Once an inmate is settled into their routine, the time goes by pretty quickly, all things considered. But, if you are close with your family, you will witness the time dragging on for them as there are greater hardships on your loved ones on the outside. The loss of income that is caused by the incarceration creates huge issues for the family trying to pay bills. That is tough on an inmate mentally carrying that baggage knowing what they did
Read moreOnce a letter is received, scanned, and uploaded to the InmateAid system so it can be delivered to the recipient, the original physical letter is kept on file for two weeks and then destroyed. The two week window exists as a buffer to handle any issues that might arise with the digital delivery, such as a recipient reporting they did not receive the letter or a question about the contents. Having the original available during that period allows any
Read moreYes. Many members use InmateAid as a virtual return address for privacy. Your inmate writes back to the same InmateAid address in Florida every time. Letters are received, scanned, uploaded to your account, and you are notified by email. Your home address is never exposed. If you send even one letter through InmateAid, the return address on the envelope will be InmateAid's corporate address in Florida. That address is fixed and consistent. It does not change from letter to
Read moreMost facilities require new arrivals to complete an Admissions and Orientation period before visitation is permitted. That process typically takes about two weeks, though there is no universal standard and some facilities move faster while others take longer. During that initial period, the facility is processing the inmate into their system, completing medical and classification evaluations, and establishing housing assignments. Visitation is generally not available until that intake process is complete and the inmate has submitted their approved visitor
Read moreThat is a pretty general question. The easy answer is "fire him" and get another attorney
Read moreCorrectional facilities maintain internal logs of inmate calls, mail, and financial transactions but that information is strictly private. Outside parties including family members have no access to those records. The only activity you can track is what you initiate yourself.
Read moreThat is a risk that will have to be determined by the person lending the money. There is no easy answer here. It is all going to be in the hands of the bail people in your area and if you are able to convince them that their risk is worth taking. Normally, the requirement is ten percent of the total bond amount
Read moreYes, an inmate does not have to wait for a scheduled court date to request a bail reduction. There are ways to pursue it proactively through the court system without sitting on the calendar and hoping the next appearance comes quickly. The most direct path is filing a motion for bail reduction or bond modification through the court. This is typically done through an attorney who drafts and submits the motion to the judge handling the case. The motion
Read moreMarrying someone who is incarcerated is entirely possible but requires navigating a process that varies significantly by institution and jurisdiction. The steps below reflect the general framework across most facilities. Step 1 - Contact the facility. Start by calling the prison or jail and asking to speak with the chaplain or a staff member who handles marriage requests. Every institution has its own specific requirements and the chaplain is almost always the right first contact. Ask specifically what their
Read moreThe phone service at the California State Prison - Sacramento is GlobalTel (GTL). Unless there is a disciplinary hold on your inmate, he should be able to make all the calls he wants provided he has funds on his books or in an Advanced Pay account. If you are long distance to Sacramento, the InmateAid Discount Phone Service is something you should look into. We can save about $4.50 per call instate and more if your are out of state.
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