News

Judge Gives Teen a Second Chance, and Now 12 Years Later — She’s Becoming a Lawyer!

When Carmen Allen Day was a teenager, she told New Jersey Superior Court Judge Charles Dortch that she regretted her mistake and she wanted to become a lawyer if he reduced her probation sentence. Now, after 12 years, Day is just one semester away from her law school graduation.

Day, who was then 17-years old, had plans for college and law school until she got involved in a juvenile offense. She was so embarrassed and she regretted doing such unwise decision at a young age. She pleaded with Judge Dortch, who gave her a chance and reduced her probation sentence from 18 months to 6 months.

Now 29 years old, Day is a married woman with 2 daughters and is just one semester away from graduating from Rutgers Law School, which is also Dortch’s alma mater.

Just recently, Day visited the courtroom with other law students. Dortch, who is now the presiding judge of the family division, was surprised to meet Day after 12 years and know that he somehow changed her life. Day said what Dortch did restore her faith in the criminal justice system.

“He didn’t see me as a docket number, or some poor girl from Camden,” Day said. “He saw me as a girl who needed help, who needed a chance.”

Dortch took it as a proud moment. He said, “I could even say it made my career.”

Day’s journey to being a lawyer wasn’t at all easy. After her probation sentence ended when she graduated high school in 2007, she enrolled in college but dropped out twice. She finally graduated in 2015, with a double major in political science and criminal justice.

Afterward, she really wanted to go to law school so she took the Law School Admission Test in 2017. But she didn’t fare well and wasn’t able to initially enter Rutgers. Thankfully, an opportunity of conditional acceptance came and she immediately grabbed it even though it would mean that she had to drive two hours a day to school.

All those times, Day goes back to the moment where Dortch gave her a second chance in her life. She said she had always looked forward to when she could reach back out to him.

“No matter your circumstances, no matter what you are going through, as long as you stay focused, you can make it,” Day said. “You are not what happened to you. You are what you choose to become.”

Related Posts

Storm Bert’s trail of carnage: Urgent search underway for ‘dogwalker swept away by floodwater’ after killer storm leaves three people dead as weather map reveals where 16 inches of snow and -11C freeze will hit parts of Britain

Storm Bert left a trail of carnage in its wake this weekend as an urgent search for a missing dogwalker was abandoned on Saturday afternoon. It comes after a day of chaos where three motorists were killed after two fatal crashes and a car was crushed by a falling tree. Another driver escaped tragedy after a different tree crushed his vehicle, while ten people including five children were rescued from a landslide in Wales.

What America REALLY thinks of Trump’s plan to pardon January 6 protesters

New polling has suggested Americans are overwhelmingly opposed to president-elect Donald Trump’s plan to pardon January 6 defendants. During his campaign, he had pledged to ‘absolutely’ pardon those involved in the January 6 Capitol storming, frequently referring to them as ‘patriots’ and ‘hostages’. When Trump is sworn in as the 47th President of the United States, he will have the authority to wipe those cases of the 1,488 people charged in relation to Jan 6.

Bill Clinton finally breaks silence on claims he carried out shocking act of sabotage before leaving White House

Former President Bill Clinton has addressed a bizarre claim his staff deliberately tore the letter ‘W’ from White House keyboards to hinder his successor, President George W Bush – and admitted that the long-running allegation might be true. Writing in his new memoir, Citizen – My Life After The White House, Clinton, 78,  recalls how a media ‘feeding frenzy’ marred the handover to Bush in 2001 amid claims departing staff had vandalized the West Wing. At the time, it was said that filing cabinets were glued shut, obscene messages left on answering machines and pornographic pictures placed on office printers.

Outrage after Target fires woman over ‘dress code issue’

A North Dakota Target is facing backlash for firing a woman who wrote ‘Trust in Jesus’ on her name tag. Denise Kendrick, an employee of the store in Fargo, said she was fired on November 16 over a dress code issue. She put ‘Trust in Jesus’ and a drawing of a cross on her name tag for that shift, but was approached by a manager who told her she could not wear it, according to KVLY.

‘Anxious millennial’ who fled America for ‘utopia’ warns why others shouldn’t follow her lead

With a growing number of Americans considering leaving the country after Donald Trump’s election as president, one young woman has warned fleeing for politics isn’t always what it’s cracked up to be. Google searches on on ‘how to move to countries’ massively increased after Trump’s win, with relocation firms saying 80 per cent of people want to move specifically for political reasons. Celebrities such as Barbra Streisand, Cher and Sharon Stone and Barbie star America Ferrera all said they’d leave if Trump won.

Keir Starmer declares war on benefits Britain: Prime Minister vows to crack down on £137billion welfare ‘blight’

Sir Keir Starmer today pledges to crack down hard on the ‘bulging benefits bill blighting our society’ as he tries to steal the Tories’ political clothes over abuses of the welfare system. The Prime Minister uses an article in today’s Mail on Sunday to promise ‘sweeping changes’ to try to tame the £137 billion bill for welfare benefits – including a blitz on cheats and those who ‘game the system’ – vowing: ‘No more business as usual.’ His most hardline comments yet on the issue come as Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall prepares to announce a package of legislation on Tuesday to ‘get Britain working’, after officials forecast that more than four million people will be claiming long-term sickness benefits by 2030 – 60 per cent higher than before the pandemic.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *