How DrPrison Works

A simple model designed for the realities of federal incarceration.

The Three Roles

Inmate

The federal inmate at the center of every account. Their progress, their goals, their advocacy. They keep the account; the sponsor and coach support it.

Sponsor

A trusted family member or friend on the outside. Sponsors create the account, hold the credentials the inmate uses to log in from a tablet, order services, communicate with the coach, and manage logistics. The sponsor is the operational driver — but the account belongs to the inmate.

Coach

A DrPrison staff member assigned to the inmate. The coach reviews documents, drafts filings, advocates on the inmate's behalf, and is the point of contact for everything inside-the-fence. Coaches bring lived experience and clinical training together.

Why This Model

Federal inmates often have limited tablet access, restricted email windows, and intermittent communication. A model that depends on the inmate to drive every action would fail. A model that excludes the inmate from their own account would be paternalistic. So we built a three-party system: the inmate's voice and goals at the center, a sponsor on the outside who can act on logistics in real time, and a coach inside the network who handles the federal-system mechanics. Every action is audit-logged. The inmate can review what was done on their behalf. The sponsor cannot override the inmate's identity-defining decisions. The coach cannot bill or change a service without sponsor authorization.

Why We Use the Word "Inmate"

The word matters. We use "inmate" deliberately, not casually. Three reasons:

  1. It is the official term used by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the U.S. Sentencing Commission, the Department of Justice, and federal law. Every form, every program statement, every court document uses it. Using softer alternatives would make our platform harder to find for the families who need it most — they search for what they hear from the system.
  2. It is the term most families themselves use when navigating the system in real time. We follow their language, not impose our own.
  3. We reject the secondary meaning of "inmate" as a moral judgment. A person inside federal custody is a person — a son, a parent, a partner, a colleague — who is currently incarcerated. The word describes a circumstance, not a character.

When someone you love is referred to by a term that feels reductive, the reduction stings. We see that. The choice to use "inmate" across this platform is not an endorsement of the system's tendency to flatten people into their custody status. It's a practical decision to be findable and accurate. The clinical respect for the person inside that custody status is in everything else we do — every guide written from lived experience, every coach trained to listen first, every service designed to give a family back agency.

What This Looks Like in Practice

  1. Sponsor signs up, adds the inmate (legal name, register number, facility).
  2. Staff verifies the inmate against BOP records.
  3. Sponsor creates a 6-digit PIN, shares it with the inmate via call, letter, or visit.
  4. Inmate logs in from their tablet, changes the PIN to one only they know.
  5. Inmate, sponsor, and assigned coach communicate through the platform. The coach handles filings, FSA calculations, transfer requests, and other federal-system mechanics. The sponsor manages orders and document uploads. The inmate reviews everything and can request changes.
  6. Every action is audit-logged. Nothing happens to an inmate's record without a trail.

Ready to start?

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