Not likely, however it does happen from time-to-time at institutions across the country. We post stories of women who have compromised the system by having an affair and then doing something that crossed the legal-line. Then they get arrested and become an inmate themselves.
Read moreThe inmate will need to add you to that list
Read moreThe day to day risk of being actively hunted down is low, but the warrant does not expire and it does not care where she lives. Law enforcement agencies are not going to dispatch marshals across state lines to track down someone for failure to pay fines. The resources required for that kind of active pursuit are reserved for violent offenders and serious fugitives. An unpaid fine warrant, even one classified as a felony, is not going to trigger
Read moreOnce your inmate writes a response and mails it to the InmateAid return address, the letter typically arrives and gets processed within a day or two of InmateAid receiving it. The full round-trip timeline breaks down into two legs. The first is how long it takes your inmate to actually write and mail the response, which depends entirely on them and their access to mail call at the facility. Once they drop the letter, it travels through USPS to
Read moreNo, there is no cost to the inmate on either end of the process. When you send a letter, postcard, or photo through InmateAid, the cost is covered on your end when you place the order. The inmate receives the physical mail at no charge to their commissary account. Nothing gets deducted from their books when a letter arrives. On the response side, your inmate writes a letter by hand and mails it back to the InmateAid return
Read moreWhat you are thinking about doing matters more than you might realize. Inmates who have outside contact, people who write, who check in, who treat them like human beings worth communicating with, have measurably better outcomes than those who are completely isolated. A letter from someone who has no obligation to write but chose to anyway carries a different kind of weight than almost anything else that comes through mail call. Getting started is straightforward. InmateAid has over two
Read moreThe clock starts when he is picked up and taken into custody, not when the paperwork is signed. Signing the revocation papers on Monday set the legal process in motion, but time served does not begin until physical custody begins. The moment law enforcement or transport takes him into custody is day one, and that day counts as a full day regardless of what time it happens. If they pick him up at 11:55 at night, that entire calendar
Read moreBy using an InmateAid number, you are lowering the price of the call. You can talk longer for a lot less money. Prisons contract with only one prison phone company to provide outbound inmate calling services for each prison, jail or detention center. The prison phone company has no competition. We don't replace the prison phone company, we are simply providing a number that makes their call price less (based solely on the telephone number). People that come to InmateAid are already
Read moreThe correspondence rules are similar for all detention centers (jails, prisons, penitentiaries), the letters may be and probably are read by the Correctional Officers. Unless this offender is on some mail restriction for things you should already know about (terrorist-type charges), mail is considered sacred and they don't censor much. You cannot speak of business issues like moving money around, buying/selling real estate, stocks or bonds. You cannot speak of escape or anything conveying surveillance of the institution. And you
Read moreYes, there are. The state prison system has no discriminations against women being guards in a men's facility. In fact, it occurs in all fifty states.
Read more