Using only the information you've given us, our opinion (and we are NOT lawyers) is that the bond is set at arraignment not during the warrant phase. Our instincts tell us that they owe money to the courts for child support or some fine that has triggered the warrant. You can call the Clerk of the Court and find out how the warrant was written. Your answers are in that document.
Read moreThe prisons do not keep inmates beyond their release date unless there is something like a detainer or that the inmate caught a new charge. You can contact the judge's office who originally sentenced him and see what the actual sentence was. And then the clerk of the court to see if there is anything pending in that jurisdiction.
Read moreYes, the service for that facility is City TeleCoin. We will get you a number that will make the calls at the cheapest rate they offer. There should be a savings of $3-4 per call.
Read moreThe online letter is the most reliable. Inmates have to call you, you cannot call in and ask to speak to them. Therefore, the letter can initiate contact but then the inmate would have to call you.
Read moreThe inmates may write you back through us. If they do, we scan their mail into your account and notify you by email that you have correspondence.
Read moreYes, InmateAid works with every county jail, state and federal prison
Read moreYes, absolutely we will notify you that they have written you back
Read moreIt’s very simple to update your number. If you change your phone number, just send us your new forward-to number, and we will update it on your account. What this means: Your InmateAid local number stays the same (the one your inmate dials) We simply change where those calls are forwarded to Your inmate does not need to learn a new number How to request the change: Email us with your new number Include your current number
Read moreYes, and they DO! When we receive the letter from your inmate on your behalf - we scan it into your account and then notify you by email that it is there.
Read moreWhat happens next depends on what the violation was and how the parole board views it, but there are some common outcomes. Since he was close to finishing parole, the board will look closely at: Type of violation (technical vs new crime) His overall behavior while on parole Risk to the public If it was a minor (technical) violation: Examples: missed meetings, curfew issues, failed check-ins He could be sanctioned with short jail time Parole could be reinstated
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