Meet Our Divisions

Justice for Vets
In June at RISE23, we unveiled our new name and brand as All Rise. As part of the rebrand, we’ve also made changes to our divisions, and we’d like to introduce you to them one by one. You’ve already met the Treatment Court Institute and Impaired Driving Solutions; next is Justice for Vets.
Justice for Vets transforms how the justice system identifies, assesses, and treats our veterans by ensuring that no veteran is left behind. We provide a wide variety of training, technical assistance, and other free resources to educate public health, public safety, and veterans’ service professionals on evidence-based, best, and promising practices for working with justice-involved veterans diagnosed with mental health and substance use disorders. This includes not only veterans treatment courts, but all treatment courts who accept and serve veterans.
In short, we keep veterans out of jail and prison and connect them to the benefits and treatment they have earned.
Keep scrolling or click below to learn more and browse our resources!
“Justice for Vets’ impressive array of education options proactively anticipate the ever-evolving needs of the professionals who provide lifesaving interventions to justice-involved veterans. By empowering local jurisdictions to develop and sustain our nation’s treatment courts, especially veterans treatment courts, we serve not only those who served us, but their families and communities as well.”
-Scott Tirocchi, Director, Justice for Vets
Meet the Director
Scott Tirocchi, M.A., M.S., L.P.C., served in the U.S. Army Reserves and the Rhode Island Army National Guard for 21 years; his occupational specialty was a 31A (military police officer). While deployed to Afghanistan in 2003-2004, he served as commander for the training and doctrine component of Training Assistance Group II to the Afghan National Army. Mr. Tirocchi is a licensed behavioral health clinician and has an employment background rooted in both treatment and criminal justice. Prior to serving as the director of Justice for Vets, he was employed with the Rhode Island Judiciary, serving in a dual capacity as deputy director for the district court pretrial services unit and program coordinator for their veterans treatment court. He has served as a behavioral health clinician in jail, prison, hospital settings, and various community behavioral health agencies located in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Connecticut.
