Subject: Send inmate mail
Inmates 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 would write...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate money
JPay allows you to send money to an offender in all TDCJ prison facilities. Visit their website at jpay.com or call 1-800-574-JPAY to send funds using Visa, Discover or MasterCard credit/debit cards. Tell them InmateAID sent you...
♦JPay Senders can make cash deposits at MoneyGram locations nationwide using an Express Payment form. Senders may also make cash deposits from their home after setting up a cash collection account with a JPay customer service representative.
Subject: Visitation
Being told you are on the list but still not being allowed in is one of the most confusing and frustrating visitation experiences families deal with and there are several specific explanations worth investigating.
The most common reason is a scheduling or capacity issue. Many county facilities, including the house of corrections, operate visitation on a strict schedule with limited slots available per inmate per visiting period. Being on the approved list confirms eligibility but does not guarantee entry if the...
Read moreSubject: Survive prison
All of the parish prisons in Louisiana have daily recreation, they have TVs, they have some form of book exchange, others have a library - but boredom is an issue. The inmate that can compartmentalize their situation and block out the surroundings can get into a meaningful routine of self-improvement and actually come out of there a better, more rounded individual. You help by sending in reading material. That is one of the main reasons InmateAid exists is to make...
Read moreSubject: Ice-immigration enforcement
Illegal reentry after deportation is a federal felony prosecuted under 8 U.S.C. 1326. The sentence your husband receives depends primarily on his prior criminal history and the circumstances of his previous deportation.
The Basic Charge - No Prior Criminal Record
If your husband was previously deported and has no prior criminal convictions, the maximum sentence under the basic illegal reentry statute is two years in federal prison. In practice, many first-time illegal reentry defendants with no criminal history receive sentences significantly below...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
Prison rape is real but it's not pervasive in every facility. Rape can happen to an inmate in a 24-hour DUI holding cell or in a maximum security prison. Surroundings and circumstances are different but the outcome of rape could happen in any one of the fifteen-thousand plus detention facilities in this country.
Subject: Visitation
Not unless they are given permission by the warden
Subject: Survive prison
It depends on the person. There is no easy prison time for any inmate. Sometimes the younger inmates have more hope for the future and realize they can do some "learning" while they are there. Hope is a great motivator, if an inmate can see a potential bright future their time will be used wisely.
Subject: Halfway house
Five weeks into the wait is not unusual and unfortunately not a sign that something has gone wrong. The Bureau of Prisons halfway house and home confinement approval process runs on its own timeline and that timeline is rarely communicated clearly to inmates or their families.
Here is how the process typically works. Once the unit team submits a recommendation for Residential Reentry Center placement or home confinement, the paperwork goes to the BOP's Residential Reentry Management office for the region....
Read moreSubject: Commissary
Inmates must make an outbound call to you. They place your number on their call list and can direct dial you - as long as they have money on their TruLinks account. If you want to verify the location of your inmate, you can go online to: bop.gov/iloc2/LocateInmate.jsp


