Fifteen-year-old Ethan Miller walked into Detroit’s juvenile courthouse with indifference, shrugging off a shoplifting charge that reflected a growing pattern of defiant behavior. Judge Rebecca Harmon, recognizing the deeper family and psychological issues behind his arrogance, chose an unconventional approach: instead of detention, Ethan was sentenced to forty hours of supervised work at the very store he had targeted and required to participate in an accountability program hearing firsthand from victims. Confronted with the real consequences of his actions, the physical labor and personal stories slowly dismantled his cavalier attitude, forcing him to see the human impact of crime.
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