#Crv comic
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creepedverse · 1 year ago
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BONNIE TOMMIE AND NICO SAGA!!!!
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koifly · 11 months ago
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TWO POSTS ON THE SAME DAY ??? I CAN ALREADY FEEL THE ARTBLOCK COMING I SWEAR
Anyways, have a little Tobin and Tali comic based on a thread made by Tobin's creator @necroromantics
Tali's creator : @clockeyedtoy
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stephaniebrownslover · 1 year ago
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Masterlist
[Main Fandoms]
Creepypasta
Monster High
DC(comics and some animated universe)
Creepypasta
My Main Creepypasta AU
-Characters+Notes
-Jeff The Killer's Relationship With Other Mains
-Jeff and Liu's relationship
-Their ages and most important birthday day facts about main characters
-TicciWork romantic relationship part I
-TicciWork relationship beginning-Oneshot
-Liu and Jeff-Oneshot
-Main Characters' reaction to someone loved's deadly wounds
-NinaKate romantic relationship part I
-Friendships
Creepypasta Pirate AU
Part 1
Annual Duck Competitions With Pastas And Tons Of Other Shit[Crack]
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Stray Souls[A TicciWork Centric Creepypasta Fanfiction]
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
I would look at the sky and imagine we were our past selves until I remember what really happened
-Introduction+Notes
-Part 1
Vigilante shit
Part 1-Jane The Killer
Creepypasta Humans Vs. Vampires AU
Characters and which group they are in
Creepypasta The Magnus Archives AU
Introduction
CRV Zoo AU
Part 1(Bonnie and Dia)
Creepypasta Whumptober 2023
Day 1
Creepypasta x Reader Flufftober 2023
Day 1
Headcanons
-General Clockwork Headcanons
-Hoodie, Jeff, EJ with a tall lover
-General Nina The Killer Headcanons
-Nina The Killer x Kate The Chaser Headcanons
-Short Ticci Toby Memory Loss AU Headcanons
-Jason The Toymaker x Red Obsessed!Reader Headcanons
-Random TalBin Headcanons(CRV)
-Random Nico Headcanons(CRV)
TicciWork Headcanons List
1/15
Oneshots
-TicciWork+NinaKate Double Date Oneshot
Monster High
Kieran Valentine backstory headcanons—Part 1
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dog-mccool · 5 days ago
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Thank you for your service.
I think they put their hazards on to let you know they're taking a risk that day by driving the speed of traffic. If I had a dime for every Honda CRV driving around with their hazards on, but no apparent distress, well, let's just say I could buy more than some gum and comic books!🙂‍↕️
It's a new day! The sun is shining, the birds are chirping, and a Honda CRV is in the left lane with their flashers on but driving normally otherwise, just another day in the life!
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dragonchildcomic · 2 years ago
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Today I picked up the first half of my restock of Dragon Child trade volumes. This half includes all of my paperbacks, or perfect bound titles. The second half will be the hardcovers/case bounds. Glad to have these, as I have Bakersfield Comic Con in a week.
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Enjoy my cats, Howell and Sophie being cute, and I need to get back to inking. One I finish the panel I am on, I only have two more pages left to go on issue 8!
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marymosley · 5 years ago
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On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I’m pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government’s second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC’s School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant’s 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don’t work in the court system. I say this in the book’s introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project.  
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
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ilovewikishopline-blog · 8 years ago
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AI Grant aims to fund the unfundable to advance AI and solve hard problems
New Post has been published on https://www.wikishopline.com/ai-grant-aims-to-fund-the-unfundable-to-advance-ai-and-solve-hard-problems/
AI Grant aims to fund the unfundable to advance AI and solve hard problems
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Artificial intelligence-focused investment funds are a dime a dozen these days. Everyone knows there’s money to be made from AI, but to capture value, good VCs know they need to back products and not technologies. This has left a bit of a void in the space where research occurs within research institutions and large tech companies and commercialization occurs within verticalized startups — there isn’t much left for the DIY AI enthusiast. AI Grant, created by Nat Friedman and Daniel Gross, aims to bankroll science projects for the heck of it to give untraditional candidates a shot at solving big problems. Gross, a partner at Y Combinator, and Friedman, a founder who grew Xamarin to acquisition by Microsoft, started working on AI Grant back in April. AI Grant issues no-strings-attached grants to people passionate about interesting AI problems. The more formalized version launching today brings a slate of corporate partners and a more structured application review process. Anyone, regardless of background, can submit an application for a grant. The application is online and consists of questions about background and prior projects in addition to basic information about what the money will be used for and what the initial steps will be for the project. Applicants are asked to connect their GitHub, LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter accounts. Gross told me in an interview that the goal is to build profiles of non-traditional machine learning engineers. Eventually, the data collected from the grant program could allow the two to play a bit of machine learning moneyball — valuing machine learning engineers without traditional metrics (like having a PhD from Stanford). You can imagine how all the social data could even help build a model for ideal grant recipients in the future. The long-term goal is to create a decentralized AI research lab — think DeepMind but run through Slack and full of engineers that don’t cost $300,000 a pop. One day, the MacArthur genius grant-inspired program could serve other industries outside of AI — offering a playground of sorts for the obsessed to build, uninhibited. The entire AI Grant project reminds me of a cross between a Thiel Fellowship and a Kaggle competition. The former, a program to give smart college dropouts money and freedom to tinker and the later, an innovative platform for evaluating data scientists through competition. Neither strive to advance the field in the way the AI Grant program does, but you can see the ideological similarity around democratizing innovation. Some of the early proposals to receive the AI Grant include: Simulation of many-body quantum systems with neural networks Machine learning for motion recognition and trajectory generation of human movement for rehabilitation Simulating physiologically plausible human brain electromagnetic activity using GANs Charles River Ventures (CRV) is providing the $2,500 grants that will be handed out to the next 20 fellows. In addition, Google has signed on to provide $20,000 in cloud computing credits to each winner, CrowdFlower is offering $18,000 in platform credit with $5,000 in human labeling credits, Scale is giving $1,000 in human labeling credit per winner and Floyd will give 250 Tesla K80 GPU hours to each winner. During the first selection of grant winners, Floodgate awarded $5,000 checks. The program launching today will award $2,500 checks. Gross told me that this change was intentional — the initial check size was too big. The plan is to add additional flexibility in the future to allow applicants to make a case for how much money they actually need. You can check out the application here and give it a go. Applications will be taken until August 25th. Final selection of fellows will occur on September 24th.
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jmuwrtc-blog · 8 years ago
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My Leather Throne- Profile of a Place
Being away at school really makes me miss driving. I feel so helpless not being able to drive myself to CVS or a supermarket, and figuring out how to get the shopper bus back home is somehow always difficult. I miss driving to the beach every week in the summer. I even miss the traffic through town. It makes me realize how much I took driving and my car for granted. The CRV helps me escape from any circumstance, even if that circumstance is, ironically enough, being completely lost on the road.
I got my license a few months before my junior year ended. I started off driving my dad’s old car because it was the oldest one we had. My parents figured that if I got in an accident, we could just get a new car since  it  was the most low-risk car price-wise. My dad drove a shiny, light blue Nissan Scion xB, the color similar to the blue text bubble of imessages. If you don’t know what kind of car that is, picture a toaster on wheels. With a license plate frame that reads “I’m Tuned Into NPR.” Now, picture a teenager driving that toaster on wheels. Of course,  I was thankful that I had a car to drive whenever and wherever I needed, but this  mode of transportation wasn’t exactly ideal for a teenage girl in a small town. Especially in a small town where everyone knows everything about you and can recognize your car by the bumper stickers on it.
Fast forward in time a little bit. My dad gets a new car. A brand new silver Honda CRV, but of course, with my family, he got it at a really good price. My parents sat me down on the couch in a very serious way. I knew a talk was coming, I just couldn’t think of anything I had done wrong recently. They ended up giving me a letter that said that they realized how unsafe the Toaster was for me to drive. I hadn’t really thought about that -- I mean besides the shuddering sound it made sometimes -- but it was alright for me. They said that after a lot of deliberation, they decided to let me drive the CRV because it was the safest of our cars. I had driven the CRV once or twice and it drove a lot more smoothly  than the Toaster. I remember being so happy and thankful that I started crying, in typical teenage girl fashion. I felt so incredibly spoiled by my parents, but thankful nonetheless, and to this day I still feel the same way.
In a parking lot full of other gray CRV’s I could describe mine exactly. Look inside the front windows- 90% chance there will be at least one old Dunkin Donuts cup and napkins all over. Check the back too; there is a water volleyball ball that I bought two summers ago and used for a whole ten minutes until the wind made it impossible to play. There are a total of five bumper stickers: a circular red and black one for my high school lacrosse team on the left side of my license plate, and another circular one on the other side for JMU. Another black and red one for my high school is on the left side of the back window. There is a set of three little red Hawaiian hibiscus flowers on the farthest back window on the right side, and a sticker that says ‘Pennsylvania’ instead  of “Patagonia” in the Patagonia logo and font. My parents got me a flip flop key chain when we went to Jamaica a few years ago. It says “one love” and hangs from my rearview mirror. It’s there in an attempt to remind me to keep my cool while driving, but I’m from New Jersey so it doesn’t really help all that much with the road rage. There are a few deep scratches on the roof  from last winter. I went to dig the car out of the snow and accidentally scraped the corner of the shovel on the roof  leaving really noticeable marks. I can’t even describe how heated my parents got, especially when I screamed back at them, “why is it such a big deal?” Since I scratched the paint off, if it rusts over it’ll compromise the roof  itself. Kind of is a big deal!
My car somehow makes music sound better. One of my favorite playlists that I’ve curated is designed for singing in the car. Aptly named, “Concert Car” assists me in the most difficult of South Jersey traffic. I always have music playing when I drive, even if I’m just driving down the street. My music choice is pretty much always perfect for wherever I am headed, except for the time I got so lost driving home from the PHL airport. What should have been a 15 minute drive turned into an hour of confusion and crying. I drove around the Philadelphia stadium district for about half an hour while my 2000’s playlist blasted Sean Kingston on full volume. Not ideal driving music for the moment, to say the least.
The amount of times that car has saved my life is almost comical. I (knock on wood) haven’t actually gotten in a car accident, but I’d attribute that fact to the brakes on my car. Driving is one of the things I miss most about being away from home: the freedom to drive, to escape, or get lost. That is why my beloved, smelly, homey Honda CRV is my favorite place to escape; it lets me escape to wherever I want to. Other than near death experiences, my car and I have had some pretty solid times. I remember the countless fights I had in it with the guy I dated my junior year. I can even recall the drive I took after we broke up. But one of the most memorable arguments my car has been part of was one that I had with my dad. I couldn’t even tell you what it was about, but I remember my mom was away and couldn’t be the mediator for us, which she usually is. I don’t fight with my parents often, but when I do, its bad. Tears, yelling, our dogs barking at us because they don’t understand what is going on. It got to the point to where my dad had to take my keys away, but I had left my car unlocked in the driveway. I went to my room and my dad kept coming in to have a conversation, while that was probably the last thing I wanted to do in the moment. My next move was to storm out of the house to sit in my car and lock it from the inside out. I sat there for a while wishing that whole day could just end. My parents know it's bad when I just sit in my car contemplating things, but it is where I can escape to at times where my own room does not suffice.
Since I love driving so much, I’m usually the driver for day trips to the beach with my friends. I could easily give you a detailed timetable of how those beach days go. Get up at 7, leave around 8 to get to the beach by 10 or 11, with time to get gas and Dunkin as we head out. The amount of sand that has made its way in and out of the CRV could build a new beach. Absolutely nothing makes me happier than driving down the residential back roads adjacent to route 73 with all the windows down and the sunroof open. That is my euphoria. Sitting in my leather throne with my friends surrounding me, screaming the lyrics to whatever song is playing into the salty air. When I first started driving it, the CRV only took $20 to fill up completely- I even used to say “Twenty buck fills ‘er up!” Driving to and from the beach took less than a full gallon, and although gas prices have gone up since Christie decided to tax us NJ residents on gas, putting  gas in my car is still never a pain.
Driving isn’t always fun and games, though. Last summer I got a job nannying for a family in town. They had a beautiful, huge house with a pool in the backyard. It was just three kids; the two girls were pretty easy to handle, but the youngest -- a boy -- was impossible. I hadn’t really driven kids around before nannying, so I made sure to be 10000% cautious whenever driving them. Of course they knew every song on the radio. Their favorite songs were “One Dance” by Drake and “Can’t Stop the Feeling” by Justin Timberlake. The latter was from one of their favorite movies: “Trolls.” They knew all the words, and I felt like we were little family every time that came on. I can still hear them singing the words, “I got that sunshine in my pocket, got that good soul in my feet.” It was like we became the Partridge Family for a few minutes every time their songs came on. Whenever I pass that house I think back to singing with the kids all sitting in the back like little ducks in a row. At times, they tested my patience, but in the end I enjoyed my drives with them.
Driving around my hometown is almost comical because of how small it is. There’s almost no need to drive anywhere at all! I did soccer in high school but it became such a political game that I quit and joined tennis -- a sport I’d never done. I was one of the only seniors on the team so, of course, I got stuck with carpool duty the whole season. Since we had so few girls who could drive to practice, I was stuck with an overflowing car every other day. The most I fit into my car was seven other people, when my car can only fit four others. A passenger, two in the trunk and four in the back. One of my parents’ only rules was  “everybody in that car has to have a seat belt,” I can still hear them reminding me. Sorry mom! Sorry dad! A lot of the girls I drove were freshmen. They looked up to me because I would always give them advice. They thought I was funny and a savage when in reality, I  just had Senioritis (what we called that lack of caring that hits you senior year of high school). A few of the girls clung onto me and we ended up becoming really close and we actually still are. Who knew a car could help me make friends!!
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marymosley · 5 years ago
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On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I’m pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government’s second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC’s School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant’s 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don’t work in the court system. I say this in the book’s introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project.  
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes
marymosley · 5 years ago
Text
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I’m pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government’s second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC’s School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant’s 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don’t work in the court system. I say this in the book’s introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project.  
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes
marymosley · 5 years ago
Text
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I’m pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government’s second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC’s School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant’s 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don’t work in the court system. I say this in the book’s introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project.  
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes
marymosley · 5 years ago
Text
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel
We wrote another comic book. This one is about probation.
I’m pleased to announce the availability of the School of Government’s second graphic novel, On Probation: Serving a Probationary Sentence in North Carolina. It is available for purchase here. I wrote it along with my friend Chad Owens, who is the senior policy administrator for the Community Corrections section of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Jason Whitley, a talented designer and artist who works at UNC’s School of Pharmacy, did the illustrations.
The book is a follow-up to our first graphic novel, In Prison, Serving a Felony Sentence in North Carolina. The second issue begins at the same moment as the first: sentencing of a Prior Record Level I defendant convicted of a Class G felony. But in this book, instead of receiving an active sentence, the defendant’s 10-21 month term of imprisonment is suspended and he is placed on probation for 36 months.
The book then follows how a typical case would play out from that point, from the risk-needs assessment that probation officers do during the first 60 days of supervision to the eventual possibility of revocation, termination, or expiration. We incorporated most of the key components of Justice Reinvestment related to probation, including quick dips, CRV, and the distinction between new crimes, absconding, and technical violations of probation.
As with In Prison, the primary intended audiences for the book are defendants, victims, and their families. Our intention was to describe, in the plainest language we could, what probation and probation violation hearings are really like. I hope that probation officers, lawyers, and judges might also find it useful, both for themselves and as a tool to explain the law to those who don’t work in the court system. I say this in the book’s introduction, but it bears mentioning again: I hope no one is offended by our effort to present a serious subject in illustrated form. The goal (as with any of my publications, actually) is to present the information in the most accessible way possible.
I want to thank Chad and Jason for creating the book with me, and my colleagues Kevin Justice, Melissa Twomey, and Owen DuBose for their work producing it. I also want to thank the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys and the Department of Public Safety for their support of the project.  
The post On Probation: A New Graphic Novel appeared first on North Carolina Criminal Law.
On Probation: A New Graphic Novel published first on https://immigrationlawyerto.tumblr.com/
0 notes