Violence is a reality of correctional environments that families worry about and that inmates must navigate carefully. Understanding the dynamics of violence inside, the protections that exist, and the practical strategies for staying safe is essential knowledge for anyone entering or already inside a correctional facility. This section covers what types of violence occur inside correctional facilities, how custody level affects exposure to violence, what PREA is and what protections it provides against sexual assault, what gang pressure looks like and how to resist it without creating new problems, when and how to request protective custody, and what families can do when they believe their loved one is in danger. The guidance here is direct and honest because the stakes are too high for anything less. See also our sections on Survive Prison, Prison Discipline, and Immigration Enforcement.
Subject: Prison violence
This is a serious situation and standing up to the people threatening him is not a viable option given his physical condition. That kind of confrontation ends badly for someone who can barely walk, and the people doing the extorting know exactly what they are doing by targeting someone vulnerable.
The most immediate protective measure available to him is requesting protective custody. He can make that request directly to any staff member or officer, and the facility is obligated to take...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
gang rape was hard to forget
Subject: Prison violence
He needs to get with his counselor or case manager and request a cell change. This carries some potential danger as the "gang members" will see that as a diss. The other option is to ask to be in Ad Sec (Administrative Segregation) which is essentially solitary confinement but no one would be able to get to him there.
Subject: Prison violence
Has he been sentenced and assigned to a federal prison or is he still in the county jail? County jail is actually worse than federal prison. If he is getting beaten up often, he needs to check himself into PC, protective custody. He will be in isolation, it is lonely and boring but no one will bother him there.
Subject: Prison violence
The main difference is the federal budget is $7 billion/year, the inmates are well fed and well cared for with a lot of programming options. In general, the guards are paid better and trained better. The state system is as different as the 50 states they are in. Some are okay and others are miserable - like no air conditioning in the hot southern summer. We would say with 100% surety that the federal penitentiaries are better for the inmate than...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
Very silly question. I did 66 months and never even came within a hundred miles of someone raping me. In fact i dont think i heard of more than one in my whole bid, this was a cho-mo being held for all kinds of child porn charges. He got his teeth broken out and his mouth was violated.
Subject: Prison violence
Yes, you read about it the news probably once a week, however the statistics about murder in prison are actually lower that on the streets
Subject: 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: Prison violence
The most accurate description of daily prison life is the movie Groundhog Day. Every day is identical to the one before it. Same wake-up time, same meals, same faces, same walls, same routine repeated without variation for however long the sentence runs. The monotony is the hardest part for most people, more than the physical environment or even the separation from family. Time moves differently inside, and the sameness of it is something you have to actively fight against to...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
Prison/jail is a scary place. The worst part is the boredom, not the violence. Every inmate wants to go home, but they know there is time to be served and the ones that can handle boredom the best, are the ones that survive. The magazines and books inmateAID has on the site are there for your convenience of ordering, but staying in touch with the outside world keeps them focused on what they'll do when released.
Your son will need to follow some...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
TV tends to pick the most extreme situation that could happen. If they were to film a day in a jail, it would put you to sleep. Nothing really goes on... it's wake up, eat, clean your cell, watch tv, eat again, watch tv, play cards, read a book, read a magazine, play basketball, do puzzles, eat a third time, watch tv - read - play chess, go to bed.
Tomorrow and tomorrow are all the same... like the movie Groundhog Day. Gotta...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
It is not better or worse than any other prison. Fights happen in all prisons and jails. The inmates that get into fights are the same type personalities that get into fights outside of prison. If your inmate wants to steer clear of fighting, they should learn about the "rules of respect" - not interrupting others, don't butt in line, don't reach over another's plate, don't be a snitch, don't be in other's business, don't listen in on other's conversation,...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
Feeling unsafe inside is a serious situation and there are legitimate paths to address it, though none of them are immediate or simple.
A formal transfer request is the long-term option, but it comes with significant constraints. Most facilities require an inmate to have been housed there for a minimum of nine to eighteen months before a transfer request is even considered. Beyond the time requirement, transfers are driven by the system's needs rather than inmate preferences, and a request based...
Read moreSubject: Prison violence
Probation violation at the federal level does not usually turn out well for the violator. Usually, the original sentencing judge sees the violator. When they look at the record, the sentence, the violation while at the halfway house.
Subject: Prison violence
Loudoun County Adult Detention Center is a county jail, and like most county facilities its biggest challenge is not violence, it is boredom.
County jails are not designed for long-term housing. There is limited programming, minimal structured activity, and a lot of hours with nothing to fill them. When you put dozens of people in a confined space with nothing to do, tension builds. Most conflict in county jail does not come from hardened criminals looking for trouble, it comes from...
Read more


