Send Photos & Mail at FDC Miami

How to send messages, photos, and packages

Overview

FDC Miami offers electronic messaging through the BOP's TRULINCS system—secure text messaging between inmates and approved public contacts. Messages are text‑only with no attachments, limited to 13,000 characters, and screened before delivery. To communicate, institution staff must approve you as a contact. Once approved, CorrLinks sends an automated invitation for you to accept or block messaging. TRULINCS runs entirely on the Inmate Trust Fund, not taxpayer dollars. Telephone privileges are also available, but calls are typically paid by the inmate (sometimes the receiving party) and routinely monitored. Unmonitored attorney calls may be allowed in specific circumstances.

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Quick Facts

  • Inmates at FDC Miami can send and receive electronic messages using the BOP’s TRULINCS system.
  • TRULINCS messages at FDC Miami are text‑only with no attachments and are limited to 13,000 characters.
  • TRULINCS at BOP facilities is funded entirely from the Inmate Trust Fund and uses no taxpayer dollars.
  • To add a contact, an inmate must request approval; staff approve the contact and CorrLinks sends an automated invitation to the prospective contact to accept or block communication.
  • Telephone privileges are available but calls are ordinarily paid by the inmate (or sometimes the receiving party) and calls are advisedly monitored; certain attorney calls may be unmonitored.

Common Questions

How does TRULINCS messaging work at FDC Miami?

FDC Miami uses the BOP’s TRULINCS system for secure electronic messaging between inmates and approved contacts. Messages are text‑only (no attachments) and limited to 13,000 characters, and they’re subject to screening before delivery.

How do I get approved to receive messages from someone at FDC Miami?

The inmate requests to add you as a contact, and institution staff must approve it. After approval, CorrLinks sends you an automated invitation to accept or block communication. If you block an inmate and later change your mind, the inmate can ask the local Trust Fund Office to remove the block—they'll need to provide your name, address, email, and phone to generate the unblock request.

Are phone calls from inmates at FDC Miami monitored and who pays for them?

Calls are typically paid by the inmate (sometimes the receiving party). A notice by each telephone warns that calls are monitored. Attorney calls may be unmonitored in certain defined circumstances.

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