Subject: Release questions
In most cases the release date stays intact. Being sent back from a therapeutic community to a standard facility for not completing a class is a program failure, but it does not automatically alter the underlying sentence calculation.
The release date is set by the sentence itself, the good time calculation, and any applicable credits. A program requirement that was not completed can affect eligibility for certain early release benefits, but the base release date tied to the sentence typically holds.
The...
Read moreSubject: Survive prison
Chillicothe Correctional Center is a relatively modern facility housing around 1,300 women. Like all state prisons, the basics are minimal. Meals are institutional, sleeping quarters are sparse, and the schedule is tightly controlled. The hardest part of incarceration for most people is not the physical conditions but the boredom, the relentless sameness of days that blur into one another.
What sets Chillicothe apart from harder facilities is its programming. The institution offers a meaningful range of recreational, educational, and vocational options....
Read moreSubject: Survive prison
Four months?? That is nothing. You are scared because of the unknown, but this is going to be like "four months of adult camp", not prison. Most if not all inmates are not looking for trouble, they just want to go home too. Do not tell anyone you are only there for four months, short-timers can be targets because some inmate might be jealous you're leaving so soon. Make sure you have some money for commissary, it makes life bearable....
Read moreSubject: Survive prison
USP stands for United States Penitentiary. By definition, it is for maximum security inmates which means that all movement is controlled by the guards for set periods of time. There are one or two man cells. There are not near as many personal freedoms as you would find in the lower custody facilities. But, even in these strict, hard conditions the inmates seem to figure out the hierarchy of things and it truns into a little village where everyone just...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
Inmates are allowed mail whether they are in the hole, lockdown...anything except terrorism
Subject: Send books and magazines
Probably, but you should call and speak with the chaplain or the lieutenant on duty. That is a very nice thing you are thinking about doing!
Subject: Send inmate mail
Yes you can send photos to him and in most cases there is no limit. Here is a coupon code that is good for 40% off any photos you send today through the weekend. ANYONE reading this can use this coupon MAR10, to get the discount.
Subject: Sentencing questions
In most situations, there is a built-in good time credit of 15%. On 66 years, 85% is 56.1 years. If his sentence was in a state court (not federal), there is a chance that the judge in the case added a parole provision. If that is in their Judgement and Commitment Order, then they might be eligible for the first parole board meeting at 1/3 of their sentence.
Subject: Inmate transfer
There is no specific time set aside. They transfer the inmate to the jurisdiction where the judge sits and whenever there is a court date, he will be there. It might be a week, it could be three months we just have no way of knowing.


