Yes, you are responsible for getting the number to your inmate. You can use one more "expensive call" to relay the number, you can try to contact the facility to see if they will pass it along (the rules prohibit it, but some of the COs will if you're nice on the phone) or mail the number in a postcard or letter. We offer a free postcard, just email us at aid@inamteaid.com and we'll send you a coupon code.
Read moreYes, that is exactly correct and you have it set up the right way. Your personal phone number is the destination, meaning the number where you actually want to receive the calls. The InmateAid number that was emailed to you is the routing number, which is the number your inmate dials at the facility to reach you at the lower rate. When your inmate dials the InmateAid number, the call routes through to your personal number at the discounted
Read moreNothing is free - prison is a profit deal. They set up the video system because they cannot charge for in-person visits. Now they have a way to charge you for visitation.
Read moreThe BOP line from InmateAid is local to the facility the inmate is in. The inmate has to pay for each call from their cell coming out of their Trulincs account - they use their money is for calls, emails, and commissary. The 15-minute call to your number is $3.15, the call to the local number is $0.90. You're saving $2.25 per call simply by using our local number (which rings to your long distance number). Our $8.95 fee to
Read moreThe most important ingredient is one that no one outside of her can provide: her own genuine desire to change. All of the love, housing, financial help, and family support in the world will not override a lack of internal motivation. People who stay clean after release do so because they want a different life badly enough to work for it every day. People who return to using do so because on some level the pull of the old life
Read moreIn most cases no, and the reason is a standard policy that applies broadly across correctional facilities rather than anything specific to the individual situation. Having a prior felony conviction is one of the most common automatic disqualifiers in the visitation approval process. Facilities run background checks on everyone who applies to visit, and a prior felony, especially one that involved incarceration, raises immediate concerns about the nature of the relationship, potential security risks, and whether the visit could
Read moreUSP McCreary is a federal Bureau of Prisons facility, and InmateAid offers several services that make a real difference for inmates and their families there. On the phone side, federal inmates at McCreary get 300 minutes per month through the BOP system, with that allotment bumping up to 400 minutes in November and December for the holidays. Every call costs either $0.06 per minute for local numbers or $0.21 per minute for long distance numbers, with the money coming
Read moreNothing is free. You can reduce the overall cost if you do not use a lawyer, then the only cost is the filing fee is for the court (which might be a couple of hundred dollars)
Read moreThere is no guaranteed timeline, and that uncertainty is one of the more frustrating parts of waiting for a program placement from inside a county jail. The STAR Community Justice Center in Portsmouth, Ohio is a residential community-based correctional facility that takes referrals from county jails and courts across the region. Getting there from Ross County Jail depends on several factors that are largely outside your person's control. The first is readiness on the facility's end. The STAR
Read moreThe honest answer is that it depends entirely on the judge, and that judge is not going to be in a generous mood. Here is the reality of the situation. When a judge grants probation, they are extending trust. They looked at the person in front of them and made a decision to give them an alternative to incarceration. A probation violation, even a first one, and even for something as relatively minor as a small amount of marijuana,
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