Subject: General prison questions-terminology
When a judge says “credit for time served,” that time should be applied to the sentence, but it does not always show up immediately in the system.
In most cases, the sentence calculation is handled by the Federal Bureau of Prisons (or the state equivalent), and there can be a delay while records are updated.
Why it may not show yet:
Paperwork from the court has not been fully processed
Jail credit has not been verified or entered yet
The sentence computation is still being finalized
What he should...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
Release date information is available through several channels, depending on the facility type and your relationship to the inmate.
The facility website is always worth checking first. Many state correctional systems and county sheriff's offices maintain public inmate search tools that include projected release dates as part of the available record. Searching the facility name plus inmate search or offender search will usually surface the right tool if one exists. Some systems, particularly larger state DOC databases, are updated regularly and...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
Cell reassignments are a routine part of jail administration and happen for reasons that have nothing to do with the individual inmate. Facilities shift populations constantly to manage space, separate incompatible inmates, accommodate new arrivals, or respond to classification changes. An occasional move is completely normal and should not raise concern on its own.
Six moves in five weeks is a different matter. That frequency goes beyond routine administrative shuffling and suggests something more specific is driving it. There are several...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
The simplest and most reliable method is through InmateAid. You write your letter online, upload photos if desired, and InmateAid prints and delivers everything through the US Postal Service, which is accepted at every correctional facility across the country without exception.
Subject: Parole & probation
Violations for not charging his anklet sounds like BS to us. ALL of the recharging of ankle bracelets are not requirements of the offender wearing them. They are not to be removed and cannot be charged while being worn. IF there is an issue, the probation officers get a "battery low" warning and then call the person in to have the anklet changed out.
There are too many possible variables for us to determine or guess how much time your friend...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
InmateAid does not have a read receipt or delivery confirmation system the way email does. What the platform can confirm with certainty is that your letter was printed and dispatched through the US Postal Service. From that point forward, delivery is in the hands of the postal system and the facility mailroom.
The inmate does not have an InmateAid account of their own and does not log in to read letters digitally. The letter arrives as a physical printed document delivered...
Read moreSubject: Pending criminal charges
Being arrested on a bench warrant, particularly one that is seven years old, is a stressful situation but not necessarily a dire one. The first thing that will happen is an appearance before a magistrate, typically within a day or two of the arrest, where the warrant will be addressed and the question of release or continued detention will be decided.
The age of the warrant is actually a meaningful factor in his favor. A seven-year-old bench warrant almost certainly originated...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
Once your quarterly payment is completed, the setup is usually very quick.
Getting your new number:
Most accounts receive their new local number within about an hour
You will get it by email with instructions
About the minutes:
The quarterly plan includes 1000 minutes per month, not for the whole quarter
You may also receive a prorated portion for the partial month when you first sign up
How to use it:
Give the new number to your loved one
Make sure it is set up with the facility’s phone provider
They will call that...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
A transfer to a fire camp is a positive development. California Conservation Camps, commonly called fire camps, are operated jointly by CDCR and CAL FIRE and represent a minimum security placement where inmates participate in firefighting and conservation work. The environment is meaningfully different from a traditional prison setting, and visitation at fire camps is generally contact-based, meaning you can sit together in the same room rather than through glass.
The letter still showing Tracy and Deuel Vocational Institution as the...
Read moreSubject: Prison food
Taking food out of the cafeteria is against the rules, but enforcement is inconsistent. Some COs will frisk inmates leaving the chow hall and confiscate food without filing a report. Enforcement typically increases when new staff arrive or after a facility-wide shakedown turns up hoarded food.
When a cell search turns up a significant quantity of food that has been stockpiled, administration tends to respond by tightening enforcement across the board, at least temporarily. These cycles of loose and strict enforcement...
Read more


