Louisiana calls its grievance process the Administrative Remedy Procedure -- the ARP. That name matters. Federal courts in Louisiana take the ARP exhaustion requirement seriously, and so does the regulation itself: it defines exhaustion precisely, and it states that a rejected request is not a properly exhausted request. If your ARP is rejected for any procedural reason, you have not exhausted. You must correct the deficiency and resubmit to get a decision on the merits -- because only a decision on the merits at both steps counts.
The ARP is a two-step process. Step 1 goes to the Warden. Step 2 goes to the Secretary of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections. The Secretary's decision is final. The ARP has no informal resolution requirement -- you go directly into the formal process. And Louisiana's ARP covers more ground than almost any other state process in this series, including personal injuries, medical malpractice, time computation disputes, monetary damages, ADA accommodation requests, and PREA sexual abuse complaints.
About half of Louisiana's DOC-sentenced population is housed not in state prisons but in local parish jails under contract with the Department. The same ARP process applies to you whether you are in a state prison or a parish jail. The regulation explicitly covers sheriffs and administrators of local jail facilities.
The governing regulation is La. Admin. Code tit. 22, § I-325, Administrative Remedy Procedure, current through Register Vol. 51, No. 06, June 20, 2025. All "days" in the regulation mean calendar days.
Why the Process Matters: The PLRA
The Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995, 42 U.S.C. section 1997e(a), requires you to exhaust all available administrative remedies before a federal court will hear a lawsuit about prison conditions. In Louisiana, the regulation itself defines what exhaustion means: proper exhaustion only occurs when you file a timely and procedurally proper request, the request is accepted (not rejected), and is addressed on the merits at both the first step and the second step. A rejected request is not properly exhausted.
This matters. Do not assume that receiving a response to your ARP means you have exhausted. If the response is a rejection for a procedural deficiency, you have not exhausted. Fix the deficiency, resubmit, get through both steps on the merits.
The Supreme Court in Woodford v. Ngo (2006) held that proper exhaustion requires following all procedural rules. The Louisiana ARP regulation reflects this: exhaustion requires both steps, both on the merits, after acceptance.
The exhaustion requirement applies to conditions of confinement claims. It does not apply to pure habeas corpus claims challenging the fact of confinement -- but note that Louisiana's ARP explicitly covers time computation disputes even when framed as a writ of habeas corpus.
Overview of Louisiana's ARP
The ARP covers: any complaint relating to any aspect of incarceration, including conditions of confinement, personal injuries, medical malpractice, time computations (even framed as habeas corpus), challenges to rules/regulations/policies/statutes, discrimination based on disability, ADA accommodation requests, and PREA sexual abuse complaints.
Louisiana's ARP also permits monetary damages. If the Department determines credible facts support monetary compensation, it refers the quantum (amount) determination to the case contractor for the Office of Risk Management within the Division of Administration.
What cannot be processed through the ARP:
- Court decisions and pending criminal matters over which the Department has no control or jurisdiction
- Board of Pardons and Parole decisions (discretionary under Louisiana law; cannot be challenged)
- Sex offender assessment panel recommendations
- Lockdown Review Board decisions -- BUT there are two exceptions: (1) if no reasons were given for the board's decision, or (2) if a hearing was not held within 90 days of the original lockdown placement (plus a 20-day grace period; claims are not valid until 110 days have passed without a hearing)
- Warden's decision regarding restoration of good time
What has its own separate specialized procedure (do not use the ARP):
- Disciplinary matters (separate disciplinary process)
- Lost property claims (separate lost property claim procedure; form OP-C-13-a; file within 10 days of discovery of loss)
- Religious exemption requests (must exhaust the religious exemption process first; may then file ARP if still unsatisfied)
No Informal Resolution Required
Unlike many states, Louisiana's ARP does not require a preliminary informal resolution attempt. The regulation encourages informal communication but does not make it a prerequisite. You may initiate the formal ARP process directly.
Initiating the ARP: Filing Your Request
How to file: Complete form OP-C-13-ARP-1 (Request for Administrative Remedy), available at your institution. Alternatively, you may write a letter to the Warden -- but that letter must contain the phrase "This is a request for administrative remedy" or "ARP." If it does not contain that phrase, it will not be accepted into the process.
Write briefly and specifically. Present as many facts as possible answering who, what, when, where, and how. If your letter is unclear or you attach too much material, it will be rejected and returned with a request for clarity or summarization on one additional page.
Filing deadline: Within **90 calendar days** of the incident. Extensions may be waived by the Warden when circumstances warrant. Sexual abuse complaints have no time limit.
One incident per request. You cannot combine multiple separate incidents in a single ARP (except for sexual abuse allegations, which are exempt from this rule).
The request must be written by you, the offender. Exception for sexual abuse: third parties may prepare and submit the ARP on your behalf if you have provided written authorization. You must then personally pursue all remaining subsequent steps.
Keep a copy of your request. The regulation explicitly states that the form or original letter becomes part of the administrative record and will not be returned to you. It is the offender's responsibility to retain a copy through established institutional procedures.
ARP Screening and Acceptance
After you file, the ARP Screening Officer reviews your request.
Accepted: You will be notified that your request is accepted and being processed. A manila envelope will be furnished to you with the First Step response -- you must use this envelope to continue in the procedure.
Rejected: If rejected, you will receive written notification of the specific grounds. Rejection grounds include:
- Non-appealable matters (court decisions, Parole Board, sex offender panel, lockdown review board)
- Matters with specialized procedures (disciplinary, lost property)
- Duplicate requests
- Action not yet taken or decision not yet made
- Requesting remedy for another offender (exception: third-party sexual abuse report with authorization)
- Not written by the offender without approved waiver
- Multiple separate incidents in one request (exception: sexual abuse)
- Procedural rules not followed
- More than 90 calendar days since the event (without a Warden waiver)
- No remedy requested (exception: sexual abuse)
- Unclear or too much material attached
- Religious exemption request filed before exhausting the religious exemption process
A rejected request cannot be appealed to the Second Step. You must correct the specific noted deficiency and resubmit. Only after acceptance and a merits response at both steps have you properly exhausted.
Step 1: Warden's Decision
After acceptance, the Warden assigns a staff member to conduct further fact-finding and render a First Step response.
Response deadline: The Warden must respond within **40 calendar days** of the date the request is received at the First Step. For PREA emergency grievances: within **5 calendar days**.
Extension: The Warden may request up to a 5-day extension from the Chief of Operations/Office of Adult Services. Total cumulative extensions may not exceed **25 calendar days** (or 70 additional days for sexual abuse grievances). You must be notified in writing of any extension and the date by which the decision will be rendered.
The First Step response is on Form OP-C-13-ARP-2.
If you are not satisfied with the First Step response: Indicate your dissatisfaction in the appropriate space on Form OP-C-13-ARP-2 and forward it to the ARP Screening Officer within **5 calendar days** of receiving the First Step response. If you wait longer than 5 days, you may lose your right to proceed to Step 2.
If no response is received at Step 1 within the allowed time (including extensions): You may proceed to Step 2 without waiting further.
Step 2: Secretary's Decision -- Final
The Second Step is a review by the Secretary of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections or the Secretary's designee. The Second Step review goes through the Chief of Operations/Office of Adult Services.
Response deadline: The Secretary or designee must respond within **45 calendar days** of the date the request is received at the Second Step. Form OP-C-13-ARP-3.
A copy of the Secretary's decision is sent to the Warden.
If you are not satisfied with the Second Step response (Form OP-C-13-ARP-3): You may file suit in district court. You must furnish your ARP number on all court documents.
If no response is received at Step 2 within 45 calendar days: You may file suit.
The Secretary's decision is final. After receiving it (or after the 45-day deadline passes without a response), you have properly exhausted Louisiana's administrative remedies -- provided your request was accepted and addressed on the merits at both steps.
Deadlines at a Glance
All deadlines in calendar days.
Initial filing: within 90 calendar days of the incident (no time limit for sexual abuse; extensions available at Warden's discretion)
Step 1 response (Warden): within 40 calendar days of receipt (5 calendar days for PREA emergency)
Extension available: Warden may request up to 5-day extension; cumulative cap of 25 calendar days (70 for sexual abuse)
Step 2 appeal window: within 5 calendar days of receiving the Step 1 response
Step 2 response (Secretary): within 45 calendar days of receipt
Total maximum process: 90 calendar days from initiation to completion (absent extensions)
No response at Step 1: proceed to Step 2
No response at Step 2: proceed to court
What to Put in Your ARP
Answer who, what, when, where, and how. Be specific. One incident. State the remedy you are seeking -- unless the complaint is about sexual abuse, where stopping the abuse is the implied remedy even without explicit request.
Keep a copy. The original becomes the administrative record. Make a copy before you submit, and send a copy to your family on the outside.
Sensitive complaints: If you believe filing at the institution would put you at risk, you may file directly with the Secretary through the Chief of Operations/Office of Adult Services at the Second Step level. Explain in writing why you cannot file at the institution. If the Chief of Operations does not agree the complaint is sensitive: it is returned to the Warden, and you then have 5 days to resubmit through the regular First Step process.
Families: Families cannot file an ARP on your behalf for general complaints. The ARP must be initiated by you. Exception: sexual abuse third-party filing with written authorization. Your family can help by keeping copies you send them, tracking the 5-calendar-day Step 2 window, and contacting advocacy organizations after exhaustion. The 5-calendar-day window to proceed from Step 1 to Step 2 is the most easily missed deadline in Louisiana's process.
When the System Fails
Request rejected: Read the rejection notice carefully. Fix only the specific deficiency noted and resubmit. Do not resubmit with new issues or different incidents. Fix the identified problem and resubmit within the remaining 90-day window if applicable.
No Step 1 response in 40 calendar days: Proceed to Step 2. The regulation is explicit: expiration of response time limits entitles the offender to move to the next step.
No Step 2 response in 45 calendar days: You may file suit.
Reprisal: Prohibited. Offenders are entitled to pursue a complaint that a reprisal occurred through the grievance procedure itself. However, filing frivolous or deliberately malicious ARPs is not protected -- those who abuse the process may be disciplined.
Multiple pending requests: If you have an ARP currently in the system and you submit another, the new one will be logged and set aside. It will not be processed until your first ARP is either exhausted at the Second Step or until time limits to proceed from Step 1 to Step 2 have lapsed.
Parish Jails and the ARP
Louisiana houses approximately half of its DOC-sentenced population in local parish jails under contract with the Department of Public Safety and Corrections. This is one of the largest such local housing arrangements in the country. If you are in a parish jail under DPSC custody, the ARP process described in this article applies to you. The regulation explicitly covers sheriffs and administrators of local jail facilities.
The ARP Screening Officer role is filled by a designated staff member at your facility -- in a parish jail, this is typically a designated jail staff member. The same forms, the same timelines, and the same exhaustion rules apply.
If you are a DPSC-sentenced offender housed in a parish jail, you must use the ARP and complete both steps before filing in federal or state court, exactly as if you were in a state prison.
Pretrial detainees in parish jails who have not been sentenced to DPSC custody: The ARP under La. Admin. Code § I-325 does not apply to you as a pretrial detainee. Your parish jail should have its own grievance procedure under the Basic Jail Guidelines (Department Regulation C-05-004). Ask for the jail's written grievance procedure.
Federal Prisons in Louisiana
Louisiana has a significant BOP presence in central Louisiana, organized into two federal correctional complexes:
**FCC Oakdale** (Allen Parish, central Louisiana): FCI Oakdale (low-security, approximately 1,700 male inmates); FDC Oakdale (administrative facility housing pretrial and holdover males, approximately 700 + adjacent minimum-security camp of approximately 165 males). Located approximately 35 miles south of Alexandria and 58 miles north of Lake Charles.
**FCC Pollock** (Grant Parish, central Louisiana): USP Pollock (high-security, approximately 1,067 males + 151-inmate minimum-security camp; historically one of the most dangerous facilities in the federal system); FCI Pollock (medium-security, approximately 1,600 males). Located approximately 15 miles north of Alexandria.
Both complexes fall under the **South Central Regional Office** at 4211 Cedar Springs Road, Suite 300, Dallas, TX 75219.
If you are at any BOP facility in Louisiana, the Louisiana ARP process described in this article does not apply to you. Federal inmates use the BOP Administrative Remedy Program running BP-8 through BP-11 under 28 CFR Part 542. See the InmateAid federal grievance article for the complete BOP process.
After Exhaustion: Where to Go Next
Once the Secretary has issued a Second Step response (or 45 calendar days have passed without one), and both steps were addressed on the merits, your administrative remedies are exhausted. Federal court and Louisiana district court are both available.
Disability Rights Louisiana: disabilityrightsla.org; (800) 960-7705. Louisiana's federally mandated Protection and Advocacy organization for people with disabilities, including mental illness. Has federal authority to investigate abuse and neglect and to access Louisiana DOC facilities and parish jails. Relevant for disability-related ARP complaints, ADA accommodation failures, and mental health care complaints.
ACLU of Louisiana: laaclu.org. Works on civil rights and prisoners' rights in Louisiana. The ACLU challenged conditions at FCI Oakdale during the COVID pandemic and has been active in challenging conditions in Louisiana's state and parish facilities.
Promise of Justice Initiative: promiseofjustice.org. New Orleans-based nonprofit focused on prisoners' rights, prison conditions, and criminal justice reform in Louisiana. One of the leading prisoner rights organizations in the state.
Southern Poverty Law Center: splcenter.org. Has monitored and litigated Louisiana prison conditions. Relevant for systemic conditions of confinement issues.
Special Circumstances
Emergency complaints: File with the shift supervisor. The shift supervisor immediately reviews and determines corrective action. All emergency requests are documented on an unusual occurrence report. Abusing the emergency process is treated as a frivolous request; the offender may be disciplined. Administrative transfers and time computation disputes are not to be treated as emergencies.
PREA emergency (imminent risk of sexual abuse): The grievance goes immediately to the unit's PREA Compliance Manager, who immediately notifies the unit's PREA Investigator. Initial response: within **48 hours**. First Step response: within **5 calendar days**. The initial response and final determination document whether the offender is at substantial risk of imminent sexual abuse and the action taken.
Sexual abuse (non-emergency): No filing time limit. Third parties may file with written authorization (offender must then personally pursue remaining steps). One-incident rule does not apply. Extensions available up to 70 additional days. Stopping the abuse is the implied remedy even without explicit request.
ADA accommodations: Explicitly covered under the ARP. Filing an ADA accommodation request through the ARP and its resolution constitutes exhaustion of the administrative procedure. All ARP deadlines and time limits apply.
Monetary damages: Available through the ARP where the Department determines an offender is entitled to compensation. Quantum (amount) is determined by the case contractor for the Office of Risk Management, then submitted to the Office of Risk Management and the Department for final decision.
Lost property: Use the separate lost property claim procedure (Form OP-C-13-a), not the ARP. File within 10 calendar days of discovery of the loss. If unsatisfied after exhausting all levels of that process, you may then file an ARP.
Frequently asked questions
What is the ARP and how is it different from a grievance?
ARP stands for Administrative Remedy Procedure. Louisiana calls its prison complaint process the ARP rather than a "grievance," but for PLRA purposes it is the same thing -- the formal internal complaint mechanism you must exhaust before filing in federal or state court. The ARP covers a broader range of claims than most state grievance processes, explicitly including personal injuries, medical malpractice, time computations, monetary damages, ADA requests, and PREA complaints.
How long do I have to file my ARP?
Ninety calendar days from the date of the incident. The Warden may waive this deadline when circumstances warrant. There is no time limit for sexual abuse complaints.
What does "exhaustion" mean in Louisiana?
Exhaustion occurs only when: (1) you file a timely and procedurally proper request, (2) the request is accepted (not rejected), and (3) the request is addressed on the merits at both the First Step and the Second Step. A rejected request is NOT properly exhausted. This is explicitly stated in the ARP regulation and has been confirmed by Louisiana federal courts.
How long do I have to appeal to Step 2?
Five calendar days from the date you receive the First Step response. This is the tightest deadline in the Louisiana process. As soon as you receive the Warden's First Step response, you have 5 calendar days to indicate dissatisfaction and forward the form to the ARP Screening Officer.
What if I am in a parish jail?
If you are a DPSC-sentenced offender housed in a parish jail under a contract with the Department, the same ARP process applies to you. File with the designated ARP Screening Officer at your facility. Complete both steps. The same forms, the same timelines, and the same exhaustion rules apply. Louisiana houses approximately half its sentenced population in parish jails, so this is not an unusual situation.
Can a family member file an ARP for me?
Generally no -- the ARP must be written by you. Exception: sexual abuse complaints may be filed by a third party (including family members) with your written authorization. You must then personally pursue all remaining steps. --- INTERNAL LINKS TO PLACE: 1. Louisiana inmate search (InmateAid Louisiana page) 2. Family rights and advocacy in Louisiana (FRA series Louisiana article) 3. How the Louisiana prison disciplinary process works (if spoke exists) 4. How Prison Works hub 5. Staying Connected hub --- SPEC NOTE / SOURCING (strip before publish): - Voice: formerly incarcerated narrator written TO the incarcerated person; family guidance woven in. No em dashes. No smart quotes. No double hyphens. Plain text. - Meta title char count: 57 (under 60). Meta description char count: 158 (in 150-160 range). All 7 FAQ headings under 60 chars, verified. - Defining hooks for Louisiana: (1) "ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDY PROCEDURE" not "grievance" -- ARP as branding; (2) EXPLICIT EXHAUSTION DEFINITION in the regulation itself: accepted + merits at BOTH steps; REJECTED != EXHAUSTED; (3) NO INFORMAL RESOLUTION REQUIRED -- go directly to formal process; (4) PARISH JAIL coverage: about half of Louisiana's sentenced population in parish jails; same ARP applies; (5) MONETARY DAMAGES explicitly available through ARP (quantum determined by Office of Risk Management); (6) 5-CALENDAR-DAY window to proceed from Step 1 to Step 2 -- tightest window in the process; (7) SENSITIVE complaints: may file directly with Secretary bypassing institution; (8) ARP covers medical malpractice, time computations (even framed as habeas corpus), ADA, PREA; (9) FCC Oakdale + FCC Pollock -- two major BOP complexes; South Central Regional Office Dallas TX; (10) All days = calendar days (defined explicitly); (11) ARP number required on court documents; (12) Regulation current through June 20, 2025 -- most current source in the series. - SOURCES: La. Admin. Code tit. 22, § I-325, Administrative Remedy Procedure (Justia, current through Register Vol. 51, No. 06, June 20, 2025 -- full text fetched): Purpose (A); Applicability (B: Deputy Secretary, Chief of Operations, Regional Wardens, Wardens, Sheriffs or administrators of local jail facilities; each unit head responsible; provisions applicable retroactively); Policy (C: all offenders and employees; offenders in local jails afforded reasonable access to grievance remedy); ARP Purpose (D.1-3: installed September 18, 1985; bears name ARP; required to use and complete all steps including obeying all rules before proceeding with suit in federal/state courts; covers conditions of confinement, personal injuries, medical malpractice, time computations even as habeas corpus, challenges to rules/regulations/policies/statutes, discrimination based on disability, ADA accommodation, PREA; monetary damages available); Definitions (E: ARP Screening Officer = staff designated by warden to coordinate; Days = calendar days; Emergency Grievance = substantial risk of personal injury or serious irreparable harm; Exhaustion = timely procedurally proper request, accepted, addressed on merits at BOTH steps; rejected request NOT properly exhausted; Grievance/ARP = written complaint on offender's own behalf regarding anything relating to prison conditions including policy, condition, action, incident, or disability discrimination); General Policy (F: broad range; all offenders entitled; warden provides assistance for literacy deficiencies/language/hearing/visual impairments; disciplinary and lost property have their own specialized procedures; notification at orientation; written procedures posted; may communicate with warden; non-appealable: court decisions, Board of Pardons and Parole, sex offender assessment panel, lockdown review board -- exceptions: no reasons given, or no hearing within 90+20=110 days; warden's good time restoration decision; ADA accommodation through ARP = exhaustion; staff against whom complaint filed excluded from decision-making but may participate at Step 1 for information gathering; written answers with directions at each stage; prior to federal/state court must properly exhaust -- only after request accepted can exhaustion occur, exhaustion only when second step response on merits issued; multiple requests during review = logged and set aside; identical requests from multiple offenders = respond to initial, copies to others = completed action; transfer = sending institution completes first step; discharge = moot unless affects offender post-discharge, completes and notifies at last known address; reprisals prohibited, offenders may grieve reprisal; frivolous/malicious ARPs may result in discipline; records confidential, other documents = attorney work product; electronic log; kept 4 years after final disposition; annual review); Initiating (G: informal encouraged but not required; 90 calendar days; no time limit for sexual abuse; form OP-C-13-ARP-1 or letter containing "This is a request for administrative remedy" or "ARP"; brief with who/what/when/where/how; rejected if unclear/too much material, returned with request for clarity on one additional page; response deadline restarts on resubmission; no denial based on form vs. letter; withdrawal = not properly exhausted); Emergency/Sensitive (H: emergency = file with shift supervisor, documented on unusual occurrence report; abuse of emergency process = disciplined; transfers/time computation not emergencies; sensitive = file directly with Secretary through Chief of Operations at second step level, explain why, if Chief disagrees = 5 days to resubmit through regular channels; PREA emergency imminent sexual abuse = immediately to PREA compliance manager, notify PREA investigator, 48-hour initial response, first step within 5 days, documented); Screening (I: ARP Screening Officer screens all requests; accepted = notified and processed; manila envelope furnished with first step response for continuation; rejected = one of listed reasons with written notification; rejected not appealable to second step; must correct deficiency and resubmit; not properly exhausted if rejected); Processing (J: Step 1: 40 days/5 days PREA; warden responds on Form OP-C-13-ARP-2; extension = Warden requests up to 5 days from Chief of Operations; written notice to offender; cumulative max 25 days / 70 days sexual abuse; if offender refuses cooperation = denied; if dissatisfied = 5 days from receipt to indicate and forward to ARP Screening Officer; no response = proceed to Step 2; Step 2: 45 days; Secretary or designee via Chief of Operations/OAS; Form OP-C-13-ARP-3; copy to Warden; if dissatisfied = file suit; must furnish ARP number; no response = file suit; max 90 days from initiation to completion unless extension; offender may request 5-day extension in writing to ARP Screening Officer/Warden/Secretary; must certify valid reasons); Monetary (K: credible facts = monetary damages; quantum determination by Office of Risk Management case contractor; final decision by ORM and DPSC; settlement = copy of release to Warden); Lost Property (L: Form OP-C-13-a; file within 10 days of discovery; investigation; monetary or non-monetary remedy; forms OP-C-13-b and OP-C-13-c); Wikipedia FCC Oakdale (Allen Parish LA; FCI Oakdale low-security ~1,700 males; FDC Oakdale administrative/pretrial ~700 + 165 camp; central LA 35 miles south of Alexandria); Wikipedia USP Pollock, FCI Pollock (FCC Pollock Grant Parish LA; USP Pollock high-security ~1,067+151 camp; FCI Pollock medium-security ~1,600; central LA 15 miles north of Alexandria); Senate.gov Cassidy letter 2018 (confirmed four BOP facilities in Louisiana at FCC Pollock + FCC Oakdale); bop.gov (South Central Regional Office: 4211 Cedar Springs Rd Suite 300 Dallas TX 75219); Wikipedia Louisiana DPSC (OAS supports ARP process; ~19,013 in state prisons, ~19,634 in local jails as of 2009 -- similar proportion today; 10 adult prisons as of 2025); disabilityrightsla.org (Disability Rights Louisiana = LA P&A; (800) 960-7705); laaclu.org (ACLU of Louisiana); promiseofjustice.org (Promise of Justice Initiative); splcenter.org (SPLC); Woodford v. Ngo 548 U.S. 81 (2006). - VERIFY FLAGS for Poorwa: (1) La. Admin. Code § I-325 is current through June 20, 2025 (Register Vol. 51, No. 06) -- this is today's date and is the most current regulation in the series. No further version verification needed for now. However, Poorwa should check regulations.justia.com or the Louisiana Secretary of State's Office of the State Register for any updates that post-date today. (2) Confirm form numbers: OP-C-13-ARP-1 (initial request), OP-C-13-ARP-2 (First Step response), OP-C-13-ARP-3 (Second Step response). (3) Confirm lost property forms: OP-C-13-a (claim), OP-C-13-b (response), OP-C-13-c (agreement). (4) CRITICAL: Confirm the parish jail situation -- approximately half of Louisiana's sentenced population is in parish jails. Verify the current proportion and confirm that ARP applies equally at parish jail facilities under DPSC contract. (5) Confirm FCC Oakdale: FCI Oakdale (low-security ~1,700), FDC Oakdale (administrative ~700+165 camp); Allen Parish; confirmed operational March 2026 (USAJOBS recruitment events). (6) Confirm FCC Pollock: USP Pollock (high-security ~1,067+151 camp), FCI Pollock (medium-security ~1,600); Grant Parish; both confirmed operational. (7) Confirm South Central Regional Office: 4211 Cedar Springs Rd Suite 300 Dallas TX 75219. (8) Confirm Disability Rights Louisiana: disabilityrightsla.org; (800) 960-7705. (9) Confirm ACLU of Louisiana: laaclu.org. (10) Confirm Promise of Justice Initiative: promiseofjustice.org. (11) Confirm monetary damages available through ARP and Office of Risk Management quantum determination process -- confirmed in regulation Section K. (12) 5-calendar-day Step 2 appeal window -- this is the most easily missed deadline; confirm it is still current (confirmed in regulation Section J.b.i). (13) Confirm "sensitive complaint" direct-to-Secretary option -- confirmed in Section H.b. (14) Confirm lockdown review board exception (no reasons given; or 90+20=110 days without hearing) -- confirmed in Section F.G.iv(d). No volatile phone rates. No crisis-line specifics.
Discovery Offer - Silos 1-2
Search arrest records and find out where they are
If you're trying to locate someone who was arrested or find out where they are being held, TruthFinder searches arrest records, court records, and custody status across all 50 states.