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This article needs references that appear in reliable third-party publications. Primary sources or sources affiliated with the subject are generally not sufficient for a Wikipedia article. Please add more appropriate citations from reliable sources. (May 2011) The topic of this article may not meet the general notability guideline. Please help to establish notability by adding reliable, secondary sources about the topic. If notability cannot be established, the article is likely to be merged, redirected, or deleted. (May 2011) Reentry Anonymous is a twelve step program modeled after Alcoholics Anonymous describing itself as "a program for anyone who has the honest desire to stop living a life of criminality, needs ex-offender reentry support, or is ready to ask for help with their criminal addiction(s)".[1] The program was originally started in 2005 in Tampa Florida and became officially registered with the State of Florida in 2010.[2] The program is group oriented and is based on the twelve steps of AA. Contents 1 The Reentry Anonymous program 1.1 The nature of criminal addiction 2 Meetings 3 Reentry & sober coaches, companions, and escorts 4 References 5 External links The Reentry Anonymous program Reentry Anonymous is a program of recovery for men and women coping with the consequences of incarceration, their criminal past, addiction to a life of crime, and the challenges of ex-offender reentry. Reentry Anonymous members share their experience, strength, and hope with each other in order to educate, inform, and support ex-offenders and recover from the hopeless cycle of recidivism through criminality and substance abuse.[3] The program uses a 12 step model of recovery where ex-offenders are coached to reintegrate into society. They pass on their skills and support to others who care to change the cycle of recidivism in which they find themselves. Reentry Anonymous is the first group of its kind made up of the community it serves to adapt the 12 step program of recovery to ex-offender reentry.[citation needed] The program is free and has no dues or membership fees. The nature of criminal addiction Criminal addiction is defined by Reentry Anonymous as the condition of being abnormally dependent on some habit, especially compulsive dependency toward criminal activity or behavior. (2). The state of being enslaved to a habit or practice or to something that is psychologically habit-forming. (3). An illusionary intimate relationship with an object or event.[1] The term "criminal addiction" has never been used or treated with a support type recovery method until Reentry Anonymous. Reentry Anonymous is currently the only support method available to ex-offenders post incarceration whose goal is support for a lifetime as opposed to resource driven with material resources like temporary housing or short term treatment programs.[citation needed] Meetings As with most self help 'Anonymous' 12 step programs, Reentry Anonymous due to the nature of its community of ex-offenders has had to endure a stigma and therefore had to provide non-traditional methods in which to meet as a group.[citation needed] Currently meetings are in an open format conducted by a group leader in which topics or the 12 steps of recovery are discussed. Meetings are currently held in various locations around Tampa Florida as well as online. Reentry & sober coaches, companions, and escorts The reentry coach, companion, and escort concept evolved on the east coast of The United States about 1 year after the sober coach concept evolved in California in 2005. A Reentry Coach, Companion, or Escort helps those people involved with the criminal justice system to successfully fulfill the terms of their court ordered supervision or their reentry into society by sharing the specific skills required to live free of the cycle of recidivism. Reentry Anonymous adopted the concept proven to be a viable alternative to traditional addiction treatment and became the pilot for using reentry coaching by ex-offenders in addition to the Reentry Anonymous 12 step criminal addiction program.[4] References ^ a b "Is reanon for you". Reentry Anonymous World Services Office. 2010. http://www.reanon.org/Is_ReAnon_For_You_.html.  ^ "Division of corporations name search". Florida Department of State Division of Corporations. 2010. http://www.sunbiz.org/scripts/ficidet.exe?action=DETREG&docnum=G10000100545&rdocnum=G10000100545.  ^ "Who we are, Who we serve". Reentry Anonymous World Services Office. 2010. http://www.reanon.org/Home_Page.html.  ^ "What We Do, How We Do It". Reentry Anonymous World Services Office. 2010. http://www.reanon.org.  External links Reentry Anonymous World Service Office WSO Alcoholics Anonymous World Service Offices