Subject: Visitation
This is one of the harder realities of juvenile facilities, and the answer is not what you are hoping to hear.
Juvenile detention centers operate under much stricter contact rules than adult jails or prisons. The policies are designed around the assumption that juveniles need to be insulated from outside influences while they are in placement, and visitation and phone access is typically limited to immediate family only. That means parents, siblings, and grandparents. A girlfriend, regardless of how serious the...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
6803 Lake Worth Rd Suite 220
Greenacres, FL 33467
Subject: Send books and magazines
If Amazon already sent the books and they came back, the issue is almost certainly the facility's policy rather than the retailer. Amazon is the standard that most prisons accept for book orders because it ships directly from a recognized retailer with a packing slip, which is what mailrooms require. If Amazon books are being returned, it is a strong signal that Florence Correctional Center has either changed its book policy, restricted the types of books allowed, or moved to...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
Yes, and this is one of those situations where being in the hole is actually the best possible outcome given the circumstances.
The hole, or segregation unit, serves two very different purposes that most people on the outside do not realize. It is used as punishment for rule violations, but it is also used as protective custody for inmates whose safety cannot be guaranteed in general population. When your son told staff he was scared for his life, he was essentially...
Read moreSubject: Inmate transfer
It is understandable to want to help, but the honest answer is that people on the outside have no formal influence over where an inmate is housed or what custody level they are assigned to.
This surprises a lot of families because it seems like something a judge or an attorney could at least push for. The reality is that even a judge cannot dictate facility placement. A judge can recommend or suggest a particular type of facility in the sentencing...
Read moreSubject: Furloughs
Furloughs are rare in the Arizona state prison system and should not be counted on as a realistic option for most inmates at Douglas or anywhere else in the ADCRR.
A furlough is a temporary authorized release into the community, typically ranging from 24 hours to several days. In the states and systems that offer them at all, they are granted under very specific and limited circumstances. The two most common are a family death furlough to attend a funeral of...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
Hair dye is a minor infraction especially in a camp, but contraband is a loosely used term in the incident reports. Contraband can be a weapon, drugs, obvious signs of operating a business, gambling records or ANYTHING not on the comissary list. Hair dye seems almost like a nuisance charge, we wonder whose bad-side did your husband get on. Our guess is that the SHU stay will be no more than two weeks and he might have some limitations on commissary purchases...
Read moreSubject: Parole, probation & supervised release
Parole approval is great news, but it is the beginning of a process, not the end of one. The gap between approval and walking out the door is one of the more frustrating parts of the system for families to navigate because it feels like the hard part is done and yet nothing seems to be moving.
The reality is that two to six months between approval and release is completely normal. Here is why it takes that long.
After approval, the...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
LOP is "loss of privileges". If he was moved, it was probably to a disciplinary or special housing unit (SHU) within his complex detention unit (CDU). The loss of privileges could include limited or no visitation, limited or no phone or limited or no commissary. The length of time will stem from the charges and results of his hearing.


