
Ginny Burton’s life began in chaos. Born in Tacoma in 1972, she was raised amid addiction, violence, and instability. Her mother struggled with drugs and mental illness, while her father went to prison when Ginny was just four. Exposed to substances early, she used marijuana at six, meth at 12, and was addicted to heroin by her early twenties. For years, her life became a painful cycle of crime, incarceration, and hopelessness, with little sign of escape.
Everything changed in 2012 after yet another arrest. Instead of despair, Ginny felt relief. “I knew then I had to live differently,” she later reflected. Through drug diversion court and intensive rehabilitation, she achieved sobriety and rebuilt her sense of self. Determined to prove she was capable of more, Ginny enrolled in college, eventually transferring to the University of Washington to study political science, where she thrived academically despite being older than most classmates.
At 48, Ginny graduated—her mugshot replaced by a cap and gown. Today, she lives in Rochester, Washington, with her husband and works to reform addiction treatment within the prison system. Her story stands as living proof that change is possible.
