Subject: Sentencing questions
The projected release date is a calculation, not a guarantee. It reflects the expected release date based on the sentence length minus applicable good time credits at a specific point in time. Whether it holds depends on what happens between now and then.
The date stays accurate when an inmate maintains a clean disciplinary record, completes any required programming, and has no outstanding legal issues in other jurisdictions. Under those conditions the projected date is reliable and families can plan around...
Read moreSubject: Survive prison
This is the struggle that every inmate faces every day of incarceration. Inmate's toughest time is the first six months of being locked-up. The adjustment of being told what to do, when to do it and where to be at certain times are not easy to adjust to. One of the main reasons that InmateAid was created it to allow the people on the outside to help their loved ones on the inside. Getting into a suitable routine is the...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
In most cases, letters and photos sent through InmateAid arrive at the facility within 2 to 3 business days after they are processed and mailed. That is the delivery time through the postal system.
Once the mail reaches the jail or prison, it goes through the facility’s internal mail process. Staff will open, inspect, and read each piece of mail to check for contraband or rule violations before giving it to the inmate. This step can add additional time, and it...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
Inmates cannot receive calls. Inmates have to make the outbound call to you. You will have to get involved with the payment part of the call - funding it from the outside which can and does get expensive.
The service at Fannin is Securus. Depending on your number, the calls could be as little at 50 cents or as much as $12-14 each. We can give you an exact price for what each call would cost and if our Discount Telephone...
Read moreSubject: Marriage in prison
Inmates who are serving less than a year will usually have their application for marriage denied with the presumption being that such a short wait will not harm the prisoner or prospective spouse. Each
partner must be legally eligible and mentally competent to marry. Marriages may be blocked for security or disciplinary reasons; solitary confinement can block access to marriage. Most states do not allow marriage for inmates on death row; California is at least one exception to that rule. Some...
Read moreSubject: Family services
Yes, it is possible to get a divorce while incarcerated, but it takes more coordination because you cannot handle things in person like someone on the outside.
The process usually starts by filing in the county where your spouse lives. If you and your spouse are on the same page and agree to the divorce terms, called an uncontested divorce, the process is much smoother and can move faster. If there are disagreements about property, custody, or support, it becomes more...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
It would be a total of 600 long distance minutes for the month and may be used in any combination.
Subject: Send inmate mail
Sending mail through InmateAid to someone at the Laredo Processing Center is simple, and everything is handled for you once you submit your order.
When you write a letter and upload photos, you complete the payment on the site and the process starts right away. Your letter is printed out on paper, and any photos you include are printed as well. Everything is then neatly assembled, folded, and placed into a standard envelope. There are no ads or extra inserts, just...
Read moreSubject: General prison questions-terminology
Most inmates do not have access to the Internet or email,
they receive letters through the US Mail. Mail call is done Monday through
Friday only. Inmates that have money on their inmate trust accounts can
purchase stamps and envelopes at the weekly commissary. If they do not have
money on their books, the prison will provide indigent inmates with all the
materials necessary to send out mail to their loved ones.
If your inmate writes to you directly, using your address, the cost of the
mailing...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
No. A spouse does not have access to another inmate's visitor list or visitation records. That information is considered private to the inmate and the facility, and it is not shared with outside parties, regardless of the relationship.
The facility maintains visitation records for security and administrative purposes, but those records are not available to spouses, family members, or anyone else on the outside through a standard request. Even being legally married does not grant access to an inmate's personal records...
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