Mitigating Plea: Persuade providing the mildest possible punishment that can reasonably be expected for the offense
In the past, as the nation’s longest-serving elected officer, I heard a plea that led to Cheek List. The craft of the butler dates back 600 years, and to those unfamiliar with church activities it might sound dead boring. It was not!
How long does a detainee have to wait before being able to make a phone call?
When inmates can make phone calls depends on which facility they are in and where they are in the incarceration process. For example, if the person has just been arrested, they can make a phone call after making the reservation. As they go through a sentence, there is a process they must go through before they can make any calls. In the admission and classification process, they must take part in a medical, physical and psychological examination. This process can take anywhere from a day to a few weeks, and during this time the detainee cannot use the phone.
Under federal law, an incarcerated person is entitled to at least 4 hours of visiting time per month.
Depending on where your loved one is, they may have more visiting hours. The facility may also limit the duration of each visit and the number of people who can be in the room. Before you leave, be sure to find out about the center’s visiting hours and whether or not you need to make an appointment. If you’re unsure how to approach a personal visit to your incarcerated loved one, check out these tips on what to talk about when visiting someone in prison.
Why Police and Prison Staff Monitor Your Private Calls
Almost all prisons record and monitor inmates’ phone calls and inspect every letter, postcard, and other item that goes in or out of prison done for security reasons: to make sure no one is planning an escape, drug shipment, etc. Even the visiting rooms have equipment that records images and sound.
The practice of monitoring and recording your phone conversations with an inmate is generally accepted as legal. Prison staff always listens to inmates’ audio samples! In special cases, they monitor all communications from an inmate who they believe is attempting to conduct business outside of prison over the phone.