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Read moreYou need to contact someone at the Clerk of the Courts where your husband caught his charge and file a formal complaint.
Read moreInmates need hope. The hope of something better or different than the life that led them to the charges that sent them to prison. If you know what their interests are, you could introduce them to magazines and/or books that are mailed into the facility from the publisher. You could write them uplifting letters. Urge them to embrace optimistic thinking and focusing on how to re-invent themselves for a successful re-entry.
Read moreThis depends on their custody level and the security level at the facility they are incarcerated in. Minimum security, there are no cells, you live in a barracks setting where there are 100 people in one large room and you are only there to sleep and count times. Low security, there are 2-3 man cells. They are given recreation time outside their cells for more than 10 hours a day. Medium security, there are 1-2 man cells. They
Read moreYes, inmates are always allowed to receive postal mail, even during evaluation periods
Read moreThe only way to appeal it is to write the warden. Take a humble approach and be very respectful when communicating. They have the final say. If you are pushy or demanding, you will get nowhere.
Read moreBond and home detention are two distinct mechanisms that both allow someone to avoid or leave jail, but they work differently and are granted under different circumstances. Bond is determined at the initial appearance before a judge or magistrate, typically within 24 to 72 hours of arrest. The judge weighs factors including the severity of the charge, criminal history, ties to the community, flight risk, and public safety before setting an amount. Once set, the full amount can be
Read moreYes, you can do that. Just mail the information and he can get the doc notarized by someone in the main office. It might take a couple of weeks for the entire process.
Read moreprobably not, but we don't know enough about your inmate's situation to comment further
Read morePrison/jail is no joke. Sometimes the young jits need to settle down and not get mixed up with others. The first couple isn't too bad, hopefully, he'll learn a lesson. But if not, he'll be looking at solitary before you know it.
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