Subject: Ice-immigration enforcement
Admitting undocumented status to law enforcement starts a process, but the full outcome depends on what the original reason for the contact with police was. If he was picked up specifically because of immigration status, that is handled through the civil immigration system rather than the criminal courts. In that case, he would be held in immigration detention while his case is reviewed by an immigration judge, and that detention can go on indefinitely while proceedings work through the system....
Read moreSubject: Ice-immigration enforcement
It depends on the charges and how immigration gets involved, but here is how it usually plays out.
If your boyfriend has no legal status, there are typically two separate systems involved:
The criminal court (for the arrest)
Immigration authorities (for his status)
What happens first:
He will go through the normal criminal process:
See a judge
Be informed of the charges
Possibly be given bail or held depending on the case
If the charge is minor and this is truly his first arrest, he may:
Get released quickly
Or resolve the case with little or no...
Read moreSubject: Inmateaid website questions
We sent it to the facility YOU selected. The inmate profiles are set up by the member/users of the site. We do not monitor, verify or update the inmate profiles unless you request us to do so - and we are happy to do it. This sort of thing happens from time-to-time, we have no problem fixing the error and resending the mail for you at no charge.
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
There is no fixed timeline like “30 days.” Getting on the parole docket depends on a few moving parts, and it is rarely immediate.
Most parole boards meet once or twice a month, but inmates are only scheduled after certain things are in place.
What has to happen first:
The inmate reaches parole eligibility
Their file is reviewed and prepared by classification or parole staff
Required reports are completed, such as disciplinary history, program participation, and recommendations
Only after that will they be placed on a docket.
Typical timing:
Some inmates are...
Read moreSubject: Bail & bond questions
It depends on how you posted the $1,300.
If you paid a bail bondsman:
That money is a fee, not a deposit
It is non-refundable, even if you go to court and the case is dismissed
The bondsman keeps it for taking on the risk of your release
If you paid cash bail directly to the jail or court:
The money is a deposit
You will usually get it back after the case is finished, as long as you:
Show up to all court dates
Follow all court conditions
The court may deduct fees, fines, or...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
When you are hearing different things, the only version that matters is what has been officially filed with the court.
The jail and individual officers may give incomplete or outdated information. Charges can change quickly, especially early in a case. The Clerk of Court has the accurate, current record.
What you should do right away:
1. Contact the Clerk of Court
Go in person if you can, or call. Ask for:
The formal charges filed
The case number
The court date and type of hearing
This is public information and they can give you...
Read moreSubject: Commissary
This happens quite a bit, especially when money is added close to a release date.
When someone is released, the facility usually issues a release card or check with the balance that was already processed in their account at that moment. If you deposited money the same day, it may not have cleared in time to be included.
Where the money is now:
It is typically still in the facility’s trust or commissary account system
It does not disappear, but it may not have been transferred...
Read moreSubject: Inmate search
Usually after the transfer, the facilities keep all inmate movement unpublished for safety reasons. Call the old facility and ask to speak to a counselor or case manager.
Subject: Release questions
This happens more often than people think, and it is usually not as serious as it looks.
If the inmate has official paperwork showing a release date, that is what matters most. Internal records and signed documents are what the facility actually uses, not the public website.
Why the online date might change:
Database updates that lag behind real time processing
Automatic recalculations triggered by transfers, audits, or clerical updates
Temporary holds or flags that get entered and later removed
Simple data entry errors
Public inmate locator systems...
Read moreSubject: Treatment vs.incarceration
Having done time, her record is definitely working against her. The judges get tired of seeing people do short sentences and then commit more crimes after their release. The one thing you seem to have in your favor is a PO willing to recommend rehab. Rehab is a great alternative for offenders wanting to avoid jail time, but it's usually reserved for the first-timer, not habitual. The new drug laws are for federal offenses and sentencing guidelines, if this is...
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