Elwood Jail
Police Department Jail | Madison County County — Indiana | Elwood Indiana Police Department
Elwood Jail is located in the city of Elwood, Indiana which has a population of 8,455 (as of 2016) residents. Prisoners are housed in separate areas depending on the crimes they committed, their current risk assessment, and their behavior. This facility is currently under the supervision of Chief of Police Jason Brizendine and houses male and female offenders.
If you have a family or loved one that is currently incarcerated at Elwood Jail, the first thing you should do is contact the prison for information on the inmate. Based on the information you are provided, you would then contact either a criminal defense lawyer or a bail bond service. They will provide you with vital information which can be used to defend an individual and in a lot of cases get them released from detention while awaiting trial.
Elwood Jail Facility and Inmate Contact Information:
Phone Number to Reach this Facility is:
765-552-3376
Send Mail to the Facility (not inmates):
Elwood Jail
1505 S B St,
Elwood, IN 46036, USA
To Send Mail to an Inmate at Elwood Jail:
(please get a list of acceptable mail from the facility)
Elwood Jail
Inmate Name, Inmate ID #
1505 S B St,
Elwood, IN 46036, USA
Elwood Indiana Police Department - Facebook
Recent News for Elwood Indiana Police Department:
Apr 8, 2017 - An Elwood, Kansas, couple says that they have been accepting dangers from a gathering of people over their natives band radio for a considerable length of time due to their race. Tracy Standifer, a previous truck driver who has been a CB specialist for a considerable length of time, said that a gathering of men have been annoying him over the wireless transmissions for around five years as a result of the way that he is a dark man. He said the issue began when he got to know a man with a mental incapacity over CB and a gathering of individuals started to ridicule him. "From that point forward, they, pretty much, felt like they would come after me as a result of my feedback of them and the way I cared for him and attempted to encourage him," Standifer said. "At that point, I turned into a group of disparaging, racists names." Standifer said the bigot slurs developed into dangers. "I've gotten demise dangers. I've been informed that they would execute me, they would torch my home, suffocate me in the waterway. They've let me know everything," Standifer said. He said a portion of the people have even debilitated to assault his better half. In March, Standifer recorded a police report with the Elwood Police Department. As indicated by an episode account report, Elwood Police Chief Larry Hunsaker guided officers to lead additional watches in the range of Standifer's home. Standifer likewise started recording the discussions he had with the gathering. Various contentions and racial slurs can be heard in the recordings. In a recording in which the gathering did not realize that Standifer was tuning in, they depict a vehicle on his property and discuss him. "He has a considerable measure of inconvenience coming ...," one man said. "He's excessively imbecilic, making it impossible to try and acknowledge it." "He has a ton of adversaries, and he don't have the foggiest idea about who will hit him and who ain't," a moment man said. Standifer said that at one time, he and the gathering had an understanding that they would remain on various channels, him on 15 and them on 40. Recordings of channel 40 demonstrate that the gathering appreciates going "down to 15" for "amusement." In one recording, the gathering promptly begins utilizing a racial slur over and over before Standifer has an opportunity to reply. The gathering additionally talks about observing Standifer's better half leaving at specific circumstances. Standifer said he isn't excessively worried in regards to the gathering assaulting him or his property due to what number of neighbors he has, however his significant other stresses over it. "I can't state what a man would do after they've had a couple of lagers," Standifer stated, tending to his better half's worries. "There's an incredible plausibility that some of them may attempt to come here. I trust that never happens. I trust that they keep it on the radio." Standifer contends with the gathering in a large number of the recordings, yet he has begun taking a more serene alternative of late. He has taken to utilizing an elastic band to keep his amplifier on, then setting the mouthpiece before a speaker playing gospel music until the gathering leaves channel 15. Standifer knows he could simply stop the CB to abstain from managing the gathering, however he won't be scared out of his pastime. "I'm stuck in the '60s," Standifer said. "This is something that I've delighted in for a considerable length of time, and no gathering will prevent me from the couple of joys that I have cleared out." The Federal Communications Commission, which controls CB radio activity and the wireless transmissions, has a run against utilizing express dialect over the air.
Many correctional facilities let families send books and magazines to an inmate — but almost all of them require the items to be brand-new and shipped directly from the retailer. Anything sent secondhand or repackaged at home is usually rejected at the mailroom. Ordering from a retailer that ships direct is the standard way to get reading material in.
- Must ship new, directly from the retailer — you can't forward it yourself.
- Softcover / paperback only at most facilities (hardcovers are commonly banned).
- No used or third-party marketplace sellers — new copies only.
- Limits on quantity per package and how many packages may be pending.
- Address it to the inmate's full committed name and ID number.
- Use the facility's mailroom address, which can differ from the public address.
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