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Dr. Nancy Conley

Dr. Conley founded the 9 Juliet program in 2006, to help teens addicted to the internet, cell phones and other electronics. Dr. Conley received her B.A. degree in Biological Science at Stanford, her M.D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1995 and did her five years of residency at UCLA. Dr. Conley has continued with post-graduate studies and is currently pursuing her Ph.D. in Psychology. She continues to work in her private practice, as well as overseeing and running the 9 Juliet program.

Please click here to read an important notice about Dr. Conley.


Dr.  Jennifer Shepard

Dr. Shepard is the Associate Director for the 9 Juliet program. A clinical psychologist, Dr. Shepard received her B.A. in Psychology from Brown University, where she was the recipient of the Brady Scholarship, and her Masters and Doctorate from Tufts University, where she received the Hindley Fellowship for her dissertation on the psychological impact of modern technology on the development of children and teens. Dr. Shepard served as a team leader with the Change For Life wilderness camp for teens who demonstrated negative behaviors and unhealthy coping skills.

She continues to work in her private practice in Los Angeles as well as running the 9 Juliet program, both in our Northern Idaho and Shasta Lake locations.


Dr. Robert Sunar

Dr. Sunar holds a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University of Minnesota. He served as associate director of the Green River Psychological Associates in Seattle, Washington for 12 years, a practice that provided school consultation and private assessments. His shared private practice, Starkweather and Sunar, has focused on group therapy as well as one-on-one counselling for many issues facing children and teens.

An avid outdoorsman, Dr. Sunar will be taking on the duties of developing 9 Juliet's program for boys aged 13 to 18.


This website is a work of fiction used for marketing the feature film The Mooring. Names, character, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or a used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental.