Subject: Visitation
You will need to be accompanied by an adult. Correctional facilities do not allow minors to visit on their own regardless of the reason for the visit or how well you know the inmate. This applies at virtually every jail, prison, and detention center in the country.
The adult accompanying you should ideally be a parent or legal guardian. Some facilities will accept another responsible adult in that role, but the closer the family relationship, the smoother the approval process tends...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
You’re on the right track, and yes, you can absolutely reach him.
Sending a letter
You can mail him at the address you have for FCI Pollock. Just make sure you include:
His full name
His 8 digit register number (format: XXXXX-XXX)
Without that ID number, mail can be delayed or returned.
You can also use InmateAid to type your letter online and have it printed and mailed for you.
Can he get mail “on the web”?
No. Inmates do not have internet access, so they cannot read messages online directly.
However, the Federal Bureau...
Read moreSubject: Release questions
The letter means that "when he is released", he is to report to the probation Office (by web portal) within 30 days of that. He will most likely not be released earlier than his out-date. That pretty much never happens. One small bit of advice, please tell him that once is is out, that he cannot take the probation officer lightly. He knows what he can and cannot do, where he can and cannot go... and just lay low.
Subject: Release questions
If parole is granted, release typically follows relatively quickly, but the exact timeline varies and several things have to fall into place first.
The two biggest factors are approved housing and confirmed release conditions. The parole board has to have a verified, acceptable address where he will be living, a parole officer assigned in that jurisdiction, and all of the paperwork processed before they will authorize the actual release date. If everything is already in order, release can happen within a...
Read moreSubject: Parole, probation & supervised release
The process for moving probation supervision from one state to another runs through the Interstate Compact for Adult Offender Supervision, which is the formal agreement that allows states to transfer supervision of probationers and parolees across state lines.
The first step is for your brother or his attorney to contact his Florida probation officer well before his release and formally request a transfer of supervision to Tennessee. The Florida probation office will evaluate the request and, if approved, submit it through...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
The felony record is going to make this a more involved process than a standard application, but it is not automatically disqualifying, and you have two significant factors working in your favor. Five years clean with no new charges shows a track record of compliance since release, and being the mother of his children gives the warden's office a concrete, child-centered reason to approve the visits.
Arizona State Prison Complex facilities understand that children need access to incarcerated parents, and the...
Read moreSubject: Sentencing questions
Let's pretend that the Bill passes. It will not go into effect until late next year if it is not held up politically. Then the State will produce a document that will outline how the Bill will work and who exactly may benefit from it. Then the inmates who think they fit within the parameters of this law's guidelines will make their application. The application is reviewed, and he is accepted. He goes back to his original sentence, which is...
Read moreSubject: Bail & bond questions
No, the magistrate that sets the bond knows there is a deportation. They will not risk offender flight pending a hearing with that order in place.
Subject: Law & court questions - legal terms
This is NOT a new law, it is a misintrepation of THE law. This Missouri Supreme Court ruling is considered a "legislative blunder", we are not certain of it's impact on any of the few hundred pending cases. It is our opinion that thjey will all be fixed on January 1, 2017 and if you are to take advantage of the loophole, do so before the new year.
The decision dealt with a felony theft case – State v. Bazell — in which a...
Read moreSubject: Inmate transfer
Visitation rules at juvenile facilities are significantly more restrictive than at county jails, even when the person being held is technically an adult. Juvenile halls typically limit visits to immediate family members only, meaning parents and sometimes siblings. Friends, significant others, and extended family are generally not permitted regardless of the inmate's age.
The reasoning is that juvenile facilities are designed to protect and rehabilitate young people, and controlling outside contacts is part of that environment. An adult housed there for...
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