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Yes, mail is considered sacred in prison and even during lock down, administrative or disciplinary segregation the mail still gets delivered to the inmates.
Read moreInmates that have money on their inmate trust accounts can purchase stamps and envelopes at the weekly commissary. If they do not have money on their books, the prison will provide indigent inmates with all the materials necessary to send out mail to their loved ones. If your inmate writes to you directly, using your address, the cost of the mailing is a 49 cent stamp. Many of our members use the Inmate Response Mail service through InmateAid. Your
Read moreYes, we will absolutely resend the mail for you to the new location - NO CHARGE. Just send us the new institution and we will make the change in your inmate's profile and send it them that same day. Email us: Aid@InmateAid.com
Read moreThere is no return-receipt feature to this service. The only way you will know for sure is when your inmate thanks you for sending it. Mail takes a couple of days through USPS. Once it arrives in the mail room it is up to the staff to read the letters, review the pictures and determine when they will hand it to the inmates at mail call .
Read moreYou can check with the Clerk of the Court where he was sentenced. Ask for a copy of the Judgement and Commitment Order signed by the judge. It will have the confinement order and any fine, restitution or court fees owed. If the jail is charging a daily incarceration fee like some jails are now doing, you will have to call them as find out what the rate is.
Read moreYes, if an inmate has court fees, a fine or restitution, the institution will deduct an amount that they deem appropriate (some arbitrary percentage) from the inmate's books. If they stopped deducting money, maybe it's paid back or maybe he has nothing in there. If he has money on his books and he still owes money, they haven't "stopped".
Read moreThis is a question that is not for us to answer for you. You cannot let the silence convince you of one thing or another. If you confirm it, that is one thing but to break up "thinking it is someone else" might be a mistake. There might be another explanation since the whole prison-thing is about isolation. They might have phone privileges suspended, or he might not have funds to call, or maybe he thinks you are with someone
Read moreWhen sentences run concurrently, defendants serve all the sentences at the same time. When sentences run consecutively, defendants have to finish serving the sentence for one offense before they start serving the sentence for any other offense. If a defendant is convicted of a number of crimes that carry lengthy prison terms, the difference between consecutive and concurrent sentences can be tremendous. The same factors that judges tend to consider when deciding on the severity of a sentence (for
Read moreAs an inmate does his time and is not receiving any incident reports, their custody level will change for the better. That is the incentive for an inmate to maintain good behavior. The lower the level of custody, the easier their time is. The higher security facilities have inmates with long sentences and not much to lose when it comes to igniting situations with rule breaking or violence. Inmates that want to go home follow the rules and get rewarded
Read moreThere is no real quick way to speed up extradition. You will have to let the process play out. This is done sometimes to sweat the inmate into a plea agreement. Finding a good attorney is not the easiest thing to do or the cheapest. You will have to talk with your daughter and get a feel for her case. No one really "knows a good criminal attorney" unless they have been through a criminal TRIAL and been
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