Anger Management Resources in Ocean County, NJ — The Definitive Guide to Court-Approved Programs, Community Services & Private Options for the Jersey Shore’s Largest County
Ocean County is New Jersey’s largest county by land area — 916 square miles stretching from the booming Orthodox community of Lakewood to the barrier islands of Long Beach Island, from the county seat of Toms River to the Pinelands wilderness of Lacey and Barnegat Townships, from the military-adjacent communities near Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst to the retirement communities of Whiting, Crestwood Village, and Leisure Village. Ocean County’s 33 municipalities encompass a staggering range: Lakewood alone has grown from 60,000 to over 135,000 in two decades, driven by the rapidly expanding Orthodox Jewish community. Meanwhile, Long Beach Island’s summer population quintuples during tourist season, producing a unique pattern of seasonal DV incidents fueled by alcohol, vacation-house proximity, and the stress of summer rentals. Toms River — the county seat and judicial hub — processes cases from every corner of this enormous county, and the judges at the Ocean County Courthouse on Hooper Avenue see everything: Lakewood Beth Din–parallel proceedings, LBI summer house altercations, military family DV from the Joint Base corridor, retirement community elder disputes, and working-class family conflicts from the Route 9 corridor.
If you have been ordered to complete anger management by an Ocean County court — or if you are proactively enrolling before your court date — this is the most comprehensive resource guide available for Ocean County residents. No other provider has produced anything close to this page because no other provider understands Ocean County’s complexity the way NJAMG does.
New Jersey Anger Management Group (NJAMG)
Private 1-on-1 · Court-Accepted Statewide · $375–$750 Total · English & Spanish · Virtual Telehealth
Founded by Santo Artusa Jr — Rutgers Law graduate, former NJ public defender, certified anger management specialist — with 2,500+ clients since 2012. NJAMG serves every Ocean County court — Superior Court in Toms River and all 33 municipal courts. Virtual telehealth is essential in Ocean County because this is a county where driving from Lakewood to Barnegat Light is over an hour. NJAMG eliminates the geography problem entirely.
✓ Private 1-on-1 sessions — not a group class. In Ocean County’s tight-knit shore towns and Lakewood’s insular community, a group class means guaranteed exposure.
✓ Attorney-founded — documentation designed for Ocean County judges, not just therapists.
✓ Same-day enrollment — enrollment letter to your attorney within hours.
✓ 7 days/week — shore-town seasonal schedules, military family rotations, retirement community flexibility, Shabbat-sensitive for Lakewood.
✓ Accelerated — meet your Toms River court deadline. Not locked into a 12-week group cycle.
✓ 100% virtual telehealth — Ocean County is 916 square miles. Driving to Toms River from Barnegat Light is 45+ minutes. Virtual eliminates it.
✓ English & Spanish — for Lakewood’s growing Latino community and the Route 9 corridor.
✓ Shabbat-sensitive scheduling — for Lakewood’s Orthodox community. Sunday–Friday. No Shabbat or Yom Tov.
✓ Beth Din–presentable documentation — for Lakewood families navigating secular court AND rabbinical court simultaneously.
✓ Military family awareness — Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst. UCMJ implications, security clearance, base housing.
✓ Court-grade documentation — multi-page attorney-designed progress reports for judges, probation, DCPP, custody evaluators, professional licensing boards, and employers.
✓ Every Ocean County court — Superior Court, all 33 municipal courts, Family Part. Money-back guarantee.
newjerseyangermanagementgroup.com · njangermgt@pm.me
Are You Looking for a Program That Checks Every Box?
If you need court-approved anger management in Ocean County, court-ordered domestic violence classes, or a program that understands the Shore County’s unique populations:
If you checked every box — NJAMG is the program for you.
📞 Call 201-205-3201 NowOcean County Courts That Order Anger Management
🏛️ Ocean County Courthouse — Toms River
Address: 120 Hooper Avenue, Toms River, NJ 08753 · Phone: 732-929-2000
The central courthouse for all of Ocean County — criminal division, family part, civil. This is where indictable offenses, contested divorces, final restraining orders, custody disputes, and DCPP matters are heard for all 33 municipalities. The judges at 120 Hooper Avenue process an extraordinary range: Lakewood’s Orthodox community disputes that run parallel to Beth Din proceedings, LBI summer-house DV from seasonal residents who may live in New York or Philadelphia the other 10 months, military family cases from the Joint Base corridor, retirement community disputes involving couples married 40+ years, and working-class family conflicts from the Route 9 corridor towns of Beachwood, South Toms River, and Berkeley Township.
What Ocean County judges expect: Proof of enrollment (NJAMG provides same-day), a live-facilitated program (not a self-paced online video course — Ocean County has specifically rejected self-paced courses in multiple DV cases), and completion documentation that demonstrates genuine behavioral change specific to the client’s triggers and cultural context. NJAMG’s multi-page attorney-designed progress reports are built for this courthouse.
🏛️ Ocean County Municipal Courts — Major Courts
Toms River (255 Oak Ave) · Lakewood (231 3rd St) · Brick (401 Chambers Bridge Rd) · Jackson (95 W Veterans Hwy) · Manchester (1 Colonial Dr) · Stafford/Manahawkin (260 E Bay Ave) · Berkeley (627 Pinewald Keswick Rd) · Lacey (818 W Lacey Rd) · Barnegat (900 W Bay Ave) · Little Egg Harbor (665 Radio Rd) · Beachwood (1600 Pinewald Rd) · Point Pleasant Beach (416 New Jersey Ave) · Point Pleasant (2233 Bridge Ave) · Seaside Heights (901 Boulevard) · Long Beach Township/LBI (6805 Long Beach Blvd) · and all others.
NJAMG is accepted at every municipal court in Ocean County — all 33.
🏛️ Ocean County Family Part — DV, Custody & DCPP
Location: Ocean County Courthouse, 120 Hooper Avenue, Toms River
Family Part handles FROs, TROs, custody, DCPP/CPS. Ocean County’s Family Part sees an unusually wide range: Lakewood’s large families (6-12 children) navigating both secular custody and Beth Din proceedings simultaneously, military families from Joint Base MDL where a DV charge triggers UCMJ review and potentially ends a 20-year career, shore-town families where a summer incident becomes a year-round legal battle, and retirement community couples whose 40-year marriages are fracturing under the pressure of medical decline, financial stress, and the isolation of fixed-income living. NJAMG documentation is calibrated for each of these populations.
Case Study: A Lakewood Yeshiva Administrator Navigating Criminal Court, Beth Din, and a Community That Knows Everything
Moshe, 44 — Harassment 2nd, Lakewood, Yeshiva Administrator, Beth Din, 8 Children, Shidduch Crisis, Business Partnerships
Moshe, a Lakewood yeshiva administrator and real estate investor with 8 children, was in a marriage strained by the financial pressure of supporting the largest family on his block. Yeshiva tuition alone exceeded $120K per year. His wife’s parents — prominent in a different Lakewood kehilla — had been pressuring her to demand that Moshe sell a rental property to fund a larger home for the family. During a Motzei Shabbat (Saturday night) argument about the property, Moshe threw his car keys at the kitchen counter. The keys bounced off the counter and hit his wife’s hand. She went to the neighbor’s house — who happened to be a member of the yeshiva board. Within an hour, the board president called the Rosh Yeshiva. By Sunday morning, three things had happened simultaneously: the neighbor had called 911 (police arrived Sunday at 7 AM), the Beth Din had been contacted by the wife’s family, and the yeshiva board had called an emergency meeting about Moshe’s fitness to continue as administrator.
Moshe was charged with Harassment 2nd. His yeshiva position was suspended. His real estate partnerships — all with fellow Lakewood Orthodox investors — froze pending resolution. His oldest son, age 19, was in shidduch discussions that were immediately paused when the shadchan heard about the arrest. His wife’s family’s kehilla was applying communal pressure for a get. And Lakewood — a community of 135,000+ where the yeshiva network, the business network, the shidduch network, and the social network are all the same network — knew about the incident before Moshe had even appeared in court.
Moshe enrolled at NJAMG. Program cost: $750 for 12 sessions. Shabbat-sensitive scheduling — Sunday through Friday only. No Yom Tov. The work addressed the key-throw as object assault (bounced contact is still contact), the financial-pressure trigger (in-law pressure to liquidate an asset that represented Moshe’s financial strategy for supporting 8 children — the trigger was not the property but the humiliation of being told his plan was failing), the triple-system navigation (Ocean County Criminal Court documentation + Beth Din teshuvah report + yeshiva board fitness assessment — three different audiences from one genuine behavioral change program), the shidduch protection (documentation for the community rabbi and shadchan demonstrating teshuvah), and the Lakewood network management (strategies for navigating a community where everyone knows, because denial is not an option — only visible change works). Harassment resolved with conditional discharge. Beth Din accepted NJAMG report as evidence of genuine teshuvah. Yeshiva position reinstated with rabbinical supervision. Real estate partnerships resumed. Son’s shidduch process restarted 5 months later. Get demand withdrawn. Family entered structured marriage counseling.
Moshe spent $750. His yeshiva career + real estate portfolio: $350K+/year. His son’s shidduch: the next generation’s future. Yeshiva tuition for 8 children: $120K/year in obligations that cannot be interrupted. A group class in Lakewood: the entire Cedar Lane corridor would know by Sunday afternoon. A secular therapist with no Beth Din awareness: $3,000 and culturally useless.
Ocean County — 916 square miles, 33 courts, one program that serves every community.
$375–$750 · Every Ocean court · Virtual · Shabbat-sensitive · Military-aware
Case Study: A Seaside Heights Summer Incident That Became a Toms River Winter Court Date
Tony, 27 — Assault 3rd, Seaside Heights Summer Rental, Philly Resident, Out-of-State Complications
Tony, a 27-year-old construction worker from Philadelphia, was sharing a summer house in Seaside Heights with five friends. On a Saturday night in July, after a day of drinking on the beach and an evening at the boardwalk bars, Tony and his girlfriend — who had driven down from Philly for the weekend — argued about a text message she had received from her ex. Tony punched the bedroom wall of the rental house, putting a fist-sized hole in the drywall. His girlfriend, startled, ran to the living room where the other housemates were watching TV. One of them called 911. Seaside Heights police arrested Tony.
Tony was charged with Assault 3rd at Seaside Heights Municipal Court. But Seaside Heights uses shared municipal court services, and the case was transferred to the Ocean County jurisdiction. Tony now had to appear in Toms River — 30 miles from the beach house and 100 miles from his Philadelphia apartment. His construction job in Philly could not accommodate random midweek trips to the Jersey Shore for court dates. His landlord in Seaside Heights sent a security deposit claim for the wall damage. And his girlfriend, back in Philly, was not sure whether to cooperate with the prosecution or support Tony’s defense.
Tony enrolled at NJAMG. Program cost: $550 for 8 sessions. All virtual — Tony completed every session from his Philadelphia apartment without a single trip to New Jersey. The work addressed the alcohol-beach-house escalation pattern (summer rentals create a pressure cooker of proximity, alcohol, and unresolved relationship tension that produces a predictable pattern of Saturday-night incidents), the wall-punch as property destruction + implied threat (no one was touched, but a fist through a wall in the presence of a partner is chargeable as menacing behavior), and the out-of-state logistics (NJAMG’s virtual format meant Tony never missed a day of work in Philly for a New Jersey court requirement). Assault reduced to Criminal Mischief (non-DV). No domestic violence record. Construction career continued. Security deposit dispute resolved. Tony has not rented a summer house in Seaside Heights since.
Tony spent $550. His construction career: $75K/year. Zero trips to New Jersey for anger management. A Toms River group class: impossible from Philadelphia. A therapist: $1,600 and no understanding of the Shore summer-house dynamic. NJAMG: virtual, flat price, and a provider who has seen this exact Seaside Heights pattern dozens of times.
Case Study: A Manchester Township Retired Marine Whose PTSD-Driven Incident Threatened His VA Benefits
Frank, 64 — Harassment 2nd, Manchester Retirement Community, USMC Veteran, VA Disability, PTSD Trigger
Frank, a retired Marine living in a Manchester Township retirement community near the Joint Base MDL corridor, had been married for 38 years. His PTSD — service-connected from his deployment — had worsened since retirement, and the isolation of the retirement community compounded it. When his wife told him she had invited her sister to stay for three weeks over the holidays, Frank — who experienced his sister-in-law’s visits as an invasion of his controlled environment — shouted, threw a TV remote at the wall, and locked himself in the bedroom. His wife, frightened by the intensity of the outburst (which she described as “the worst since he got back from deployment”), called their daughter. The daughter called 911.
Frank was charged with Harassment 2nd at Manchester Municipal Court. His VA disability rating — which provided $2,400/month — was not directly at risk from the charge, but a criminal conviction could complicate future VA healthcare access and service-connected benefit reviews. His retirement community’s HOA sent a “behavioral concern” letter. And Frank — a man who had served 24 years in the Marine Corps with an exemplary record — was now standing in a municipal court in a retirement community being treated like a domestic violence offender for throwing a remote control at an empty wall.
Frank enrolled at NJAMG. Program cost: $550 for 10 sessions. The work addressed the PTSD trigger (the sister-in-law’s visit was experienced as a breach of the controlled environment Frank had built to manage his PTSD — the anger was a trauma response, not aggression), the retirement-community isolation (the transition from structured military life to unstructured retirement had eliminated every coping mechanism Frank had developed over 24 years), the VA benefit protection (documentation for the court AND the VA demonstrating that Frank was actively addressing the service-connected condition that contributed to the incident), and the 38-year marriage preservation (Frank’s wife was not afraid of Frank — she was afraid of what the PTSD was doing to him, and the 911 call was an act of love, not fear). Harassment resolved with conditional discharge. VA benefits unaffected. HOA concern resolved with NJAMG letter. Marriage: Frank agreed to resume VA PTSD counseling, which he had discontinued 3 years earlier. His wife agreed to discuss household changes before implementing them. The sister-in-law’s visit was shortened to one week.
Frank spent $550. His VA disability + pension: $5,000+/month. His 38-year marriage: preserved. His dignity as a Marine veteran: restored. A group class in Manchester: his retirement community neighbors in the room, discussing his marriage in front of strangers. A therapist with no military awareness: $2,000 and no understanding of PTSD-driven escalation. NJAMG: $550, virtual from his home, and a provider who understands that throwing a remote control is not the same thing as domestic violence — even though the law treats it identically.
Ocean County Anger Management Options — Side by Side
| Feature | Online Self-Paced | Community/Medicaid | Per-Session Therapist | NJAMG ★ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Format | Videos + quizzes | Group of 8-15 | 1-on-1 office | 1-on-1 virtual telehealth |
| Total Cost | $25–$150 | $0–sliding scale | $1,200–$3,000 | $375–$750 flat |
| Ocean County Court | Judges have rejected | Generally accepted | Generally accepted | Every court — all 33 |
| Wait Time | Immediate | 2–8 weeks | 1–4 weeks | Same-day, 72hr |
| 916 sq mi Geography | N/A (online) | Drive to Toms River | Drive to office | Virtual from anywhere |
| Scheduling | Self-paced | Fixed weekly | Business hours | 7 days, Shabbat-sensitive |
| Language | English only | English (some Spanish) | Varies | Full English & Spanish |
| Beth Din–Ready? | No | No | No | Yes — Lakewood teshuvah docs |
| Military-Aware? | No | Rarely | Rarely | Yes — UCMJ, VA, security |
| Out-of-State Clients? | Yes (may reject) | No | No | Yes — LBI/Shore visitors |
| Documentation | Generic cert | Group letter | Clinical letter | Multi-page attorney report |
| Best For | Low-risk, judge allows | Medicaid, flexible timeline | Insurance, no rush | Court deadline, career, results |
Community & Government-Funded Resources in Ocean County
The following are community, nonprofit, and government-funded organizations that provide mental health and behavioral health services in Ocean County. These serve a different population — primarily Medicaid-eligible, uninsured, or those seeking general mental health services. For immediate, private, court-approved anger management with attorney-designed documentation, call NJAMG at 201-205-3201.
Ocean Mental Health Services — Toms River (Multiple Programs)
Phone: 732-575-1111 · Email: info@oceanmhs.org
Services: Ocean County’s primary community mental health provider. Comprehensive continuum of behavioral health, substance abuse, and integrated healthcare. Turnaround Program — group dynamics and skills training specifically covering anger control, cognitive restructuring, assertive communication, problem solving, and goal setting (for adolescents and families). Jail Diversion Services — links people to treatment programs and support services to address mental illness and avoid future legal involvement (referrals: 732-281-1658 Option 3). Family Preservation Services. Caregiver support.
Payment: Discounted rate available based on gross household income, size, and assets.
Best for: Ocean County residents — particularly adolescents and families — seeking community-based anger control and behavioral health programming with the county’s largest community mental health provider. The Turnaround program specifically addresses anger control.
Mental Health Association in NJ — Ocean County (MHAOC)
Locations:
— 25 South Shore Drive, Toms River, NJ 08753 (732-244-0940)
— 691 Mill Creek Road, Unit 13, Manahawkin, NJ 08050 (609-205-1600)
— 4 Murray Grove Lane, Lanoka Harbor, NJ 08734 (Veterans)
Services: Free wellness and recovery support groups, community outreach, education. Mental health, substance use, and co-occurring disorder support. Partners with Saint Barnabas Behavioral Health, Ocean Mental Health Services, and Preferred Behavioral Health.
Best for: Ocean County residents seeking free support groups and wellness resources at three convenient locations (Toms River, Manahawkin, and Lanoka Harbor for veterans).
Preferred Behavioral Health Group — Ocean County (Multiple Locations)
Phone: 732-367-4700 · Website: preferredbehavioral.org
Services: Mental health and substance abuse treatment for adults and children. Therapy, medication management, crisis intervention. Multiple Ocean County locations.
Payment: Medicaid, insurance, sliding scale.
Best for: Ocean County residents seeking behavioral health services from a regional provider with multiple access points throughout the county.
Rutgers University Behavioral Health Care — Toms River & Lakewood
Phone: 800-969-5300 · Website: ubhc.rutgers.edu
Services: Comprehensive mental health services including individual and group therapy, medication management, crisis intervention. University-affiliated clinical programs.
Locations: Toms River and Lakewood.
Best for: Ocean County residents seeking university-affiliated clinical mental health services, particularly in the Lakewood area.
Catholic Charities — Diocese of Trenton — Toms River
Phone: 732-349-1040 · Website: catholiccharitiestrenton.org
Services: Mental health and addiction treatment services. Individual therapy, group therapy, medication management. Serves all regardless of religious background.
Best for: Toms River-area residents seeking nonprofit faith-based counseling services.
Lakewood Community Services Corporation
Services: Outpatient mental health services addressing therapeutic interventions for adults and children with persistent mental illness, behavioral or emotional disorders.
Best for: Lakewood residents seeking community-based outpatient mental health services.
NAMI Ocean County (National Alliance on Mental Illness)
Address: P.O. Box 1436, Toms River, NJ 08754 · Phone: 732-244-4401
Services: Monthly family meetings (2nd Wednesday, St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, Beachwood). Peer connection circles. Family support groups. 12-week education course for families of adults living with mental illness. Not treatment — support, education, and advocacy.
Best for: Ocean County families seeking peer support and education around mental health challenges. Not a treatment provider but a vital community resource.
Ocean County Department of Human Services — Mental Health Division
Website: co.ocean.nj.us
Services: County government division that coordinates and funds mental health and addiction services across Ocean County. Can provide referrals to appropriate community resources.
Best for: Ocean County residents who need help navigating the community mental health system.
Online Self-Paced Anger Management Courses (National Providers)
National providers: $25–$150, no live facilitator.
⚠️ Critical warning for Ocean County: Ocean County judges have specifically rejected self-paced online courses in multiple DV cases. The Toms River courthouse expects a live-facilitated program. Confirm with your attorney before enrolling in any self-paced course. NJAMG’s live telehealth with a certified facilitator satisfies this requirement.
Why Ocean County Clients Choose NJAMG — The Five Ocean County Populations
1. Lakewood’s Orthodox Community — Beth Din + Secular Court + Communal Standing
Lakewood is the fastest-growing municipality in New Jersey and home to one of the largest Orthodox Jewish communities in the world. When a DV incident occurs in Lakewood, the family navigates three simultaneous systems: Ocean County Criminal Court in Toms River, the Beth Din (rabbinical court), and the communal judgment network (yeshiva, shidduch, business). NJAMG provides Shabbat-sensitive scheduling, teshuvah documentation for the Beth Din, and secular court documentation — all from one enrollment. This is the same expertise we deploy for Borough Park and Williamsburg families in Brooklyn.
2. The Shore Towns — LBI, Seaside, Point Pleasant, Lavallette
Ocean County’s barrier island and shore towns have a unique DV pattern: summer-house proximity, alcohol, seasonal employment stress, and out-of-state visitors who get arrested in New Jersey but live in New York, Pennsylvania, or Connecticut. NJAMG’s virtual format serves out-of-state clients without requiring a single trip back to the Shore for anger management. And our documentation is designed for the Toms River courthouse that handles these seasonal cases year-round.
3. Military Families — Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst
Joint Base MDL is one of the largest military installations on the East Coast, and the surrounding communities (Manchester, Jackson, Plumsted, New Hanover) have significant active-duty, reserve, and veteran populations. A DV charge in a military family carries UCMJ implications, security clearance risk, base housing eligibility, and career trajectory consequences that civilian providers do not understand. NJAMG documentation is calibrated for both the civilian court and the military review process.
4. Retirement Communities — Manchester, Berkeley, Lacey
Ocean County has one of the highest concentrations of retirement communities in New Jersey — Crestwood Village, Leisure Village, Holiday City, and dozens of 55+ developments. DV incidents in retirement communities often involve couples married 30-50 years whose relationship is fracturing under the pressure of medical decline, fixed-income financial stress, and the isolation of post-career life. These cases require a different approach than a 28-year-old’s bar fight — they require understanding that a thrown remote control after 40 years of marriage is a different crisis than a thrown remote control after 2 years of dating.
5. The Route 9 Working-Class Corridor — Toms River, Beachwood, Berkeley, South Toms River
The Route 9 corridor through central Ocean County is the county’s working-class spine — families living on construction wages, retail income, and service-industry pay. DV incidents here follow the universal working-class pattern: financial pressure, long commutes, shift work, and the stress of living in a county where housing costs have risen faster than wages. NJAMG’s $375 starting price is designed for this population — private 1-on-1 quality at a price that does not require choosing between anger management and groceries.
🇪🇸 Programa Completo en Español — Condado de Ocean
Lakewood, Toms River, Jackson, Brick — Ocean County’s growing Latino community is served by NJAMG with sesiones privadas completamente en español. Documentación bilingüe. No afecta su estatus migratorio. $375–$750.
All 33 Ocean County Municipalities — NJAMG Serves Every One
Barnegat
Barnegat Light
Bay Head
Beach Haven
Beachwood
Berkeley Twp
Brick
Eagleswood
Harvey Cedars
Island Heights
Jackson
Lacey
Lakehurst
Lakewood
Lavallette
Little Egg Harbor
Long Beach Twp
Manchester
Mantoloking
Ocean Gate
Ocean Twp
Pine Beach
Plumsted
Point Pleasant
Point Pleasant Beach
Seaside Heights
Seaside Park
Ship Bottom
South Toms River
Stafford Twp
Surf City
Toms River
Tuckerton
Frequently Asked Questions — Ocean County Anger Management
Ocean Mental Health Services offers discounted rates based on income. MHAOC offers free support groups (not court-ordered anger management). Catholic Charities (Toms River) provides nonprofit counseling. Online courses from $25 — but Ocean County judges have specifically rejected self-paced courses in multiple DV cases. NJAMG private 1-on-1 from $375.
Many will not — especially for DV charges. Ocean County has a track record of rejecting self-paced video courses. Confirm with your attorney before enrolling. NJAMG’s live telehealth with a certified facilitator satisfies the “live program” requirement.
Yes. 120 Hooper Avenue, Toms River. All 33 municipal courts. Family Part. Money-back guarantee — if the court does not accept your NJAMG certificate, full refund.
Yes. Beth Din documentation, teshuvah framework, Shabbat-sensitive scheduling (Sunday–Friday only, no Yom Tov), shidduch protection, communal standing management. We serve the same community in Borough Park and Williamsburg.
NJAMG’s virtual program is designed for exactly this situation. Complete your entire program from your home in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, or anywhere else without returning to the Shore. Documentation sent to the Toms River courthouse.
NJAMG understands UCMJ implications, security clearance risk, base housing eligibility, and VA benefit concerns. Documentation calibrated for civilian court AND military review.
We serve many Ocean County retirement community clients. A thrown remote control after 40 years of marriage is a different crisis than a bar fight. Our approach is calibrated for the specific dynamics of long-term marriage stress, retirement isolation, and medical-related behavioral changes. Complete privacy from your retirement community neighbors.
No. Zero immigration reporting. Does not affect green cards, visas, DACA, TPS, asylum, or any pending application. Critical for Lakewood’s and the Route 9 corridor’s immigrant communities.
Documentation directly to caseworkers. Proactive enrollment is the single strongest action for DCPP case closure. We address the specific concern that triggered the investigation.
Documentation for courts AND licensing boards — teaching, nursing, law, finance, CDL, any credential that requires background review.
Sí. NJAMG: programa completo en español. Llame 201-205-3201.
Yes. You are not locked into a 12-week group cycle. Your pace, your deadline. Multiple sessions per week if needed.
Same-day enrollment. Enrollment letter to your attorney today. First session within 72 hours. 201-205-3201.
Zelle, Apple Pay, Venmo, CashApp, credit/debit (3% surcharge). No insurance — no diagnostic codes, no delays, no insurance company knowing your business. Complete confidentiality.
Multi-page attorney-designed progress reports — not a one-page generic certificate. Specific behavioral changes documented. Triggers identified. De-escalation strategies developed. Cultural context provided. Customized for your audience: judge, probation officer, DCPP caseworker, custody evaluator, Beth Din, employer, licensing board.
Explore NJAMG — All 21 NJ Counties + New York
NJAMG Home · 📞 201-205-3201
NJ Resource Pages: Middlesex · Bergen · Hudson · Monmouth · Union · Passaic · Ocean
All 21 Counties: Atlantic · Bergen · Burlington · Camden · Cape May · Cumberland · Essex · Gloucester · Hudson · Hunterdon · Mercer · Middlesex · Monmouth · Morris · Ocean · Passaic · Salem · Somerset · Sussex · Union · Warren
New York: NY Anger Management Group
Ocean County — 33 Municipalities, 916 Square Miles, One Program Accepted at Every Court
NJAMG: $375–$750 · Private 1-on-1 · Same-day enrollment · English & Spanish
Virtual telehealth · Shabbat-sensitive · Military-aware · Beth Din–ready
Lakewood · Toms River · LBI · Seaside Heights · Manchester · Brick · Jackson
2,500+ clients · Attorney-designed documentation · Money-back guarantee
