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Ask a former inmate questions at no charge. The inmate answering has spent considerable time in the federal prison system, state and county jails, and in a prison that was run by the private prison entity CCA.

Ask your question or browse previous questions in response to comments or further questions of members of the InmateAid community.

Subject: Commissary

yes, once per week as long as there is money in their account

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Subject: Relationship issues

Yes, and two years of silence is not as insurmountable as it might feel right now. People inside have a lot of time to think, and that thinking does not always land on resentment. For many inmates, the longer they are in, the more they come to value genuine connection over pride or the reasons a friendship went quiet. Two years without contact hurts, but it also means two years of reflection on both sides about what actually matters.

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Subject: Inmate search

Finding someone who is not showing up in a search can happen for several reasons, and there are a few steps worth trying before assuming the information is simply unavailable. Start with VINELink at vinelink.com. Search for his full legal name, making sure you use the name he was booked under rather than a nickname. If you know the state where he was arrested or sentenced, search there first since VINELink is organized by state and jurisdiction. If

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Subject: Survive prison

ST/SP is also referred to as protective custody (PC). This is a type of imprisonment to protect a person from harm, either from outside sources or other prisoners. Sometimes it is the administration that decides, other times the inmate asks for protection. This is isolation or solitary confinement, not necessarily a "punishment" but a safety concern and it's for their protection. Jail and prison officials must know of the signs and characteristics of inmates that may need protective custody. Inmates such as

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Subject: Inmate search

Not every county jail publishes an online inmate roster, and Dickson County is one of the facilities that does not make that information easily searchable from the outside. That is frustrating when you are trying to locate a family member, but it does not mean she cannot be found. Start with VINELink at vinelink.com. Search her full legal name and the system will pull custody information from Tennessee facilities including county jails that participate in the network. VINELink also

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Subject: Inmate search

The starting point for all of those questions is knowing which system she is in, and that single piece of information opens up every other answer you are looking for. If she was convicted of a federal offense, the Bureau of Prisons inmate locator at bop.gov is where everything begins. Search her full legal name or federal register number and it will show her current facility, which gives you the address for mail and the starting point for visitation

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Subject: Family services

To submit a complaint about a prison, you must file through the US Department of Justice. Explain your example of mistreatment of an inmate. This may fall under violations of the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution. The Special Litigation Section enforces the constitutional rights of people held in state or local government institutions, such as prisons, jails, juvenile correctional facilities, mental health facilities, developmental disability or mental retardation facilities, and nursing homes. Contact the Special Litigation

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Subject: Inmate phone calls

It took about a week to get everything approved and set up

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Subject: Inmateaid website questions

We sent it again this morning, please chcek your spam folder. Also, check your Account dashboard,it is displayed there as well

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Subject: Work release

Yes, you receive a paycheck from your employer the same way any worker does. The difference is that you do not keep all of it. Work release programs require inmates to return a portion of their gross earnings to the facility, typically between one-third and one-half of the gross pay before taxes. The exact percentage depends on the specific program and facility rules. What remains after that deduction is yours. Most programs also allow or require you to put

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