Subject: Inmate phone calls
If your fiance has registered the number through the facility's phone system and is still unable to get through, there are a few possible explanations worth working through before assuming the number itself is the problem.
Confirm the number is fully approved. Registering a number through a service like OffenderConnect is one step, but the facility's phone provider also needs to process that registration and activate the number on their end. That approval is not always instant and can take a...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate money
Milledgeville City Jail in Georgia is a municipal facility, and the money transfer process at city jails varies more than at larger county or state facilities. The most reliable first step is to call the jail directly and ask which service they use for inmate deposits and what the process is.
Most Georgia jails use one of the major inmate money transfer services. The most common options are JPay, Access Securepak through Keefe, or Western Union Quick Collect. Each has its...
Read moreSubject: Halfway house
The halfway houses that are supporting released state and county inmates are not necessarily designated for "sex offenders". Most cases the sex offenders are given some anonymity so as to not draw the ire and become a target of other ex-inmates. There will be the registration process that they will have to submit to... Call the Clerk of the Court for more specific details and information.
Subject: Inmate phone calls
This is a known and deliberate practice by Securus, and understanding why it is happening helps explain what can be done about it.
Background: prison phone carriers like Securus were previously blocking local numbers from being used to receive inmate calls, effectively forcing families to use long distance numbers and pay the higher rates. A federal lawsuit challenged that practice and Securus lost. Rather than simply comply with the ruling, Securus shifted tactics. They are now classifying certain local numbers as...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
When an inmate's status shows as a Division of Corrections offender while they are still housed in a regional jail, it means they have been sentenced and formally committed to the state prison system. The regional jail is simply holding them temporarily until a bed becomes available at the appropriate state facility and the transfer is arranged.
So yes, in short, they will be moving to a state prison. The regional jail is a waiting point, not the final destination.
What the...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
Status labels in the correctional system can change as a case moves through different administrative stages, and those changes in wording rarely reflect anything meaningful about the inmate's actual situation. The shift from convicted felon to Division of Corrections offender is one of those administrative terminology updates that happens as the case transitions from the court system to the correctional system's own tracking and classification process.
Division of Corrections is simply the state agency responsible for managing incarcerated individuals after sentencing....
Read moreSubject: Website function questions
InmateAid does not have a mechanism that allows one member to block another member from accessing an inmate's profile outright. What can happen is that a profile is set to private by whoever created it, which restricts visibility to that specific page. If you are running into a wall trying to access a particular profile, a private setting is the most likely explanation for why you cannot get through.
The important thing to understand is that a private profile does not...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
Good behavior provisions are primarily designed for longer sentences where the incentive to maintain clean conduct over an extended period serves a meaningful purpose. For a 45-day sentence at a county jail, the administrative overhead of calculating and tracking good time credit is rarely applied. The sentence is short enough that most facilities simply count the days from commitment to scheduled release without any formal reduction calculation.
That said, early release does happen at the county level, though not through a...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
Changes to federal mandatory minimum sentencing laws apply only to federal inmates. They do not automatically extend to state systems, including Texas state jails and prisons.
Federal and state criminal justice systems operate independently of each other. When Congress or the federal courts modify sentencing guidelines, those changes affect people convicted of federal crimes sentenced in federal court. Someone in a Texas state jail is serving time under Texas state law, and only changes made by the Texas Legislature or Texas...
Read moreSubject: Family services
Do not bring legal paperwork to a visitation without confirming the facility's policy first. Many facilities prohibit any documents from being passed between visitors and inmates during visitation, regardless of the purpose or content. Attempting to have papers signed during a visit without prior approval can result in the visit being terminated and potentially affect future visitation privileges.
The right first step is to call Clay County Detention Center and speak with your boyfriend's counselor or case manager before you do...
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