Subject: Relationship issues
Pushing people away during incarceration is more common than most people admit, and the reasons are usually understandable even when the outcome is painful. Shame, pride, a desire to protect loved ones from the reality of the situation, or simply the emotional difficulty of maintaining relationships under those circumstances can all create distance that feels permanent but often is not.
A letter is the right first move for a reason. A phone call puts the other person on the spot and...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
Inmates are not permitted direct internet access and cannot personally operate a Facebook or any other social media account from inside a correctional facility. What is happening is one of two things. Either someone on the outside is managing the account and posting or messaging on the inmate's behalf, or the inmate has access to a contraband device and is operating it themselves in violation of facility rules.
Both situations are serious and both give you a path to address it.
Start...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
Without knowing all the facts, giving a precise timeline is not possible, but understanding what is working against him helps set realistic expectations.
Missing court dates, regardless of the reason, is viewed negatively by judges. The court's perspective is straightforward. A court date is a legal obligation and failing to appear, even unintentionally, signals unreliability to the judge who will eventually handle the case. In domestic violence matters specifically, courts tend to be less forgiving about procedural failures because of the...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
Surprise visits sound like a sweet idea but calling ahead first is always worth the few minutes it takes.
Even if you are on the approved visitor list, several things can prevent a visit from happening on any given day. The facility may be on lockdown, visitation hours may have changed, your inmate may have lost visitation privileges due to a disciplinary issue, or the visiting room may be at capacity. Showing up with children after a long drive only to...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
Prison has its own social hierarchy and moral code, and certain offenses sit at the bottom of it regardless of how the outside world views them. Crimes against women and children consistently rank among the most looked down upon within the inmate population.
Domestic violence cases vary in how they are received depending on the specific circumstances. A situation involving a mutual altercation between adults is viewed differently from one involving severe abuse, serious injury, or children being present. The inmate...
Read moreSubject: Inmateaid website questions
For most facilities, as many as you can stuff in there. There are some facilities with a 10 photo limit, but it is rare. Check with the facility page on InmateAid, if there are restrictions, we post them in "extra information"
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
The frustration behind this question is completely understandable, and the situation involving a warrant sent to the wrong address while the probation officer had clearly visited the correct home at least five times raises legitimate procedural concerns. That said, the legal reality of probation violation is unforgiving in ways that can feel deeply unjust to families caught in the middle.
Probation is a conditional form of freedom. Every condition attached to it carries legal weight, and the standard for finding a...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
Good time credit in Louisiana works similarly to most state systems but the specific impact on a release date depends heavily on the details of the sentence imposed and what conditions the judge included in the commitment order.
The standard good time reduction is 15%, meaning an inmate who maintains a clean disciplinary record throughout their sentence serves about 85% of the total time. That calculation applies automatically and does not require any special arrangement. On top of that baseline, Louisiana...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
Inmates may call out to any number on their "approved call list". If you have a number that the jail does not accept, please contact us about getting a land line that will allow the calls to go through at the cheapest rate possible.
Subject: Relationship issues
If the relationship is genuinely over and there is no contact between you, visiting another inmate is your personal choice and not something that requires anyone else's approval.
Respect and disrespect in this context are entirely subjective. What one person considers a betrayal another considers a completely reasonable exercise of personal freedom, particularly after a relationship has ended. The question worth sitting with is not whether your ex would approve, because that approval is not yours to seek once a relationship...
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