How to Mail a JPay Money Order for Someone at Madison Parish Detention
Mailing a JPay money order is simple once you know what goes on the deposit slip and where to send it. Follow the steps below to avoid common delays.
How to deposit funds, commissary, and payment options
Madison Parish Detention uses JPay to handle deposits to an incarcerated person's account. Visitors cannot give money directly to someone inside the facility. You can add funds online through JPay, by phone, at MoneyGram walk-up locations, at facility kiosks, or by mailing a money order to the vendor. Online and phone deposits accept Visa and MasterCard. Online transactions include processing fees. For phone deposits, call 1-800-574-5729 and have the person's state, facility, and inmate ID or CCN ready. Before sending money, double-check the vendor instructions for correct mailing details, site codes, deposit limits, and expected posting times. Do not mail cash.
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Mailing a JPay money order is simple once you know what goes on the deposit slip and where to send it. Follow the steps below to avoid common delays.
Sending money to someone at Madison Parish Detention Center comes down to one thing: a correctly filled-out JPay deposit slip mailed to the right address.
Sending money to someone in a Louisiana prison is straightforward once you know the DOC-approved options. Here are the main ways to deposit funds, what payment types work, and the rules that can slow things down.
No. Visitors cannot give money directly to incarcerated people. All deposits must go through JPay or another approved method.
You can add funds online (JPay), by phone, at MoneyGram walk-up locations, at facility kiosks, or by mailing a money order to the vendor. Follow the vendor’s instructions and include the state, facility, and inmate ID or CCN.
Internet and phone deposits accept Visa and MasterCard. Online transactions have processing fees, so check the vendor site for current rates.
Before you can visit someone in a Louisiana DPS&C prison, you need to be on their approved visiting list. Here's how the approval system works and what to expect while your paperwork is being processed.
Phone rules in Louisiana prisons follow a structured system. A few details matter most: how many numbers your loved one can call, how calls are billed, and how long conversations last. Here's how the Department's phone process works so you can set things up with fewer surprises.
Phone calls are handled through Securus Technologies. You can use the Imprisoned Person Locator to confirm where someone is housed.