Send Photos & Mail at David L Moss Criminal Justice Center

How to send messages, photos, and packages

Overview

You can send letters, postcards, and greeting cards to someone at David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center, but the jail limits what's allowed and how photos are handled. Photographs are permitted under size limits, though facility documents don't fully agree on the maximum—check current rules before mailing pictures. Polaroid photos are specifically not accepted. Several common items count as mail contraband: padded envelopes, currency, postage stamps, laminated items, and food. Mail with these items may be returned or seized. Expect routine inspection of all mail. If you're sending legal or privileged correspondence, label it clearly and follow the jail's legal-mail procedures.

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Quick Facts

  • Accepted mail includes letters, postcards and greeting cards, subject to content and size restrictions.
  • Polaroid photographs will not be accepted by the facility.
  • The facility treats padded envelopes, currency, stamps, laminated items and food as contraband and will return or seize such mail.
  • Sources conflict on allowable photo size: the inmate handbook references up to 8x10 and up to ten photos while mail rules state photos cannot exceed 5x7.

Send Photos & Mail Guides

Common Questions

What mail items can I send to an inmate at David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center?

You may send letters, postcards, and greeting cards, but content and size limits apply. Photos are allowed under size limits, but the facility’s documents show conflicting guidance, so confirm the current photo rules before sending.

Are Polaroid photos allowed in mail to David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center?

No. Polaroid photographs are explicitly not accepted and will be refused.

What happens if I send contraband (currency, padded envelopes, food) to an inmate?

Those items are treated as contraband, and the jail may return the mail to the sender or seize it. If you’re sending legal or privileged correspondence, follow the facility’s legal-mail procedures so it receives the correct handling.

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