Subject: Relationship issues
Inmates with high public profiles receive more attention than most people realize. Letters, emails, and pen pal requests come in regularly for anyone whose name carries recognition, and standing out in that crowd takes more than enthusiasm.
The most straightforward approach is a well-written letter that says something real. Not flattery, not obsession, just a genuine introduction that gives her a reason to write back. Inmates have time to read, and a letter that is honest, interesting, and respectful is far...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
There are over 18,000 prisons and jails and about 25 separate phone carriers that contract with individual facilities. In almost every case, there is a wide price variance depending on your location. In federal prison, the rates are six cents per minute for a local number, 21 cents per minute for a long-distance call. Any local number will help a federal inmate save money. We issue the local line, they give it to the inmate who has to initiate the...
Read moreSubject: Relationship issues
Conjugal visits, officially called extended family visits or family reunion programs depending on the state, are available in only four state prison systems in the United States: California, Connecticut, New York, and Washington. The federal system does not offer them at all. If your person is housed anywhere outside those four states, the program simply does not exist where they are.
Even in states where conjugal visits are permitted, eligibility is not automatic. Inmates typically need to be in good disciplinary...
Read moreSubject: Parole & probation
The US Parole Commission used the Salient Factor Score to assess a federal inmate's odds of a favorable outcome upon release. Parole no longer exists in federal law. But, the instrument contained seven items: prior convictions, prior commitments, age at first commitment, whether the commitment offense involved auto theft or checks, whether parole had ever been revoked or the inmate is a probation violator, history of opiate dependence, and verified employment or full-time school attendance for at least 6 months during...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
When a letter feels too slow, you have a few options worth trying.
The fastest is to call the facility directly and ask nicely. This works about half the time and depends entirely on who picks up the phone and how the conversation goes. Be polite, be brief, and be straightforward about what you need. Something simple like explaining that your number changed and you just need someone to pass it along to your fiancé goes further than a complicated story....
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
Yes prohibited by law, but that being said, cigarettes are easily attainable in Ohio state prisons for anywhere from $2-10 each
Subject: Work release
they have to be on the last 1/3 of their sentence and have a clean disciplinary history
Subject: Release questions
The odds are reasonable if everything lines up the right way, but mandatory minimum sentences come with specific constraints worth understanding before getting too optimistic.
The term mandatory minimum means the law requires a floor on how much time must be served before any release is possible. On a 24-month mandatory minimum, that floor is the full two years in most jurisdictions, meaning parole consideration does not typically begin until that minimum is satisfied. Unlike discretionary sentences where good behavior can...
Read moreSubject: Send books and magazines
Both are genuinely good choices and serve different purposes.
A health and fitness magazine gives your family member something practical and motivating. Exercise is one of the few things inside that an inmate has real control over, and a fitness publication can fuel that routine with new workouts, nutritional information, and a focus on physical discipline. It also reinforces a healthy mindset during a period when it is easy to let things slide.
A business magazine like Forbes keeps the mind engaged...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
If eligible, Class 1 earns 30 days of good time credit per month. Class 2 earns 20 days credit per month; Class 3 earns 10 days credit per month; and Class 4 does not earn any good time. All inmates are placed in Class 2 status when they arrive


