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Every word. Mail is one of the most anticipated parts of an inmate's day, and a letter from someone on the outside gets read carefully and often more than once. Boredom and isolation are two of the hardest parts of incarceration. A letter breaks through both. It is a tangible connection to the world outside, and most inmates will tell you that receiving mail is one of the few things that genuinely lifts the day. Do not worry about
Read moreNot every facility can be serviced with a local discount phone line. Coverage depends on the phone carrier contracted to that specific jail or prison, and in some cases a local number simply cannot be obtained for that area. When InmateAid is unable to procure a local line for a facility after a customer has placed an order, we issue a full refund. You will not be charged for a service we cannot deliver. If you are setting
Read moreWe have looked high and low for those titles. No one has a subscription listing for them. One is out of the UK and the other is "underground". Many other titles in this genre are available for subscription. the onlty advise we have to offer is that a high number of questionable adult magazines get rejected for the partial nudity going too far for their rules
Read moreThe committed date is the date your inmate began serving their sentence. It is not the release date. To put it simply: the committed date marks the start, and the release date marks the end. They are two separate fields and neither is required when setting up a profile on InmateAid. If you enter both dates, InmateAid has a countdown feature built into the profile that shows how many days remain in the sentence. It is a small
Read moreThe cost is $1.59 for the first photo - additional photos are $1.39. In almost all cases, there is no limit to the number of photos allowed (federal and state no limit). If you want to check with us before sending if they are in a county jail, we will let you know if that particular facility has a limit.
Read moreNo, your husband cannot see your InmateAid account. Inmates do not have access to the internet, so anything you create or do on the website is private and only visible to you. What InmateAid does is act as a bridge for communication and services. For example: When you send a letter or photos, they are printed and delivered by mail When you set up phone services, it helps lower the cost of calls he makes to you
Read morePhotos are printed as 4x6 prints. If the image you uploaded has different proportions than 4x6, the system automatically applies a fit adjustment to make sure the entire image appears on the print without any part of it being cut off. What that means in practice is that the actual image may print slightly smaller than the full 4x6 surface, appearing more like a 4x4 or 4x5 centered on the photo paper with a small border around it. The
Read morewhat is his name, we will check on his whereabouts? once in the halfway house, they have a lot more freedom to call and communicate. they are encouraged to get a job and get re-entered into society. let us know and we will help you.
Read moreNot necessarily, but it is a reasonable question and the answer depends on how dramatic the difference was between the expected sentence and what was actually handed down. A modestly lighter sentence than expected can have several explanations that have nothing to do with cooperation. A skilled defense attorney, a sympathetic judge, mitigating factors presented at sentencing, program eligibility, or a negotiated plea agreement can all produce a sentence that comes in below what the guidelines might have suggested.
Read moreAt most correctional facilities including Trumbull Correctional Institution in Ohio, photos taken during visitation are purchased by the inmate through commissary rather than paid for directly by the visitor at the time of the visit. The typical process works like this: the inmate purchases a photo voucher or receipt through commissary in advance, presents it to the photographer during the visit, and the finished photo is processed and delivered to the inmate afterward. Visitors generally do not handle the
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