Subject: Send inmate mail
Letters are processed immediately upon entry unless after 6pm on Saturday, those letters will process Monday morning. We estimate that it takes 2-3 business days to make it to the jail. Once there, the staff opens and reads each piece of mail and inspects it for contraband. Once they decide the mail is fit to be handed out at mail call, your inmate will receive it. Any delay that occurs at the facility is out of our control. We make...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
It is possible, but not reliable.
Most facilities require the inmate ID number on all incoming mail to make sure it is delivered to the correct person. Without it, the mailroom has to rely only on the inmate’s name, which can create confusion.
What can happen:
The mailroom staff may figure out who it belongs to and deliver it
Or they may return it to sender for missing required information
In some cases, it may be held or delayed while they try to verify
Why the ID number matters:
Many inmates have similar or...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
Depending on the jurisdiction, the standard for the "real length of time served" is 85% of the imposed sentence.
Subject: Send inmate mail
Mailed means the letter left InmateAid and entered the US Postal Service that day. It has not been delivered yet. The estimated delivery date on the site reflects when the letter is expected to be sent out, not when it arrives at the facility.
From the point it is mailed, expect another 2 to 3 business days for it to reach the jail or prison. Once it gets there, it does not go straight to your inmate. The facility mailroom staff...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
Yes, sexy pictures are perfectly okay. We process lots of bikini and lingerie photos from the loved ones of inmates and they are acceptable and appreciated by the recipient.
Subject: Send inmate money
Sending money into the Contra Costa County-Martinez Detention Facility will only be accepted in the following forms: Money Orders, Cashier's Checks, Local, State, and Federal government checks, including checks from other detention and prison authorities, Traveler's Checks, Personal checks, or cash. Envelopes and all their contents will be returned to the sender. Money Orders, Cashier's Checks, and Traveler's Checks must be made out to the inmate. The inmate's name and booking number must be on the front of the check....
Read moreSubject: Inmate transfer
The fugitive label creates real headwinds for any transfer or parole consideration, and here is why. Being captured as a fugitive signals to the system that this person previously chose to run rather than face their legal obligations. That history follows them directly into how their custody and security level gets assessed. Most inmates brought in this way are placed at the higher end of the security scale, which makes early transfer requests harder to justify and less likely to...
Read moreSubject: Inmate search
Trust the locator over what the inmate tells you, at least as your starting point for getting to the truth.
State and federal inmate locator databases pull directly from official department of corrections records. The admission date in the system reflects when that person entered the custody of that correctional system, and those records are maintained by the government with no incentive to misrepresent them. They are not perfect and data entry errors do occasionally happen, but they are far more...
Read moreSubject: Sentence reduction
Depending on where you are incarcerated there are only a couple of ways to get your sentence reduced. The most common way is to provide substantial assistance to the authorities that results in the conviction of another (yes, snitching - but it happens all of the time). The other way, if your inmate is in federal prison and qualifies for this program, is called RDAP. RDAP is the Residential Drug Abuse Program which is a nine month program. Once successfully...
Read moreSubject: Inmate transfer
The timeline between sentencing and transfer to a classification or reception center varies depending on whether the sentence is federal or state and how backed up the system is at the time.
For federal sentences, the Bureau of Prisons typically designates a facility within a few weeks of sentencing. Inmates who are self-surrendering are given a specific report date, usually four to six weeks after sentencing, and report directly to their designated facility rather than going through a separate classification center....
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