Subject: Halfway house
Getting halfway house time credited toward a prison sentence requires a formal legal process and cannot be accomplished through a simple phone call to the facility or the court.
The correct path is filing a motion with the court requesting a hearing specifically to address the time credit issue. That motion needs to lay out the legal basis for why the halfway house time should count toward the sentence, cite the relevant statutes or case law that support the argument, and...
Read moreSubject: Inmate care packages
County jails have widely varying policies on care packages, and the first step is always to call the facility directly and ask what their specific rules are. Some jails accept packages from family, others only allow packages from approved vendors, and some do not permit outside packages at all. There is no universal standard at the county level.
For facilities that do allow outside packages, items are typically restricted to approved clothing, hygiene products, and similar basics. Food is usually not...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
In some cases like most county jail, you only need an ID. If you are going to state or federal inmate visitation you will need to fill out an application and gain approval before being allowed to visit.
Subject: Sentencing questions
The honest answer is that a prior 17-year prison sentence weighs heavily against any outcome that does not include additional incarceration on new charges.
Criminal history is one of the most significant factors judges and prosecutors consider at every stage of a case, from charging decisions through plea negotiations to sentencing. Someone with a 17-year stretch already on their record is viewed very differently from a first-time offender facing similar charges. The prior sentence signals to the court that incarceration was...
Read moreSubject: Sentencing questions
A post-conviction petition challenges a sentence or conviction after all appeals are exhausted, typically on grounds like new evidence, ineffective counsel, or constitutional violations. Success rates are low and a 63-year sentence does not shorten significantly without extraordinary legal grounds
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
Whether parole is even a possibility on this sentence depends entirely on what the judge wrote in the Judgment and Commitment Order at the time of sentencing. That document is the controlling authority on parole eligibility. If the judge included a parole provision, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles has jurisdiction to consider release before the full sentence is served. If parole is not written into the order, it is not available regardless of conduct or programming.
Two-year sentences resulting...
Read moreSubject: Relationship issues
It is possible, but the answer depends on why you were gate-locked at the prison and whether that information has been shared with the county jail.
Gate locking at a state or federal facility creates a record within that institution's system. County jails operate their own separate visitor approval processes and do not always have access to or share information with the state prison system. If the county jail runs its own independent background check and your denial at the prison...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
They might, every county is different. If you suspect that you have a warrant, we would not risk it. You could send someone you know to visit first and then ask them the procedure. Just a thought, why not clear up the warrant with a phone call and arrange to clear your name?
Subject: Prison discipline
This situation carries serious consequences on multiple levels and the assault of a corrections officer is what transforms a manageable problem into a potentially devastating one.
Cell phone possession in a California state prison is already a significant infraction. Under federal law the Contraband Cell Phone Act carries up to five years of additional prison time, though in practice California state facilities typically handle phone possession through the institutional disciplinary system rather than new federal charges. The standard response is SHU...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
Federal inmates do have access to a limited email system called CorrLinks, and it works differently from standard email in a few important ways.
The key thing to understand is that your boyfriend has to initiate the connection, not you. He submits a request through the TRULINCS system at the facility, which sends you an invitation to your email address. Once you receive that invitation, you go to CorrLinks.com, create an account, and accept the connection. From that point you can...
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