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Subject: Sentencing questions
There is no way to predict that with confidence without knowing more about the specifics, including whether new charges were filed, what the judge said at the last hearing, and what the terms of his supervision looked like. Those details matter a great deal in how the judge is going to read this. What can be said is that missing a court-ordered DV review is a more serious misstep than missing a routine appearance. Domestic violence cases carry heightened scrutiny, and...
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Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
An Intermediate Sanction Facility, or ISF, in Texas is itself a form of community supervision, sitting between standard probation and full incarceration. Being placed in an ISF typically means someone violated the terms of their probation and the court responded with a structured residential program rather than sending them to prison. It is a last-chance opportunity to complete supervision requirements in a controlled environment. Because the ISF is already a supervised program rather than a traditional sentence, the concept of parole...
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Subject: Education & vocational training
On a 6-month sentence, good time credit is minimal. If any is applied, it typically comes out to around 15 percent of the sentence, which, over 6 months, amounts to less than a month off. The practical effect is small, and by the time the process of calculating and applying it runs its course, the sentence is nearly finished regardless. Parole in the traditional sense does not really apply to an ISF placement. An Intermediate Sanction Facility is already a form...
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Subject: Visitation
Usually, a week or two depending on their orientation schedule
Subject: Send inmate money
Yes, most facilities can deposit a check directly into an inmate's account, but the process has to be done correctly to avoid the check sitting unprocessed or being returned. Do not mail the check directly without first calling the facility and speaking with her case manager or counselor. They will give you the specific instructions for that institution, including who to address it to, what information to include with the check, and what the facility's process is for handling checks sent...
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Subject: Sentencing questions
The typical calculation is 85% of your sentence is what you'll serve. That equates to 15.3 months, with 4 months already served, there is 11.3 months remaining
Subject: Commissary
Inmates can use their money in their Inmate Account to buy commissary, add talk time to their phone, send an email and even send money home to family members.
Subject: Survive prison
Generally older inmates are left alone unless they have a big mouth. If your female friend is on her second bid (for murder?!?), she knows the score better than we could advise. She'll be a real gangster in there
Subject: Re-entry & rehabilitation
Halfway houses are allowing their residents to own cell phones now
Subject: Money transfer
The money does not automatically follow them. County jail and state prison operate on entirely separate account systems, and funds from a county commissary account are not transferred to the state when an inmate moves. To get the remaining balance, the inmate needs to request a check for whatever is left in their county account. That check is typically issued to the inmate's home address, so there needs to be someone on the outside to receive it. The inmate or their...
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Subject: Send inmate mail
Send him a postcard, it is the most direct and reliable method. Write your phone number clearly at the top of the letter so it is the first thing he sees when he opens it. Mail moves through the postal service and goes through the mailroom, but a letter with your contact information is perfectly acceptable to send and there is nothing the facility can refuse about it. Once he has the letter in hand, he has your number. InmateAid's letter...
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Subject: Release questions
The facility will release him in whatever clothing he has available, whether that is what he came in with or what he has accumulated while inside. If his original clothes no longer fit after gaining weight, you may want to bring a change of clothes in the right size to the pickup so he has something comfortable for the ride home. Beyond that, a few practical things make a real difference on release day. Have a meal ready or planned. The...
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Subject: Medical treatment
Prison medical systems are slow and require persistent navigation from the inside. The process starts with him, not with you. He needs to get the right paperwork submitted through his counselor or case manager to formally request a medical review and get into the system for evaluation and specialty care. If he has not already done this, that is the first step. Verbal complaints and sick calls are not the same as a formal written medical request that creates a...
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Subject: Prison discipline
Getting caught with either a cell phone or drugs inside a facility sets off an immediate response. The inmate gets taken into custody on the spot, handcuffed, and escorted directly to the Special Housing Unit, which is also called the SHU, the hole, or solitary confinement depending on the facility. They stay there until a Disciplinary Hearing is held to determine what the formal punishment will be. The consequences from that hearing are serious. A lengthy SHU stay is typical, often...
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Subject: Survive prison
That profile puts someone in a genuinely favorable position relative to most of the prison population. No strikes, no violence history, and no active gang affiliation means lower classification, more programming access, and less scrutiny from staff. It does not come with automatic rewards, but it opens doors that are closed to people with more complicated records. The process inside is largely the same for everyone: intake, classification, assignment to a housing unit and a work or programming detail, regular counts,...
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