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Unjust Penalty for crime due to mental illness

Please allow the forgiveness of first time convictions of Veterans to be sealed if due to mental illness

I am a disabled American veteran that served in the United States Air Force honorably for her country and suffer a severe form of bipolar disorder, anorexia and Bulimia, obsessive compulsive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder and am getting the help that I need for it. In 2010 I was in in a manic phase of my bipolar disorder and I entered someone's home thinking I knew who lived there. I was truly sick and did not even know what my name was. I did not have any weapon on me nor did I intend to harm anyone. I tried on the clothes of the owner of the home and was awakened by the police and arrested for Burglary 1 which is a class A felony. I am not a career criminal in any way and it is very difficult for me to live with the stigma of being a class A felon when I already struggle with such a critical limiting disease. I am in the process of applying for a governor's pardon from the state of Oregon for my offense. I have obsessively feared limits and stigmas of being a Class A felon and according to my therapist that I worked with for three years he noted that it was a climactic moment in my escalating mania and complete surrender to my mental illness. My crime was clearly an expression of my mental illness and not of criminal intention. My therapist no ted that he could not see the logic or the benefit to society by condemning someone who is mentally ill with a criminal's identity in the same manner that we restrict the options of someone who is actually acting from a place of criminal intent. Please take this matter into consideration. I am currently working on getting a governors pardon from the state of Oregon and am awaiting an answer. I recently moved back to Georgia to live with my mother who is my caregiver. I only hope and pray that this restoration and sealing process come to pass. I appreciate your time and thought. Thank you.