Subject: Send inmate mail
A postcard or a letter is the fastest option for reaching someone in prison, and both can be sent from your phone or computer through InmateAid without printing, stamps, or a trip to the post office. InmateAid's office is in Florida and sends mail directly to the facility through the US Postal Service, so turnaround is quick. Click the link to send a postcard or a letter to your inmate.
For a postcard, you can upload a photo and a brief message and...
Read moreSubject: Re-entry & rehabilitation
Rebuilding is genuinely hard, and the difficulty is not a personal failing. It is a structural reality. Everything familiar, the people, the places, the habits, the shortcuts, is still right there waiting. And comfort is comfort, even when it led somewhere bad. The pull back toward the old life is real and it does not disappear because you want it to.
The old saying about doing the same thing and expecting different results holds up here. Real change is not about...
Read moreSubject: Treatment vs.incarceration
The honest answer is that the setting matters far less than the person's readiness to change. Research consistently shows that treatment works when the individual is genuinely motivated, and struggles when they are not, regardless of whether it is court-mandated inside a facility or chosen voluntarily on the outside.
That said, there are real differences between the settings. Voluntary inpatient treatment outside of the criminal justice system allows the person to focus almost entirely on recovery without the additional stressors of...
Read moreSubject: Law & court questions - legal terms
A writ of habeas corpus is a legal petition filed with a court that essentially demands the government justify why a person is being held in custody. The Latin phrase translates to "you shall have the body," which in practice means the government must bring the person before the court and provide a valid legal reason for the detention. If the court finds the imprisonment is unconstitutional or unlawful, it can order the person released.
In the context of a prison...
Read moreSubject: Inmate transfer
It depends on the system. Within the same state prison system or the federal Bureau of Prisons, mail sent to a prior facility does typically get forwarded to the inmate's new location, though it can take additional time and the process is not always perfectly reliable. Within those systems, facilities are used to handling forwarding when inmates move, and mail generally finds its way eventually.
The situation is less predictable across different systems, such as from a county jail to a...
Read moreSubject: Family services
No, this is not true. There is no government program, benefit, or entitlement that pays a spouse simply for being married to an incarcerated person. This rumor circulates inside facilities and outside them, but it has no basis in law.
Where some confusion may come from is Social Security disability benefits. When someone receiving SSDI is incarcerated, their benefits are suspended after a certain period in custody. In some cases, a spouse may have previously been receiving spousal benefits tied to...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
Could be weeks, could be months... if the violation is severe enough, I've seen it last for over a year
Subject: Inmate phone calls
Yes, during the pandemic, inmate calls were free. They are no longer free and if you are paying more than $3 per 15 minutes, get an InmateAid Discount Phone line
Subject: Pending criminal charges
The new gun charge alone carries a mandatory minimum of 5 years for felony possession of a firearm. That minimum applies regardless of circumstances, criminal history, or anything a judge might otherwise want to consider. The law requires it.
The prior Class X conviction makes this significantly worse. Class X offenses are serious felonies, and having that history on record affects how the new charge is weighted at sentencing. Depending on the state and the specific firearms statute, a prior violent...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate money
Yes, if you have their inmate ID (52490-509) and the money transfer company (Western Union). Whether it is a good use of your money is a different question. Celebrity inmates with significant careers and resources on the outside are rarely in need of commissary funds from fans. Their teams, family members, and label money typically keep their books covered. A letter or a postcard is probably a more meaningful gesture and costs far less.
If you genuinely want to support an...
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