US v. Mosley
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Summary

In this 2018 case, the court found Mosley’s substance use disorder, PTSD, and depression mitigated his violations, opting for time served plus supervised release rather than further incarceration.

2018 | Federal Juristiction

US v. Mosley

Keywords Mosley; substance use disorder; PTSD; depression; mitigated; violations; time served; supervised release; incarceration; court
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Summary

In a judicial decision from 2018, the court recognized Mosley's substance use disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and depression as mitigating factors for his violations. This determination led to a sentence that included time already served, along with supervised release, rather than additional incarceration.

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Summary

A 2018 court decision determined that certain medical conditions, specifically a substance use disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and depression, served to lessen the severity of an individual's violations. Consequently, the individual was sentenced to time already served, along with supervised release, instead of additional imprisonment.

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Summary

In a 2018 case, the court determined that Mosley’s substance use disorder, PTSD, and depression reduced the impact of his violations. Because of these factors, the court chose to release him based on time already served, adding a period of supervised release instead of further imprisonment.

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Summary

In a court case from 2018, a judge looked at Mosley's problems. These included a drug problem, a serious stress problem called PTSD, and depression. The judge decided these issues made Mosley's actions seem less serious. So, Mosley did not have to go back to jail. Instead, he got credit for time he had already served and was watched by an officer after leaving jail.

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Footnotes and Citation

Cite

312 F.Supp.3d 1289 (2018)

Highlights