It can definitely be done. But, you will have to have your lawyer do the coordinating. They know how the system works and getting all parties on the same page in goping to take some level of effort to accomplish.
Read moreThat is a terrible story, we are sorry for your loss, the fact that he has an out date at all is crazy. Our guess here is that it was a minor incident report that took some of his granted "good time" (all inmates get their good time credits at the beginning of their bid) which could be a short list of possible violations (fighting, contraband, gambling, possession of drugs or tobacco, or repeat violations) OR it is more likely a
Read moreTrustees are treated the very best by the prison staff. They get little benefits that go along way sometimes when you have so little to begin with.
Read moreYes, all inmates get paid a small stipend for the work that they do. Kitchen workers are among the highest paid inmates in the facility. Not that they are getting rich, but 40 cents per hour can get you some phone time and some snacks at commissary.
Read moreSeptember is the realistic target, but approved and released are two different things and the gap between them requires some patience. When the parole board approves release, that decision triggers an administrative process that takes time to work through. A parole plan has to be finalized and verified, supervision conditions have to be established, and paperwork has to move between the board, the facility, and the supervising parole office in the jurisdiction where he will be living. None of
Read moreGetting approved by the parole board is a major milestone, but it is the beginning of the final stretch rather than the finish line. The actual release typically follows two to six months after the board grants parole, and understanding why helps manage expectations during what can feel like an agonizingly slow wait. The parole date itself is anchored to what the sentencing judge established at the original hearing. The judge's order includes a parole eligibility window, and the
Read moreBeing recently released from jail does not automatically disqualify you from visiting your husband, but it does mean you cannot walk in as a standard visitor without additional steps. Most facilities have a policy restricting visitation from people with recent criminal justice involvement, and Powell County Detention Center in Kentucky is no exception to that general rule. What works in your favor here is significant. You are legally married, you have documentation to prove it, and you have a
Read moreIt is more common than most people outside the system realize. Research on incarcerated populations consistently shows that consensual sexual activity between female inmates occurs at notably higher rates than in male facilities. Estimates vary, but studies have placed the rate of sexual contact among women in prison significantly higher than among men, with some research suggesting that a substantial majority of women in longer-term facilities have some sexual experience with another woman while incarcerated. The reasons are not
Read moreYes, inmates can write back, and the way the addressing works is one of the features people appreciate most about the service. When InmateAid sends a letter to your inmate, the return address printed on the envelope is InmateAid's address in Florida. Your personal home address does not appear anywhere on the outside of the envelope. Your inmate sees your name as you registered it on the account, and whatever you choose to share within the body of the
Read moreYes they do for Haywood County Detention in Waynesville NC. Inmate telephone service is provided by Combined Public Communications. InmateAid can reduce the call price from $7.50 to $3.15. If you are paying $7.50 we can help, if you're already paying $3.15 we cannot get it any lower.
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