Subject: Inmate phone calls
First, we are sorry about your son's sentence. Twenty-five years is a long road and the first days after sentencing are among the hardest for everyone involved.
Here is what to expect in terms of communication. Kirkland Correctional Institution is South Carolina's reception and evaluation center, which means your son will go through an orientation period of about a week or so before full privileges open up. During that window phone access is limited while he gets processed, classified, and assigned...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
Unfortunately no. Inmates initiate all outgoing calls and there is no way to call them directly. That is standard policy at every correctional facility in the country regardless of the circumstances, including a phone number change on your end.
This means the burden of getting your new number to him falls entirely on you through other channels before he can reach you. If he dials your old number and gets a disconnected message or no answer, he has no way of...
Read moreSubject: Send books and magazines
You probably should not send books in advance of the inmate's arrival. Magazines are the same thing, but since they both have a lag time in their delivery, you could "time it" if you know the reporting date and order them a month ahead.
Books and magazines sent to a facility before an inmate arrives will either be refused, held indefinitely, or returned. Facilities only accept mail and packages for inmates who are currently in the system at that location. Someone...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
The process is straightforward once you understand how it flows from your end to your inmate's hands.
After you purchase a Letter or Photo Package, you log into your InmateAid account and compose your letter directly on the platform. If you are sending photos, you upload the images you want to include. Once you submit the order, InmateAid's automated system takes it from there. The letter gets printed by machine and the photos are printed as high quality physical prints, then...
Read moreSubject: Send inmate mail
purchase the two smallest packages to start. if they are going to be in there for a minute, you can always get the bigger package later on. thanks for writing in!
Subject: Visitation
It happens, and it is frustrating when the record in question is a single misdemeanor from years ago with nothing since. But a denial is not necessarily the end of the road.
The standard background check that every visitor goes through flags criminal records automatically, and some facilities apply those filters broadly. A felony is almost always an automatic disqualification through the standard process. A misdemeanor falls into a grayer area that varies by facility, and some institutions are stricter than...
Read moreSubject: Medical treatment
Be prepared for a bureaucratic process that requires patience and persistence, but both sets of records are obtainable if you work through the right channels.
Start with the unit secretary at the facility where he was housed. That is the administrative hub for the unit and the best starting point for understanding who controls access to which records. The unit secretary can direct you toward the decision-makers for medical record releases and point you to the right department for commissary transaction...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
YES, Amtell's service is priced best for a local number (save 50%). We can get them for you anytime for any period of time.
Subject: Inmate search
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice has a free public offender search tool on their website that makes this straightforward. Go to tdcj.texas.gov and look for the offender search function. You can search by name alone if you do not have any other identifying information. The results will show your husband's TDCJ number, current facility, sentence information, and projected release date.
If the name search returns multiple results, you can narrow it down using date of birth or county of conviction...
Read moreSubject: Law & court questions - legal terms
You need to contact someone at the Clerk of the Courts where your husband caught his charge and file a formal complaint.


