Subject: Sentencing questions
Eligibility for a specific facility like Crossroads is not something anyone on the outside can determine in advance, and it is not something the court decides either. Facility designation is entirely the responsibility of the Indiana Department of Corrections, and they make that call based on a classification assessment after sentencing.
The classification process weighs several factors simultaneously. Criminal history is one of the most significant, and the fact that this is his first incarceration works in his favor. The level...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
That specific scenario does not line up with standard correctional practice, and we have never heard of a facility issuing a monetary fine for something like not making a bed.
Here is what facilities can and cannot do. The punishment for minor infractions like failing to follow housing rules, not making a bed, keeping a messy cell, not following a direct order, is disciplinary in nature, not financial. The typical consequence is a write-up that goes in the disciplinary record, a...
Read moreSubject: Pending criminal charges
Federal immigration smuggling charges carry serious weight, and a prior criminal history makes the sentencing picture significantly worse.
The baseline for human smuggling convictions in the federal system starts at around five years for a first offense without aggravating factors. That is the range I saw consistently with people I did time with at FCI Miami who were caught bringing immigrants in off the coast. Five years was a common landing point for those cases when the record was relatively clean...
Read moreSubject: After prison challenges & services
Mail will only get forwarded if he is in the same prison system (ie federal or state DOC). if you use the InmateAid Letter and Photo Service, we will resend all of the mail to the new facility at no charge to you.
Subject: Relationship issues
That imbalance is telling you something, and your internal voice already knows what it is.
When you are on the outside holding everything together, staying loyal, managing the worry, keeping up with every detail of his situation, while he appears largely unconcerned with the details of your life, that is not just a communication gap. It is a relationship dynamic playing out in its most honest form. Incarceration strips away a lot of the performance that relationships can hide behind, and...
Read moreSubject: Medical treatment
This is a genuinely complicated area of law that varies significantly by state and has been evolving rapidly since the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision in 2022 returned abortion regulation to the states.
The starting legal point is that incarcerated people retain constitutional rights, including the right to access medical care. Courts have historically held that denying an inmate access to an abortion they want can constitute cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment, particularly when the facility is the only...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
This is more common than most families realize, and in many cases, it has nothing to do with anything your son did wrong.
Federal intake at a new facility frequently begins with a short stay in the SHU, and the reasons given can feel frustratingly vague. Missing paperwork, a bed shortage in the designated housing unit, a custody level adjustment that has not been fully processed yet, these are all legitimate administrative reasons that result in a new arrival sitting in...
Read moreSubject: Money transfer
The hesitation you are feeling is understandable, but the good news is that the major services operating in this space are legitimate and have been around long enough to have established track records.
The four most reputable options for sending money to Georgia inmates are MoneyGram, Western Union, JPay, and JailATM. Each has been operating in the correctional finance space for years and processes millions of transactions. Your money is not going to disappear into a scam with any of these...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
There is no limit, it's up to the amount of money available on the inmate's phone account.
Subject: Work release
Yes, work release inmates can be moved between facilities, and it is not necessarily a cause for concern. Work release units operate separately from the general population and are designed to support the final phase of reentry. Administrative transfers between work release centers happen for a variety of routine reasons, including program capacity, geographic proximity to a job, bed availability, or changes in the inmate's job situation.
The database showing an old location is almost certainly a lag in how quickly...
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