freehold Township — 35,500+ residents surrounding the county seat. Proximity to Route 9 and the Freehold Raceway Mall corridor creates traffic-related altercations and retail disputes alongside standard DV and assault matters.

⚖ Neptune Township Municipal Court

25 Neptune Boulevard
Neptune, NJ 07753

Phone: (732) 988-5200

Neptune Township — includes the Ocean Grove neighborhood. 28,100+ residents with a diverse caseload spanning assault, harassment, and disorderly conduct.

⚖ Additional Monmouth County Municipal Courts

Howell: 300 Old Tavern Rd, (732) 938-4848

Marlboro: 1979 Township Dr, (732) 536-0200

Manalapan: 120 Route 522, (732) 446-8525

Wall Township: 2700 Allaire Rd, (732) 449-4666

Ocean Township: 50 Railroad Ave, (732) 531-5000

Eatontown: 47 Broad St, (732) 389-7612

Hazlet: 255 Middle Rd, (732) 264-2231

Tinton Falls: 556 Tinton Ave, (732) 542-3400

Matawan/Aberdeen: 1 Aberdeen Sq, (732) 583-4200

Holmdel: 1 Veterans Way, Colts Neck, (732) 431-1799

Belmar: 601 Main St, (848) 220-9620

Keansburg: 29 Church St, (732) 787-0215

NJAMG is court-approved for every municipal court in Monmouth County and all 21 New Jersey counties.

🏛 Monmouth County Superior Court

Monmouth County Courthouse
71 Monument Street
Freehold, NJ 07728

Phone: (732) 677-4300

Criminal Presiding Judge: Hon. Jill G. O’Malley

Criminal Division: (732) 677-4500
Family Division: (732) 358-8700 ext. 87630
Probation Division: (732) 869-5600 (30 Mechanic St, Freehold)

Hours: Mon–Fri 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM

Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office:
132 Jerseyville Avenue, Freehold, NJ 07728
(732) 431-7160

Monmouth County Correctional Institution:
1 Waterworks Road, Freehold, NJ 07728
(732) 431-7860

NJ Courts — Monmouth Vicinage ↗

Monmouth County Case Studies — What Almost Went Wrong

PTI • Monmouth County Superior Court

“I Was a Teacher Facing a Felony. PTI Let Me Keep My Certification.”

Situation: 29-year-old female, Howell Township. Charged with third-degree aggravated assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(b)) after an incident at a youth sports event. Her son was playing in a travel baseball game in Manalapan. An opposing parent began berating her 10-year-old son after a collision at second base. She confronted the parent. The argument escalated. She shoved him backward over a folding chair and he struck his head on the metal bleacher frame, requiring eight stitches. First offense. Elementary school teacher in the Freehold Regional School District. Any criminal conviction would trigger automatic disclosure to the NJ Department of Education, jeopardize her teaching certificate, and activate the morals clause in her employment contract.

The deal: PTI through the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office. Conditions: 12 sessions anger management, 40 hours community service, 24-month supervision.

Her resistance: “He was screaming at a 10-year-old. Every parent on those bleachers would testify he provoked it. Any jury with children would acquit me.”

Her attorney’s reality check: “The jury will see photos of an eight-stitch laceration. They will hear testimony that you initiated physical contact. Verbal provocation — even directed at a child — is not a legal defense to aggravated assault in New Jersey. If convicted, the Department of Education will be notified within 30 days. Your teaching certificate, your career, your pension, your ability to coach your own son’s team — all of it is at stake. PTI dismisses every charge. You keep your career. The anger management is 12 hours of your time.”

NJAMG involvement: She enrolled the week she accepted PTI. Completed 12 sessions in 5 weeks via evening video after school hours. Curriculum focused on the amygdala hijack and the 90-second rule — particularly how maternal protective instinct can override rational decision-making in seconds, what rage models for children who are watching, and the distinction between advocating for your child and physically engaging with another adult.

PTI completed. All charges dismissed. Teaching certificate intact. Department of Education review closed without action. Eligible for expungement. “My son was sitting on the bench watching me get arrested. Anger management helped me understand that the moment I put my hands on another parent, I stopped protecting him and started traumatizing him. Keeping my hands down in that moment would have been the bravest thing I could have done.”

Conditional Dismissal • Asbury Park Municipal Court

“A Boardwalk Argument Nearly Cost Me My Real Estate License.”

Situation: 44-year-old male, Neptune Township. Charged with simple assault (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a)) after a Saturday night altercation on the Asbury Park boardwalk. He and a group of friends were leaving a bar when another group made comments directed at his wife. He confronted the man, and the exchange turned physical — a single punch that split the other man’s lip. First offense. Licensed real estate broker with an active firm in Red Bank. The NJ Real Estate Commission requires disclosure of all criminal convictions and can suspend or revoke licenses for offenses involving violence.

The deal: Conditional dismissal at Asbury Park Municipal Court. 8 sessions anger management, remain arrest-free for 12 months.

His objection: “He was harassing my wife. Anyone would have done what I did. I’m not going to anger management classes for defending her honor.”

The turning point: His attorney explained that “defending honor” is not a recognized legal defense anywhere in New Jersey. A simple assault conviction would require immediate disclosure to the NJ Real Estate Commission. His broker’s license — his livelihood and his firm’s operating authority — would be subject to review, potential suspension, or revocation. Conditional dismissal produces no conviction. Nothing to disclose. Direct-pay anger management means no insurance trail, no diagnosis, no record his clients or competitors could ever access.

NJAMG involvement: Enrolled Monday morning. Completed 8 sessions in 3 weeks via video between showings and closings. Sessions addressed the role of alcohol in escalation (four drinks over two hours), the cognitive distortion that equates verbal insults with physical threats, and the concept of “walking away as the stronger move.”

Conditional dismissal granted. Charges dismissed. Real estate license intact. No disclosure required to the NJ Real Estate Commission because there was no conviction. Total anger management cost: $360. Estimated trial cost: $5,000–$8,000 in attorney fees, mandatory Real Estate Commission disclosure regardless of outcome, and months of professional uncertainty.

Refused the Deal • Went to Trial • Convicted

“The Security Camera Showed What I Did, Not What He Did to Me First.”

Situation: 36-year-old male, Red Bank. Charged with aggravated assault after an incident in a downtown Red Bank parking garage on a Saturday night. He and another man had an altercation after a near-collision pulling out of adjacent parking spaces. Both men exited their vehicles. The other man pushed him first. He responded with a closed-fist punch that fractured the other man’s orbital bone. Security cameras captured the entire exchange. His attorney negotiated PTI: 12 sessions anger management, community service, 18-month supervision, charges dismissed.

He refused. “The camera shows him pushing me first. That’s self-defense. Open and shut. I want a trial.”

What happened at trial: The security footage did show the other man pushing first. It also showed the defendant responding with a full-force closed-fist punch to the face of a man who had delivered an open-hand shove. The prosecutor argued disproportionate force — the legal concept that self-defense requires proportional response. An open-hand push does not authorize a closed-fist strike that shatters an orbital bone. The jury agreed. Guilty verdict on third-degree aggravated assault.

The sentence: 3 years probation. $10,000 fine. 12 sessions anger management — the same condition he rejected under PTI. 100 hours community service. Permanent felony conviction on his record. Total financial cost: approximately $18,000 in attorney fees plus the $10,000 fine. The conviction will appear on every background check he encounters for the rest of his life.

He completed 12 sessions through NJAMG after the conviction. Identical program. Identical cost per session. Radically different result on his record. “I thought ‘he started it’ meant I would win. The jury saw a shove and then a broken face. Proportional force is something I learned about in anger management — three months after it mattered.”

Proactive DV Enrollment • Middletown

“I Called NJAMG Before I Even Called a Lawyer. It Changed My Entire Case.”

Situation: 42-year-old male, Middletown Township. Charged with simple assault (DV designation) after an argument with his wife over their teenager’s failing grades escalated in the kitchen. He grabbed her wrist and twisted it to take his car keys back when she tried to keep him from leaving. Redness and swelling on her wrist. Police called by the 16-year-old son. TRO issued. He was removed from the family home.

What he did: Spent the night at his brother’s house in Hazlet. Could not sleep. At 7:00 AM the next morning, he searched “anger management Monmouth County NJ” on his phone. Found NJAMG. Called at 8:15 AM. Enrolled by 8:30 AM. Had his first session at noon that same day. Before his first appearance at Middletown Municipal Court (1 Kings Highway), he had completed 4 sessions.

NJAMG curriculum focus: The impact on adolescents who witness parental conflict — his 16-year-old called 911 on his own father, a moment that indicates severe household stress; parenting pressure and sleep deprivation as anger amplifiers; the critical legal difference between wanting to leave and using physical force to retrieve an object from someone’s hand.

His defense attorney — retained after his first NJAMG session — presented enrollment documentation and a progress report showing 4 completed sessions at the first court appearance. The prosecutor acknowledged the proactive effort. The case resolved through conditional dismissal with anger management already substantially underway. TRO modified within 4 weeks. He completed 10 total sessions. Charges dismissed. No criminal record. No DV conviction. “My son made the call that changed my life. My attorney said that the 90 minutes between waking up and enrolling in anger management were worth more to my case than anything he could have done in court.”

How to Enroll in NJAMG — 5 Steps

1

Call
201-205-3201
Your court, charges, and timeline.

2

Confirm
Session count and fee matched to your order.

3

Document
Same-day enrollment letter for your attorney.

4

Begin
First session within 1–3 days via secure video.

5

Finish
Completion certificate filed with court/probation.

Frequently Asked Questions — Accepting the Deal in Monmouth County

Does accepting PTI or conditional dismissal count as a guilty plea in Monmouth County?

No. Both PTI and conditional dismissal are diversionary programs. You do not plead guilty. You do not admit to the offense. You agree to satisfy conditions — primarily completing anger management — and in return, the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office or the municipal prosecutor dismisses all charges. Your record reflects dismissed charges, not a conviction.

Is NJAMG accepted at Monmouth County Superior Court and all municipal courts?

Yes. NJAMG is court-approved across all 21 New Jersey counties. Every municipal court in Monmouth County — Asbury Park, Red Bank, Long Branch, Middletown, Freehold Township, Neptune, Howell, Marlboro, Manalapan, Wall, Ocean Township, Eatontown, Hazlet, Tinton Falls, Matawan/Aberdeen, Holmdel, Belmar, Keansburg, and every other — accepts our completion certificates. Monmouth County Superior Court in Freehold, the Monmouth County Probation Division, and the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office all recognize NJAMG documentation.

How quickly can I complete anger management before my Monmouth County court date?

NJAMG offers accelerated scheduling: up to 4 sessions per week. Complete 4 sessions in 1 week. 8 sessions in 2 weeks. 12 sessions in 3–4 weeks. If your next appearance at any Monmouth County court is approaching, call 201-205-3201 immediately to begin.

Will anger management show up on a background check or medical record?

No. NJAMG uses a direct-pay model. No insurance claims are filed. No mental health diagnosis is assigned. No CPT codes are generated. No entry appears on your medical records. The only documentation exists between you, NJAMG, and the court. Background checks, employment screenings, and professional licensing inquiries will not reveal your participation.

Should I enroll in anger management before the deal is finalized?

Absolutely. Proactive enrollment is the most powerful signal you can send to the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office and to the judge at 71 Monument Street. NJAMG provides a same-day enrollment letter your attorney can present at the next court appearance. If you have already completed sessions before the deal is formalized, your attorney holds significantly more leverage. Monmouth County’s criminal docket is busy. A defendant who has already started anger management stands out.

Can I reopen a plea deal after I initially rejected it?

Sometimes, if trial has not yet started. Your defense attorney can re-approach the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office or the municipal prosecutor to explore whether the original terms remain available. Enroll in NJAMG the same day at 201-205-3201 so your attorney can present proof of enrollment when reopening discussions. However, the original offer may no longer be on the table, and the longer you wait, the less room exists to negotiate.

Is PTI available for domestic violence offenses in Monmouth County?

There is a statutory presumption against PTI for domestic violence offenses under N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12(b)(2)(b). Conditional dismissal may still apply depending on the charge. Plea negotiations to reduced charges with anger management probation are common in Monmouth County DV cases. Proactive NJAMG enrollment influences both the criminal proceeding and Family Division matters including TRO/FRO hearings at the Monmouth County Courthouse in Freehold.

What if I don’t think I need anger management?

Whether you “need” it is beside the point. Anger management is the mechanism that allows the court to dismiss your charges. Think of it as the administrative cost of a clean record. NJAMG’s CBT-based curriculum is practical, evidence-based, and consistently produces positive feedback from participants who started skeptically. The private one-on-one format means no group environment, no strangers, and no wasted time. Finish the sessions. Get the certificate. Move on with your life.

Complete NJAMG Resource Library

Research & Education:

The Science Behind Anger Management — Why CBT Works

Keep Your Hands Down — Violence Prevention

Alcohol, Drugs, and Anger — The Amplifier Effect

Consequences — Prison, Job Loss, Financial Devastation

Repressed Anger & The Suppress-Explode Cycle

What Your Rage Is Teaching Your Children

Insurance vs. Direct Pay — The Complete Comparison

Voluntary Anger Management — No Court Order Required

Sleep Deprivation, Irritability, and Rage

Journaling and Stopping Negative Self-Talk

Self-Defense & Anger Management — Union, Bergenfield, Ridgefield Park

“Take the Plea” Guides — By County:

Take the Plea — Hudson County Edition

Take the Plea — Bergen County Edition

Take the Plea — Essex County Edition

Hyperlocal Court Guides:

Anger Management Near Jersey City

Court-Ordered — Jersey City & Hudson County

Private vs. Group — Jersey City

Anger Management Near Somerville

Court-Ordered — Somerset County

Private vs. Group — Somerset County

Anger Management Near Woodbridge

Court-Ordered — Woodbridge & Middlesex County

Your Attorney Negotiated an Exit. Use It. Enroll Today.

Court-approved for every municipal court in Monmouth County and Monmouth County Superior Court in Freehold. Same-day enrollment. Same-day proof of enrollment letter for your defense attorney. First session within 72 hours. Private, one-on-one, live secure video — no group setting, no waiting room, no commute. The offer on the table is the cleanest possible resolution to your case. The anger management is the simplest part. Do not let ego, frustration, or stubbornness turn a dismissable charge into a permanent conviction.

Enroll Today 📞 Call 201-205-3201

www.newjerseyangermanagementgroup.com | Court-Approved Anger Management | Monmouth County • All 21 NJ Counties