Leaving prison is not the finish line; it is the starting line of one of the most challenging transitions a person can face. The weeks and months immediately after release determine whether someone successfully rebuilds their life or cycles back into the system. This section covers everything that happens after the prison doors open: finding housing, securing employment with a criminal record, navigating supervised release conditions, understanding reentry resources in your community, and reconnecting with family after time apart. For families who have supported a loved one through their sentence the reentry period requires just as much preparation and support as the incarceration itself. The practical questions answered here come from people who have lived through reentry and from families who helped make it work. Whether your loved one is weeks away from release or just starting a long sentence with reentry already in mind, the earlier the planning begins, the better the outcome. See also our sections on Halfway House, Parole and Probation, and Work Release.
Subject: After prison challenges & services
The most important ingredient is one that no one outside of her can provide: her own genuine desire to change. All of the love, housing, financial help, and family support in the world will not override a lack of internal motivation. People who stay clean after release do so because they want a different life badly enough to work for it every day. People who return to using do so because on some level the pull of the old life...
Read moreSubject: After prison challenges & services
Federal law under 18 U.S.C. Section 924(c) imposes mandatory minimum sentences for using or possessing a firearm during a drug trafficking crime or crime of violence. The mandatory minimums are steep on their own: 5 years for possession, 7 years for brandishing, and 10 years for discharging the weapon. A second or subsequent conviction under 924(c) triggers a 25-year mandatory minimum on top of everything else.
The stacking problem comes from how these sentences are applied. Under the law, each 924(c)...
Read moreSubject: After prison challenges & services
Yes, unless you are going to live in West Virginia, South Carolina and Mississippi. These states still enforce a lifetime ban on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly known as food stamps, for people who commit drug-related felonies. Indiana had a lifetime ban but just changed its law to lift it, effective in 2020.
Subject: After prison challenges & services
Do you have an idea of the state or county they were charged? If federal we might be able to help. If this is a state charge, you have to find out where the have re-entry facilities in the area where he was charged. Usually, it is some sort of a Salvation Army facility.
Subject: After prison challenges & services
This depends on the inmate's area of interest. The top picks include fitness magazines (Men's Fitness, Shape, Muscle and Fitness), entertainment magazines (In Touch, OK Weekly, Enquirer, Star), comic book magazines (Superman, Batman, Scooby, X-Men, Marvel, Looney Tunes, MAD), puzzle magazines (Word Find, Crossword, Sudoku, Logic Problems, Daily Word) to name a few favorite topics. Please let us know if you are interested, we will send you a discount coupon to get started.
Subject: After prison challenges & services
Inmates have a form they fill out which can transfer money from their commissary account to someone on the outside. In federal prison, the form is called a BP-199.
Subject: After prison challenges & services
just email the new location and we will make the change for you at the publisher. your inmate will not miss an issue.
Subject: After prison challenges & services
Yes, and the process is more straightforward than most people expect. Newly released inmates can use their prison-issued ID together with their birth certificate to apply for a state-issued photo ID card or a driver's license. Most states accept the combination of a prison ID and birth certificate as sufficient documentation to get a permanent government ID through the DMV. Getting that ID should be one of the first priorities after release since it is needed for almost everything else,...
Read moreSubject: After prison challenges & services
Finding a job with a felony is going to be difficult, so he's going to have to prepare himself for the struggle. The mindset he has is going to be the most important element to success. He must have the attitude that he WILL find a job no matter how long it takes. Most ex-offenders give up and that leads to a path back to criminal thinking, committing a crime and then going back (becoming a recidivism statistic).
We recommend creating...
Read moreSubject: After prison challenges & services
No, your husband will not be able to see photos posted on his profile.
Inmates do not have access to the internet, so anything uploaded to an online profile cannot be viewed by them inside the facility.
The only reliable way for him to see photos is:
Sending them through the mail
Using a service like InmateAid to print and deliver the photos
Once printed and mailed, he will receive them as physical pictures during mail call.
About rare exceptions:
There are occasional situations where inmates get...
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