Subject: Inmate transfer
This is good news, and it is worth understanding why.
Camp is the term used for minimum security prison, the lowest custody level in the correctional system. When the DOC moves an inmate from a higher security facility to a camp as they approach their release date, it is a deliberate step-down process designed to prepare them for reentry into the community. The system is essentially walking them back toward normal life in stages rather than releasing them directly from a...
Read moreSubject: Law questions - legal terms
The Second Look Act has had a complicated path and its future remains genuinely uncertain depending on the political environment at any given time.
The legislation, designed to allow federal inmates who have served at least ten years to petition for sentence reductions, gained traction during periods of bipartisan criminal justice reform momentum. The First Step Act of 2018 represented the high-water mark of that era and produced real changes for many federal inmates. The Second Look Act was intended as...
Read moreSubject: Sentencing questions
it's not the State it's the Judge deciding on the penalty. First-time DUI, no injuries or property damage, our best guess would be probation and maybe some sort of education about drinking and driving.
Subject: Re-entry & rehabilitation
Yes, and if you have the spirit and patience for it, reaching out is absolutely the right thing to do.
Addiction does not pause because someone is incarcerated. If anything, the stress, isolation, and idleness of prison life can make the underlying pull of substances harder to resist, not easier. People struggling with addiction inside need exactly what they need on the outside: connection, accountability, and the knowledge that someone who cares about them is paying attention.
A letter is where it...
Read moreSubject: Parole & probation
First, an important clarification. Federal parole was eliminated for crimes committed after November 1, 1987 under the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984. What the federal system uses today is called supervised release, which functions similarly to parole but operates under different rules and with different consequences for violations.
If your husband has a federal hold on him, it almost certainly means he was on federal supervised release when his state offense occurred. Committing a new crime while on supervised release is...
Read moreSubject: Marriage in prison
Marriage while incarcerated is possible in many state DOC systems and in the federal Bureau of Prisons, but it is a process that requires patience and a willingness to navigate significant administrative hurdles on both ends.
The starting point is always the chaplain on the inside. Your fiance needs to approach the chaplain directly and express the intention to marry. The chaplain is the person who manages marriage requests at the facility level and knows exactly what the institution's rules and...
Read moreSubject: Bail & bond questions
Getting bond revoked is a significant setback and the timeline for seeing the judge again is largely out of your hands.
When a bond gets revoked, the court is sending a clear message that it no longer trusts the defendant to comply with the conditions of release. That loss of trust does not speed anything up. If anything it slows things down because the court knows he is not going anywhere and there is no urgency on their end to move...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
there is no maximum... i knew guys that were in there for their entire bid. it really depends on the infraction and reason for being sent there... for instance, getting caught with a cell phone got one guy 9 months in the SHU another got 18 months in the SHU
Subject: Prison discipline
This happens when an inmate breaks enough rules or has been involved in fighting or smuggling contraband where the administration will change the inmate's classification requiring them to be housed in a more secure facility with fewer freedoms and privileges. Whatever the reason, it's not a good thing for the inmate.
Subject: Inmate care packages
Yes, inmates at the Stanislaus County Public Safety Center are allowed to receive care packages, but there are specific guidelines and restrictions you must follow. Here’s what you need to know:
1. Approved Vendors for Care Packages:
The Stanislaus County Public Safety Center typically only accepts care packages sent through approved third-party vendors. This ensures that all items are compliant with facility regulations. The most commonly used vendors include:
Access Securepak: Access Securepak
Union Supply Direct: Union Supply Direct
Check with the facility to confirm...
Read more


