Usually not. it would have to be a very slight violation. Magistrates HATE seeing an offender violate in any way... makes them think the person that got an early release really didn't deserve it.
Read moreYour buddy is probably being optimistic, and that optimism may not be grounded in how judges actually look at this situation. Catching new felony charges while already serving time or on supervised release is about the worst signal you can send to a court. The existing sentence was already a message that the system sent once. New charges, while on paper, tell a judge that the message did not land. Courts do not respond well to that, and the
Read moreHe would have to have a suitable residence and job awaiting him outside of Arkansas if he wants to do his parole time out-of-state.
Read moreWe have been around since 2012, and we serve folks with people in all LA County Jails
Read moreNon-violent offenders are treated for bail similarly to all defendants. The magistrate assesses the crime, the criminal history, the size of the loss, and potential harm to the public if released. If it is determined that all of the criteria is benign and there is no risk that the offender will appear for their court appointment, then there is a chance that they will be ROR's (released on their own recognizance)
Read moreInmates have no access to the internet, however there are some facilities that allow inmate email. This is not an "open internet", but a closed system where all email correspondence is on a 2-3 hour delay and everything is closely monitored.
Read moreIt matters more than most people on the outside realize. Incarceration is isolating by design. The days are long, the environment is monotonous, and the psychological weight of being cut off from normal life accumulates over time. Anything that keeps an inmate connected to the people and the world they are going back to lifts that weight in a real and measurable way. A phone call that gets answered is not just a conversation. It is confirmation that
Read moreThe hard truth is that your options are limited, and it is worth knowing that going in so you are not spinning your wheels chasing solutions that do not exist. What you are describing sounds like group punishment. When something happens in a unit, whether it is a fight, contraband found during a search, or any number of other incidents, the entire population gets locked down regardless of individual involvement. Facilities do not owe an explanation to inmates or
Read moreOn the phone situation, there is no way around this one. You cannot call her. Inmates initiate all outgoing calls, and there is no direct dial in. If you are at work when she calls, those calls are going to get missed until you work out a better window with her. The only fix is communicating a schedule to her through mail so she knows when you are actually available to pick up. For the cheapest phone rates, InmateAid's
Read moreInmates are not eligible for any government assistance including Social Security and welfare. Since you are asking, if you attempt to collect on behalf of an incarcerated person there is a very good chance you will become an inmate, too.
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