Daily life inside a correctional facility depends on access to basic supplies that most people on the outside take for granted. Soap, toothpaste, writing materials, postage, and food beyond the institutional menu all come from commissary or from outside sources approved by the facility. This section covers what services and supplies inmates can receive from outside, how to send approved items through the right channels, what InmateAid's suite of services covers including letters, photos, postcards, magazines, and books, and how to make sure everything you send actually reaches your loved one rather than being rejected at the mailroom. The practical guidance here is written for families who want to support their loved one's daily wellbeing and for inmates who want to understand what is available to them. Small comforts matter enormously during a long sentence and knowing how to get them to the right person efficiently makes a real difference. See also our sections on Commissary, Send Inmate Mail, and Inmate Care Packages.
Subject: Inmate services & supplies
The tablet program in the federal Bureau of Prisons is real but was still in a pilot phase at a limited number of facilities at the time of this writing. Not every BOP institution has them, and availability varies by facility. Where tablets are available, inmates can typically use them for music, educational content, and messaging, but access is controlled and the content is curated by the BOP. If you want to know whether a specific facility has the tablet...
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You cannot mail a ring or jewelry to an inmate. Items sent through the postal system that are not on the facility's approved mail list will be rejected at the mail room, and jewelry falls outside what is accepted as standard incoming mail at virtually every correctional facility.
The only way a ring gets into a facility is if the inmate had it on their person at the time of intake. Jewelry brought in at booking is logged as personal property...
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This comes up more than you might think, particularly in situations involving paternity questions, adoption reunions, or family members who lost contact years ago and are trying to establish a biological connection.
Bringing a consumer DNA test kit to a prison visit is not something most facilities will allow. Anything coming into a visitation room is screened carefully, and outside testing materials are not going to make it through. The concern is always contraband and chain of custody, and an outside...
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It is called the [Richland Parish Detention Center (Women's) - LaSalle](https://www.inmateaid.com/prisons/richland-parish-detention-center) on InmateAId. We absolutely can help your inmate with a variety of services. If you need more information, please feel free to email us at aid@InmateAid.com.
Subject: Inmate services & supplies
Inmates can have pictures taken of themselves in the visiting room and on certain days of the year. If you are not in contact with that inmate there is little change you'd be able to receive one of him. The only other photos of inmates might be found in mugshot listings. There are no other ways to get inmate photos.
Subject: Inmate services & supplies
Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state houses military inmates at the Regional Correctional Facility, which operates under the jurisdiction of the United States Army rather than the Bureau of Prisons. That distinction matters because military correctional facilities follow Department of Defense regulations rather than standard federal BOP rules, and the restrictions tend to be stricter and less flexible than what civilian federal inmates deal with.
Mail is generally permitted but what you can send is tightly controlled. Standard letters and cards...
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Yes. Personal property moves with the inmate. When someone is transferred from one facility to another, their accumulated belongings, including photos, greeting cards, postcards, magazines, and other approved personal items, are packed up and travel with them. The same holds at release. Whatever they have been allowed to keep during their time inside comes home with them.
This is one of the reasons sending physical mail has lasting value. A letter or a photo is not just read once and forgotten....
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Beyond standard letters, there are several approved ways to reach someone inside and each one makes a meaningful difference in their daily life.
Books and magazines are among the most valued things an inmate can receive. Reading material passes time, keeps the mind engaged, and provides a connection to the world outside the walls. The key requirement is that both must come directly from the publisher or an approved vendor like Amazon rather than being mailed from your home. Content restrictions...
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First, take a breath. This is one of the most common questions families have in the first days after someone they love gets locked up and there is a clear path forward.
Getting money on an inmate's books is one of the most direct and meaningful things you can do right away. Commissary funds give your loved one access to food to supplement meals, hygiene items, phone credits, and other basics that make daily life inside more manageable. It is a...
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Generally no. Printed calendars are not typically on the approved incoming mail list at most correctional facilities and will usually get rejected at the mailroom before reaching your loved one.
The reasoning behind it varies by facility but common concerns include the size of the paper, the format, and anything printed that goes beyond standard letter correspondence. Some facilities flag printed materials that look like they were produced at home rather than coming from an approved publisher or vendor. Others have...
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