Yes, the call still runs through the facility's phone system and the cost comes out of the inmate's account just as it always has. What InmateAid changes is the price of that call. Here is how the system works. Every jail and prison has a single contract with one phone carrier. Securus, GTL, IC Solutions, Telmate, Paytel, Reliance, CityTeleCoin, and more than twenty others compete to win that contract, and once they have it, they are the only option
Read moreNot all inmate's mugshots are published. The inmate locator on the Luzerne County Prison are posted without pictures but we found this link from a site that just publishes mugshots: https://mugshots.com/US-Counties/Pennsylvania/Luzerne-County-PA/
Read moreAbsolutely!! As a former inmate, i can tell you 100% that those are the BEST letters. We like receiving them and we like writing you back with even better ones. Be mindful that some letters are read by the COs, it's their job. They are looking for plots, escape plans, planning other crimes or inmates trying to run a business - not sexy talk. Sexual talk between letters is perfectly normal and expected :))
Read moreThe prison system never wants to get in the middle of the flow of mail from the US Postal Service. Inmate mail is considered sacred, the facility wants the inmates connected in some way to a loved one or more on the outside - postal mail is the most reliable and least expensive. They are more likely to be good inmates, quietly do their time and not come back. That is why they encourage and promote the flow of mail. Even
Read moreA restraining order creates legal obligations for the person it is issued against, not necessarily for the facility housing them, and that distinction matters for both questions here. On the letter, the facility's mailroom staff have no access to restraining order information and no mechanism to screen incoming mail based on civil protective orders. A letter mailed to an inmate reaches them through the standard mail process regardless of any restraining order that exists between the sender and the
Read moreWe do not have access to internal programming schedules. We have found the ASPC counselors to be very helpful, we recommend calling there and asking nicely what the current schedules are (and is my inmate eligible?). It makes your request more personal.
Read moreNot automatically, but the odds are stacked in a way that most people outside the system do not fully appreciate until they are inside it. Federal prosecution is not like what you see at the state level. The resources are different, the preparation is different, and the conviction rate reflects both. Federal prosecutors win roughly 97 percent of the cases they bring to trial. That number exists because federal agencies, whether the FBI, DEA, ATF, or any of the
Read moreA mandatory minimum means exactly what it sounds like. It is a floor on sentencing that the judge is legally required to impose regardless of any mitigating circumstances, personal history, or preference for leniency. When a charge carries a mandatory minimum, the judge loses the discretion they would normally have to craft a sentence based on the individual circumstances of the case. The legislature has effectively made that decision for them by writing the minimum into the statute. A
Read moreRelease dates are not always published publicly and the availability of that information online depends entirely on which state and facility she is in. Many state departments of corrections do maintain public inmate search tools on their websites that display projected release dates. If you know which state she is incarcerated in, searching for that state's department of corrections inmate locator is the fastest starting point. Most of these tools are free and searchable by name. The BOP inmate
Read morePhone and commissary accounts remain active and functional right up until the moment of release. There is no early shutdown or wind-down period in the days leading up to a release date. Whatever balance remains in the account continues to be available for calls, commissary purchases, and other approved uses until the inmate actually walks out. On the day of release, any remaining balance in the trust or commissary account is returned to the inmate in the form of
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