The "next of kin"...
Read moreTransfer decisions are among the most difficult things for families to influence from the outside, and the system offers very little transparency about why a specific request was denied. After 23 years of incarceration and 11 years at the same facility, a denial feels particularly frustrating, but the reality is that these decisions are made internally and the reasoning is rarely shared with the inmate or their family. That said, there are still some steps worth taking. Your
Read moreThere are three ways phone calls work from a county jail, and understanding the difference between them matters because the cost varies dramatically depending on which option you use. The first is the inmate paying from their own account. If money has been deposited onto their books, the cost of each call gets deducted directly from their trust account when they dial. This is the standard setup and the one most families use once they have funded the account.
Read morePhysical mail through the postal service has no restrictions on who can send it. Anyone can write to an inmate via USPS regardless of whether they are on an approved email list, a phone list, or any other facility-managed contact list. Those approval processes apply to electronic messaging systems like JPay or CorrLinks and to phone calls, not to incoming postal mail. This is an important distinction that a lot of people do not realize. The approved contact list
Read moreNo, responding to a letter does not cost him anything beyond a postage stamp, which is either provided by the facility or purchased through commissary for a small amount. That is the same cost he would incur sending any letter to anyone on the outside, and it has nothing to do with InmateAid specifically. When you send a letter through InmateAid, the cost is covered entirely on your end when you place the order. The letter arrives at the
Read moreWhat you are thinking about doing is genuinely meaningful, and the need is real on a scale that most people on the outside never fully appreciate. There are over two million people incarcerated across the United States. A significant portion of them have no one contributing to their commissary, no one sending letters, no one accepting their calls. They move through their sentence largely invisible to the outside world, and the absence of outside connection has measurable effects on
Read moreBeing on probation does not automatically disqualify someone from visiting an incarcerated person, but it does add a layer of requirements that have to be addressed before any visit can happen. The first step is disclosure. When you apply for visitation, you are required to disclose your probation status on the application. Do not leave it off. Facilities run background checks on all visitation applicants, and an omission is treated far more seriously than the underlying offense. Honesty upfront
Read moreThe outcome lands in front of the original sentencing judge, and that is both the challenge and the opportunity in this situation. The judge who granted probation in the first place is the one who now has to decide what to do with someone who never reported at all. Not a missed appointment or two, but a complete avoidance of supervision from the beginning. That is a harder thing to explain than a technical violation, and the judge will
Read moreYes on both counts. InmateAid postcards are pre-stamped and go out through USPS in a format that is already approved for prison and jail mail delivery. The pre-stamped requirement that some facilities enforce exists because loose stamps have become another method for introducing drugs into facilities. A stamp that has been soaked in a liquid substance and dried can look completely normal while carrying a controlled substance that activates on contact. Facilities that require pre-stamped mail are closing that
Read moreThe judge setting a bond is a positive development, but the Alabama detainer is the complicating factor that may prevent release even if the bond is paid. Here is how detainers work in practice. The Alabama Department of Corrections placed a hold on your brother-in-law specifically to prevent him from being released before they take custody. Even if the Florida bond is posted and satisfied, the jail may not release him into the community because the detainer requires them
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