The rule is simple: you have to be wearing something. Full nudity will be rejected at the mail room at virtually every correctional facility in the country, and the entire envelope may be confiscated along with everything else inside it. Lingerie and bikinis are fine. Photos showing suggestive poses in swimwear or underwear pass through without issue at most facilities as long as private areas are covered. That is where the line is, and staying on the right side
Read moreYes, and it is one of the more avoidable ways visitation gets taken away. Correctional facilities take honesty during the visitation process seriously. Staff are trained to verify information visitors provide, and a lie that gets caught, even a seemingly minor one about transportation, creates an immediate trust problem. In your situation, telling a sheriff you drove yourself and then being observed getting into someone else's car is exactly the kind of discrepancy that gets flagged and reported.
Read moreNo. InmateAid does not read your letters. The volume of mail processed every day is handled in bulk by machine, and there is no staff review of letter content on our end. Your words go from your keyboard to the printer to the envelope without anyone at InmateAid reading them. What does happen after the letter leaves our hands is a different matter. Every piece of incoming mail at a correctional facility is opened and inspected by mail room
Read moreThere is no single maximum. How much time can be reduced depends on the mechanism being used and what the inmate is willing to do. For the average federal inmate focused on standard good time credits, the baseline reduction is 15 percent, roughly 54 days per year of sentence imposed, assuming a clean disciplinary record. Adding RDAP completion on top of that produces up to 12 additional months off the sentence. Those are the most accessible reductions available to
Read moreYes, your inmate can write back to you using the “Letters From Inmates” service. Here is how it works: Your inmate writes a regular letter and mails it to the InmateAid address The letter is received, scanned, and uploaded to your account You get notified when it is ready About the cost: There is a small fee (typically $1.49) to open and read each letter in your account Important to know: The
Read moreAt Silverdale Detention Center (formerly operated by Corrections Corporation of America), many facilities have moved away from collect calls. The main reason is cost and system changes: Collect calls are often the most expensive type of inmate call Phone providers are shifting to prepaid and debit systems instead Facilities prefer systems where billing is clearer and controlled While it feels like a loss, collect calls usually end up costing more per call than prepaid options. Lower-cost options to consider: Set up
Read moreIf your inmate is transferred to a new facility before a letter arrives at the old one, the letter will almost certainly come back to InmateAid rather than follow them. Correctional facilities do not forward inmate mail to new locations the way the postal service forwards residential mail. When a returned letter arrives back at InmateAid, we will reach out to you. If you can provide the new facility address and inmate ID at the new location, we will
Read moreWhen one letter gets through and another is refused at the same facility, the issue is almost certainly content-related rather than an addressing or ID problem. If the address or ID were wrong, neither letter would have arrived. Facilities inspect all incoming mail and mail room staff have discretion to reject anything they determine violates the facility's mail policy. What triggers a refusal varies by facility and by the individual officer reviewing the mail that day. Content that references
Read moreThe flat rate is $19.95 - tax is included in that figure. To activate your number, we will need good funds in that amount
Read morecard declined a couple times
Read more