“Your Service Is Not a Crime”: The Day Compᴀssion Replaced Punishment in Judge Caprio’s Court
On a chilly October morning in Providence, Rhode Island, 68-year-old Robert Mitchell stood quietly before Judge Frank Caprio. His charge was straightforward: 28 parking meter violations totaling $847 in fines.
But nothing about this case was simple.
Mitchell had accumulated the tickets over eight months, parking overnight in downtown Providence. To the city, it was a pattern of repeated violations. To Mitchell, it was survival. His 1998 Honda Civic—with nearly 200,000 miles on it—was not just transportation. It was his bedroom, his kitchen, his refuge from freezing nights.

He had been homeless for two years.
When Judge Caprio reviewed the file, he noticed something unusual. The violations were clustered between late evening and early morning hours. Parking enforcement officers repeatedly noted that Mitchell appeared to be sleeping inside the vehicle, which had makeshift curtains and bedding arranged inside.
Standing before the bench, Mitchell did not argue the facts.
“Your Honor, I know I broke the law,” he said softly. “I just hoped you might understand why.”

He explained that he had moved to Rhode Island after hearing the state offered more support for homeless veterans. Shelters were sometimes full, sometimes unsafe. His car, though cramped, provided a measure of control and dignity.
Then came the detail that shifted the entire courtroom’s mood.
Mitchell had served 22 years in the United States Army, including three tours in Vietnam. He earned two Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star. After retiring from military service, he worked at a manufacturing plant for nearly two decades—until it closed. At 59, he found himself unemployed, with limited job prospects and mounting medical expenses related to service-connected conditions.

When savings ran out, he chose medication over rent.
“If I lose the car,” he explained, “I lose everything.”
Despite homelessness, he never missed a car payment. He maintained a gym membership solely for access to showers. He spent his days at the library searching for work, attending recovery meetings—eight years sober—and volunteering at the VA hospital.
That final detail surprised the court.

From the back of the courtroom, Sergeant Major David Rodriguez of the Providence VA Medical Center stood and requested permission to speak. He confirmed that Mitchell volunteered twice a week, helping other homeless veterans navigate housing applications and benefits paperwork.
“He’s helped 23 veterans secure services this year alone,” Rodriguez said. “He’s never asked for anything in return.”
Mitchell had been quietly serving others while living in his car.

Then came unexpected news: the VA had secured a HUD-VASH subsidized apartment for him, available the following month. They had struggled to reach him without a reliable phone number.
For a moment, the legal proceeding transformed into something far more human. The veteran who had helped so many others was finally about to receive help himself.
Judge Caprio rose from the bench.
“All 28 violations are dismissed,” he declared. “The fines are waived.”
Mitchell looked stunned. “Your Honor, I still broke the law.”

“You were trying to survive while maintaining your dignity and helping others,” Caprio replied. “Those are not crimes.”
But the story did not end there.
Recognizing that Mitchell still needed a safe place to stay for the few weeks before his apartment was ready, Judge Caprio asked if anyone in the courtroom could help. A woman from a local church stood and offered the use of her congregation’s secure parking lot.
The courtroom—normally a space of penalties and citations—became a place of collective support.
Before adjournment, Judge Caprio presented Mitchell with a small American flag pin.
“Not because you’re homeless,” he said, “but because you represent continued service to others—even in hardship.”

Three months later, the judge received a letter bearing a return address—Mitchell’s new apartment. Inside was a pH๏τograph of him standing in a modest studio filled with sunlight. He wrote that he had expanded his volunteer work and helped six more veterans find housing.
“You reminded me,” the letter read, “that I’m still worthy of respect.”
This case underscores a broader reality: homelessness is not a moral failure. It is often the result of economic hardship, medical expenses, and systemic gaps. Veterans—particularly older ones—are disproportionately affected.

Judge Caprio’s decision did not ignore the law. It recognized context. It acknowledged service. It treated a man not as a docket number, but as a human being with history, dignity, and value.
Justice, at its best, does more than penalize—it restores.
On that October morning, in a courtroom at 25 Dorrance Street, justice looked like compᴀssion. And for one veteran who had given 22 years to his country, it meant finally going home.