Subject: Release questions
If someone has served their time and is still sitting in custody past their projected release date, the most common explanation is a detainer.
A detainer is a formal hold placed on an inmate by a separate jurisdiction that has an outstanding charge, warrant, or case pending against them. It essentially means that even though the current facility is done with them, another county, state, or federal agency has a claim and is waiting to take custody the moment they are...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
The most common obstacle people run into when trying to send mail is not knowing the exact facility address or the inmate's full registration number, both of which are required for mail to be delivered correctly.
The first step is pinning down which facility your loved one is in. Aaron Hernandez is a common name and without knowing the state it is nearly impossible to narrow down which facility and which person you are looking for. There are inmates by that...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
When an inmate breaks the rules, the facility has a range of disciplinary tools at its disposal and the punishment handed down depends on the severity of the infraction and the inmate's prior disciplinary history.
The most common privileges that get pulled include phone access, commissary, visitation, and recreation time. These are the four things inmates value most in their daily lives and facilities know that. Losing one or all of them for an extended period is a significant consequence that...
Read moreSubject: Re-entry & rehabilitation
Phase-based programs are structured reentry and rehabilitation curriculums that divide an inmate's program participation into sequential stages. Each phase builds on the last and has to be completed before advancing to the next. Phase 3 is typically the final or near-final stage of the program, which means your loved one is closer to the end than the beginning.
East Carroll Riverbend Detention Center in Louisiana operates programs through the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections. Phase-based programming at facilities like...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
Our system is perfect in all detentions centers, jails and prisons. InmateAid helps navigate the rules and nuances that exist in an industry with varying rules and regulations. If it is the phone service, and your inmate gets moved, InmateAid is the only company that will make changes in your account (like a new number if they get moved) at no additional cost. Let us know what you wish to accomplish and we can help guide you through successfully.
Subject: General prison questions-terminology
Yes, you can order books and newspapers for your inmate, but there are a few important rules to follow.
Ordering from Amazon:
You can send books from Amazon, but they must be new and shipped directly from Amazon
Do not use third party sellers or used books, those are often rejected
Paperback books are usually required, hardcovers are often not allowed
Newspapers and magazines:
These must come directly from the publisher or an approved vendor
A subscription is the safest way to send newspapers
Do you need commissary?
No, you do not...
Read moreSubject: Inmateaid website questions
Correctional facilities require a return address on incoming mail. A letter without one is likely to get rejected at the mailroom before it ever reaches your loved one. Facilities want to know where mail is coming from, and an envelope with no return address raises flags that can result in the letter being discarded entirely.
Addressing the envelope correctly is straightforward, but the details matter. You need the inmate's full legal name, their inmate ID or register number, the full facility...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
It has to be on prison-approved glossy photo paper, no more that 4" x 6" in size. InmateAid uses the correct paper but if you have the equipment at home you can do it your self. Let us know if you'd like a coupon code to try the service out, on the house!
Subject: Pending criminal charges
That depends on several factors that vary from case to case, and without knowing the full details, it is impossible to predict which direction a prosecutor will go.
The two biggest factors that influence how hard a prosecutor pushes are whether anyone was hurt and how much property damage was involved. A case where someone was physically harmed or significant property was destroyed is going to be treated very differently from one where the impact was minimal. Prosecutors weigh the severity...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
Being on probation does not automatically disqualify you from visiting an inmate, but it does make the approval process more strict.
At a facility like PCC, you will need to go through a formal approval process again, even if you were approved at a different facility years ago. Prior approval at FCC from 2004–2007 will not carry over.
What you need to do:
Submit a new visitation application to PCC
Disclose your probation status honestly
Be prepared for additional review or a required waiver
Key factor:
You...
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