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Subject: Send inmate mail
From the time you send a letter through InmateAid, expect it to reach the facility's mailroom within two to three business days via USPS. Once it arrives it goes through the standard mail inspection process before being handed out at mail call, so factor in an additional day or two depending on how busy the mailroom is at that facility. On the response side, yes, your inmate can absolutely write back. InmateAid's return address is printed on the outgoing envelope, and...
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Subject: Send inmate money
Any cash an inmate has on them when they are booked gets taken by facility staff and held securely. It does not disappear. The money is logged and deposited directly into the inmate's trust account, which is the same account used for phone calls and commissary purchases. So if your person walked in with cash, that money is already working for them inside without anyone on the outside needing to do anything. For adding money from the outside, the process depends...
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Subject: Prison discipline
Yes, mail continues to reach inmates in disciplinary custody. That channel stays open even when almost everything else gets restricted, which makes letters and postcards the most reliable way to stay connected during this stretch. Phone access drops sharply once someone goes into the SHU. The standard limitation is one 15-minute call per week, and depending on the severity of the infraction it could be less than that or suspended entirely for a period. Commissary choices also get reduced, typically to...
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Subject: Arrest record search
She is in a complicated position involving two separate jurisdictions, and the way it plays out depends on how aggressively Washington pursues the outstanding matter. First, Missouri will process the current arrest on its own terms. The drug charges in Wright County will move through the Missouri courts, and she will be arraigned, potentially have bail set, and face whatever prosecution follows. The severity of the outcome in Missouri depends on her criminal history, the quantities involved, and how the county...
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Subject: Prison discipline
There is no fixed timeline, and that uncertainty is part of what makes privilege revocation one of the more psychologically difficult punishments in the system. The length of the revocation is entirely at the discretion of the facility, driven by two things: the severity of what the inmate did and how the inmate handled the aftermath. Contrite, cooperative, and quiet gets you out faster. Defensive, argumentative, or caught in additional violations while already on restriction makes it significantly worse. For minor infractions,...
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Subject: Send books and magazines
Anything that will keep their mind occupied for long stretches of time is the best thing you can do for an inmate. You probably have an idea of your inmate's interests and on the magazine page, there is a search function that will narrow down the selection process. Some of the most popular, best sellers include the PUZZLES, WORD FINDERS and every possible COMIC BOOK available. 
Subject: Inmate phone calls
The 300 minutes your inmate gets each month are controlled by the Bureau of Prisons, not by InmateAid. The BOP resets that allotment on the same date every month, but that reset date is specific to each inmate and is set by the BOP when the inmate first enters the system. It is not necessarily the first of the month. It could be any date depending on when that individual's account was established. Once those 300 minutes are used up, your...
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Subject: Inmate phone calls
The facility is not going to deliver that message for you through official channels. Staff are not supposed to pass phone numbers from outside parties to inmates, and while an occasional empathetic officer might make an exception, that is not something you can count on or plan around. The two reliable options are mail and visitation. Mail is the most straightforward. Write the new number in a letter or on a postcard and send it directly to your inmate at Fayette County....
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Subject: Inmate phone calls
You will have to let them know either by mail, by visiting or by speaking to a staff member and politely ask if they will relay the new number to your inmate (this is only 50% effective as they usually decline)
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