This is one of the most common and most misunderstood situations in the criminal justice system and the honest answer is one that many people in your position do not want to hear but need to know. Once domestic violence charges are filed the case belongs to the state or the prosecutor, not to you. You did not file the charges and you cannot drop them. The decision to prosecute, negotiate a plea, or dismiss the case rests entirely
Read moreInmates do not have Internet access, the inmate profile pages are created by the members of this site.
Read moreThis normally means that he was "Released to Central Magistrate"; the magistrate is a presiding judge overseeing arraignment and bond. We think this means he was released on his personal recognizance.
Read moreSusquehanna County Correctional Facility in Pennsylvania has a capacity of approximately 100 inmate beds. It is a smaller county facility by most standards, which reflects the rural and relatively low-population nature of Susquehanna County itself. The geographic breakdown of where inmates come from within the county or the surrounding areas is not publicly posted. County correctional facilities typically house a mix of people from the immediate county who are awaiting trial, serving short sentences on misdemeanor convictions, or being
Read moreImmigration detention is a system that sits in its own category, separate from both criminal incarceration and the experience most people picture when they think of jail or prison. The people held in immigration detention have not necessarily been convicted of any crime. They are being held for civil immigration violations while their cases work through a separate legal process, and that distinction matters when understanding how they are supposed to be treated versus how they often actually are.
Read moreInmateAid is a support platform built specifically for families and loved ones of incarcerated people. The site was founded by a former federal inmate and is designed to make every aspect of staying connected easier, from finding where someone is held to sending letters, photos, money, books, and setting up affordable phone service. Here is how the basics work. To find a specific person, use InmateAid's facility directory or the inmate search feature. You can search by name
Read moreYes, you can send magazines to an inmate, and it is one of the most appreciated things you can do for someone serving time. Reading material makes a real difference in how slowly or quickly the days pass by. The main restriction across virtually every correctional facility in the country is nudity. Magazines containing explicit or nude content are prohibited and will be rejected at the mailroom before they ever reach your loved one. That means publications like Playboy
Read moreYes, photos are one of the most meaningful things you can send to someone who is incarcerated. Having a picture of family, a partner, or someone they love to keep in their locker or on their wall makes a genuine difference in daily life inside. Most facilities allow photos but the rules around what is acceptable vary. Generally speaking, photos need to be printed on standard photo paper, cannot contain nudity or sexually suggestive content, cannot depict weapons, drugs,
Read moreInmates that have money on their inmate trust accounts can purchase stamps and envelopes at the weekly commissary. If they do not have money on their books, the prison will provide indigent inmates with all the materials necessary to send out mail to their loved ones. If your inmate writes to you directly, using your address, the cost of the mailing is a 49 cent stamp. Many of our members use the Inmate Response Mail service through InmateAid. Your inmate
Read moreThe inmate profiles on InmateAid are created by the member & users of the site. We do not monitor, verify or update the inmate information. Upon request, we will update this information - or find your inmate for you and create the page necessary to take advantage of the services that are available to help your inmate get through their bid.
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