Subject: Relationship issues
Depends on the person, being in jail will change only those that can see they need changing. Jasil for many is a wake-up call. If it's not a wake-up call then they are lying to themselves and probably others, too.
Subject: Inmate phone calls
That automated flag does not necessarily mean your husband did anything wrong, and it does not automatically result in disciplinary action. Here is what is actually happening when that message plays.
The federal phone system runs every call through an automated monitoring layer that listens for specific keywords, unusual call patterns, and other triggers. Think of it like a search engine running in real time against the conversation. If the system detects a word or phrase on its flagged list, it...
Read moreSubject: Marriage in prison
Your inmate must get permission from the warden - and prison is normally the place where an inmate may get married. Jail marriage does not happen often if at all. Only inmates with long sentences (along with a perfect record while incarcerated) are eligible. Our advice is: if your relationship is strong, marriage is not going to change anything. If you are getting married for other reasons, we would recommend waiting until you can have a proper ceremony.
Subject: Sentencing questions
Manafort will get a longer sentence because he went to trial and lost. The government will file a PreSentence Report to the judge and try to pile on as much time as they can, maybe asking for 20 years - which really adds to the drama. There are sentencing guidelines which federal prosecutors push to the high side of the range - understanding that they get graded on how much time their "wins" bring. It's a shitty system, but its...
Read moreSubject: Relationship issues
it does happen sometimes, you read about guards getting caught up in things with the inmates. once the affair is exposed, the offending guard is prosecuted and charged with a felony. Their punishment: the inmate gets a few months in the SHU but the prison guard ends up an inmate in prison themselves.
Subject: Inmate transfer
The good news is that in most state systems the approved call list travels with the inmate rather than being wiped and rebuilt from scratch at each new facility. The list is tied to the inmate's DOC number rather than to a specific location, which means your number should still be on there when they arrive at the new facility.
The gap in calls after a transfer is almost always about logistics rather than the list itself. When an inmate arrives...
Read moreSubject: Inmate transfer
In the federal system the approved call list stays intact through transfers. It is tied to the inmate's register number rather than to a specific facility, so when they arrive at the new camp their existing list of approved numbers comes with them. You do not need to reapply or go through a new approval process on your end.
The only gap in calls after a transfer is the logistics of getting settled at the new facility. Once your inmate is...
Read moreSubject: Law & court questions - legal terms
No, and missing the hearing actually made the situation significantly worse rather than better.
A protective order exists to protect the person who requested it, not to accommodate the person it was issued against. The individual subject to the order has no standing to unilaterally request its removal, and a judge is not going to lift a protective order simply because the restrained party wants it gone. The only person who can initiate a modification or dismissal of a protective order...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
Florida applies a 15 percent good time credit at the beginning of a sentence, which is already factored into the scheduled release date you see. That February 2030 date reflects the sentence after good time has been applied upfront, so there is no additional reduction coming from that mechanism.
On parole, Florida is more complicated than most states. The state largely abolished parole for offenses committed after October 1983, but second-degree murder sentences from that era and cases where a judge...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
One video visit per day... maybe once a week depending on the inmate. The VISITOR is the one that pays for the service.


