Subject: Law & court questions - legal terms
The short answer is yes, but how he gets them depends on which direction this case goes.
If this is a criminal matter, meaning someone reported the theft of federal pandemic funds, the FBI has jurisdiction. Stimulus checks are federal money, and stealing them is a federal crime. If an investigation is open, federal agents can subpoena email records directly from the provider. Your husband would not need to produce anything himself, the investigators would gather that evidence through their own...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
Yes, email us (aid@inmateaid.com) your new information and we will make that change for you
Subject: Send inmate mail
This is more common than people realize, and it matters. There are situations where you cannot put your home address on a letter, whether because of a restraining order, a safety concern, a complicated family situation, or simply not wanting the wrong people to know where you live. The good news is that there is a straightforward solution.
InmateAid's letter service was built exactly for this. When you send a letter through InmateAid, your personal address never appears anywhere on the...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
Once you send through InmateAid, the postcard has to go through the facility's mailroom process before it reaches your friend. Plan on about 6 to 7 days from the time you send it to the time it is in his hands. That is the typical window, though some facilities move faster and a few run slower depending on staffing and volume.
As for writing back, that depends on him. He can respond as soon as he receives it, but he will...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
LOL... 30 DAYS!?!?! shame on you for even asking
Subject: Survive prison
Prison is no joke, and your person has the right instinct. Keeping emotions close to the chest is genuinely good survival advice in any federal facility, not because the place is a warzone, but because showing vulnerability in front of the wrong people can create problems you do not need. That goes for staff as much as other inmates.
That said, the specifics here matter. FMC Carswell is a federal medical center in Fort Worth, Texas, and it houses women across...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
The honest answer is that it is unlikely, and going in with realistic expectations will save you a lot of frustration.
Federal inmates are required to serve at least 85% of their sentence barring exceptional circumstances. With a 30-month sentence and a release date of January 2024, she is already on a relatively compressed timeline. If she keeps a clean record, no incident reports, she will serve that 85% and get out on schedule.
Compassionate release exists on paper, but the Bureau...
Read moreSubject: Sentencing questions
In the federal system there is no parole, and good time credit only goes so far. The standard is 85% of the sentence, which on 30 months works out to about 25.5 months served. With a voluntary surrender date of December 2, 2021 and a release date of January 17, 2024, that math lines up closely with what she is looking at.
The one program that can change that calculation significantly is RDAP, the Residential Drug Abuse Program. If she qualifies...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
You have a few options, and which one works fastest depends on your situation.
The most reliable method is sending a letter or postcard with the new number written clearly in the body of the message. InmateAid's letter and postcard service works well for exactly this kind of thing, and your personal address stays private in the process. Allow the usual 6 to 7 days for it to clear the mailroom and reach your inmate.
If timing is tight and your old...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
You can try sending international mail directly, but there are real practical hurdles that make it harder than it sounds. On your end, international postage and formatting requirements vary, and some facilities are strict about how incoming mail is processed and where it originates. On her end, the bigger problem is outgoing mail. Inmates typically have limited access to international postage, and many facilities simply do not make it easy to send letters outside the country. Letters headed overseas often...
Read moreSubject: Survive prison
Yes, they wait in line. That is standard in virtually every correctional facility, and Lea County is no different.
Shower access is not open all day. Facilities run on schedules, and shower time is a designated window, not an on-demand amenity. The number of shower heads is limited relative to the population, so inmates have to plan around that window and wait their turn when it comes. If someone is slow or the timing is off, they may miss their slot...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
No, it can only be changed by the owner of the account... outside of the prison
Subject: Prison jobs
Most inmates are required to work. It is built into the structure of daily life, and for good reason on both sides of the fence. Facilities need bodies to keep things running, and inmates who stay busy do easier time.
The range of jobs is broader than most people expect. The kitchen is the biggest operation in any facility and requires constant staffing across multiple shifts, from food prep to serving to cleanup. Orderly crews handle cleaning throughout the unit, the...
Read moreSubject: Relationship issues
Yes, and you should go in with clear eyes about it.
First, stop trying to entertain him around the clock. It is not possible, and more importantly, it is not your job. What is happening right now is a test, whether conscious or not. He is gauging what you will do for him, how far you will stretch, how much guilt you will carry. That dynamic is extremely common when someone is incarcerated, and it does not mean he is a...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
if you have his login creds, you should be able to get in there


