Subject: Prison discipline
The length of time in segregation depends almost entirely on how the incident was written up and by whom.
Seven days in already puts him past the short end of what these things typically run. If the officer on the receiving end of his outburst filed a straightforward report without escalating it, another week is a reasonable estimate. That puts him in the two-week range total, which is fairly standard for a verbal incident without any physical component.
Where it gets longer...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
I'll assume you mean how much actual time would be served on a particular sentence... it starts with "good time credits" that are applied to the sentence calculator a the beginning of the sentence. An inmate can only lose that good time by having behavior issues or breaking numerous rules. In federal you get 15%, state prison ranges from 15-30% good time. The difference with the state is that they're also dealing with a parole system too that can release an offender...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
When a facility says an inmate is in lockdown and the email system is simultaneously blocking your messages, those two things are almost certainly connected.
There are two different kinds of lockdown worth understanding. A facility-wide lockdown affects everyone at once, usually due to an incident, a search, or a staffing situation. In that case all communication gets suspended temporarily and restores once the lockdown lifts. But when it is just your husband who cannot receive messages while everyone else is...
Read moreSubject: Website function questions
https://www.inmateaid.com/members/inmates/new
Subject: Website function questions
The letters you purchase through InmateAid are for sending mail to your inmate, not the other way around. Your inmate responds the old-fashioned way, through regular postal mail with a stamp.
The current postage rate runs 73 cents for a standard letter. If your inmate does not have money on their books to buy stamps through commissary, the facility is required to provide basic writing materials, including paper, a pen, and postage for indigent inmates. Nobody gets completely cut off from...
Read moreSubject: Treatment vs.incarceration
Yes, and the system is actually set up to assess this from the very beginning.
When a new inmate arrives and goes through orientation, the facility conducts a thorough intake screening that covers physical health, mental health, and substance abuse history. This is not optional and it is not superficial. The results of that screening directly influence where an inmate gets placed and what programming they are assigned to. If the assessment identifies a serious addiction that needs immediate intervention, the...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
it is very different because the feds have a bigger budget. the guards are better paid and very well trained. The food is better, the recreation and housing is more updated. Some state prisons in the south do not even have air conditioning.
Subject: Send inmate mail
Yes, handwritten letters are generally accepted at Arizona State Prison Complex facilities including the Flamenco unit, and standard notebook paper is typically fine.
That said, every unit within the Arizona Department of Corrections has its own specific mail guidelines, and Flamenco houses a specialized population which can mean additional restrictions beyond what a standard unit allows. Before you send anything, it is worth calling the facility directly or checking the ADCRR website to confirm the current mail rules for that specific...
Read moreSubject: Inmate transfer
If Butner is the facility listed on his sentencing paperwork, that is where he is going. The Bureau of Prisons follows through on designations. Tallahatchie is simply a holding point while the transfer logistics get arranged.
What you will not get is any advance notice of when it happens. That is by design. Transfer dates, times, and routes are kept confidential for security reasons. The facility will not tell you, and your son likely will not know until the morning it...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
This is a situation that requires you to move carefully, because the rules around parolees contacting current inmates are strict and the consequences of getting it wrong fall on both of you.
The fact that you are not legally married complicates things further. Facilities give more latitude to spouses than to partners or significant others, and without that legal tie the approval process has less of a foundation to work from.
The right way to approach this is through official channels on...
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