John Elmer #231022

 

Friendship Anyone?

  

 

Birth Date:
July 7, 1976
Incarcerated Since:
August 2019
Release Date:
Unknown, but soon
Convicted Of:
Assault
Home Town:
Rocklin, CA
Ethnicity:
Caucasian
Religion:
Christian
Height:
6’4″
Weight:
230 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Anyone
Sexual Orientation:
Straight
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
Yes
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Friendship

 

I am very new at this, so here it goes. I am originally from the Los Angeles area near the ocean which I love and miss. I hold two college degrees and am working on two more degrees while being in jail. I did 23 years in the fire service and retired fairly young as a Fire Captain. I love working out, reading and writing letters to whomever. I love all sorts of people and have no judgements at all. I am a social butterfly and an excellent listener on any topic really. I am single and I am an “open-book”, so ask away. I hope to be out of jail/prison soon so I can close this chapter in my life and start a new one. To know more about me on any topic, please write me and we will go from there. I look forward to hearing from you!

John Elmer #231022
Placer County Jail
11801 Go For Broke Road
Roseville, CA 95678

Source: John Elmer #231022

Ricardo Villalobos #255776

 

Ricardo Villalobos #255776

 

Birth Date:
April 29, 1971
Incarcerated Since:
April 2013
Release Date:
Parole in 2024
Convicted Of:
2nd degree assault / robbery
Ethnicity:
Mexican-American / Hispanic
Religion:
Spiritual, shamanism
Height:
5’8″
Weight:
170 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Women only
Sexual Orientation:
Straight
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
No
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Friendship, display my art

 

Hello everyone! Soon I will be a free man with an opportunity to start a new life. I am looking to meet people from around the world, and from all walks of life. I am interested in people with a positive attitude, and positive ideas that promote kindness and peace for all.

I want to discover new ways of life, and experience life through other cultures. I have spent my time behind these walls working on making positive changes to my life and learning to make better choices. I want to make friends with persons who like to inspire others to do good as I want to inspire others like me to better themselves.

I was born and raised in the U.S.A. I speak English and Spanish. Music and art are my true passion. I pass the time drawing and learning how to play guitar. I like writing songs as well as poetry. I look for inspiration in nature, life, personal experiences, and other people.

Anyone who is interested and would like to know more about me please contact me. I would love to lear from you. Thanks, having a great day everyday!

NOTE: Minnesota Facilities will soon transition from J-Pay to GTL as our e-mail provider).

Ricardo Villalobos #255776
MCF Stillwater
5329 Osgood Ave. N.
Stillwater, MN 55082

Source: Ricardo Villalobos #255776

Prison is far more than an epidemic in America.

 

Prison is far more than an epidemic in America.

It’s a virtual death sentence for a lot of people, literally as well as figuratively. Many people die in prison, from many causes: from something as simple as having a life sentence, to being killed by an inmate or a CO, or by suicide, or by any number of illnesses.

But more than the literal sense, the figurative sense is that thing that causes the most damage, not just to the individual convicts themselves, but, in the long run, to society as a whole.

Prison kills lifestyles. Prison kills relationships. Prison kills hopes, dreams and aspirations. Maybe it’s meant to, as a form of justice, or maybe it’s a warped form of justice that isn’t just at all. In any case, it exists as it does now not because of any politician, but because of the people. The people are the ones that see criminals as dangerous, and it’s the people who choose the politicians who make these draconian laws that put a 13-year-old boy in prison until he’s a grown man, then release him without any transitioning, and expect him to operate as a full-grown adult without any problems. It’s the people who allowed this to happen because they fear something they don’t know. Boogeymen. Because of this fear, a 14 year-old boy is forcibly restrained, maced, hog-tied and placed on solitary confinement for months at a time.

How would I know this? I was that 13-year-old boy who went to prison and got out on his 19th birthday with no halfway house, no home confinement. I was that 14-year-old who was maced, hog-tied and put in the “hole” for 4 months with no celly, and allowed recreation one hour a day in a cement “rec area” no larger than my cell, with only a pull up bar for rec material.

This form of “justice” that is supposed to preserve and protect society has made more criminals than ever before in the world’s history, of all its nations in all its years. But it’s we the people who suffer most, because the vast majority of these “criminals” re-enter society with no sense of having paid for any crime with a just punishment, and are often embittered, vowing to get back at some vague, faceless authority who represents this clueless creature we call the American Justice System. It’s we the people who put that in place, and we the people who made these people who they are, and we the people who will ultimately pay the price.

Prison kills hopes, dreams and aspirations. It kills any naive thought of a return to a simple lifestyle. It kills relationships. Never again will I have a conversation with my mother, who died 6 months after I was incarcerated. Never will I know the joy of being a father to you young girl, getting to watch her grow up into a young woman, being there for her as she learns to navigate life’s troubles. That opportunity is forever lost to me when this system both unintentionally and without remorse severed the tie that bound a father to his little girl. She turns 12 in a week or so. I haven’t seen her since she was a year old, and has no idea I even exist, because this system allows that to happen.

Prison kills Hope, with a capital H. When once we were young people who hoped for families, a respectable name for ourselves, we are now forced to become leeches sucking the lifeblood of the ones we love so we can in turn call them, write them. We become unintentional burdens to our family because the wonderful 13th Amendment means we are not allowed to support ourselves while we are incarcerated. Our family oftentimes begins to resent us, because in a place where the first BOP budget cuts are from the Inmate Pay program, we are paid $8.00 a month or less at times. A pair of shoes costs no less than $35.00 at most prisons, and postage stamp prices are rising, and phone calls are $3.15 for a 15-minute phone call. Take into account shampoo, soap, writing utensils, paper, envelopes, and, if you’re lucky, some ramen noodles, and $8.00 is woefully inadequate. But because of society’s (read: the People’s) beliefs about convicts are less than merciful, and the 13th Amendment, this is still seen as too good for most of us.

Where is the hope when there is no dignity, no honor? How are we supposed to become men of means when we are never shown how to achieve–let alone handle–the means itself? How are we supposed to become productive, law-abiding members of society when dogs are treated better than us? (And I mean it, we have a dog training program here, and they get more opportunities than us to lead better lives.)

The worst thing prison does is severs the ties to the community without any help in trying to repair them. Friends disappear, family fades away into memory if you’re down long enough. All my siblings are younger than me and make no efforts to contact me. Any contact has to be initiated by me.

One way it severs is it causes you to become something less than real, an abstract thing that can become dangerous if it gets too close. I lost a very good friend because she believed it was wrong to be talking to me when she had real people who needed her. And that’s who we become to those who once loved us: abstractions, and they can only love us in an abstract way. Because life goes on, but we are not allowed to go on with it. That friend? We used to be romantically involved, and when we first got back in touch with one another after eleven years, it was like no time at all had passed: our connection was still there, and we were talking on the phone like we used to, laughing at the same jokes, calling each other the same names. There was definitely the potential for more romance, and indeed, it seemed to be heading just that way, and it was intoxicating.

She wound up ghosting me for a couple weeks, figuring things out and “coping,” as she said. I couldn’t blame her. And then one day, blocked, from email, from phone, all my letters sent back. No explanation, until last week, when I got a letter, with this as the opening line, “I’m stopping all communication. I don’t want you or me saying sweet nothings to each other. It’s stupid and pointless.” Her reasoning, she went on, was because she has a boyfriend, who despite his very real, (VERY…troublesome) flaws, “loves me, and he tries.” Nowhere was her feeling for him mentioned, and indeed, on the phone she seemed less than content with him. But regardless, she owed him something more than what she was doing with me. So sorry for even starting this, “I must be f***ing crazy,” she said. I doubt she knew at that time the feeling that that phrase would cause in me, that feeling of inadequacy, that thought of, If she’s crazy for talking to me, what does that make me? We had once loved each other, after all.

All this goes on to prove my point that prison kills. I don’t know if things would have worked out differently had I not been locked up, and I’m not going to speculate whether they would have or not. But what I will say is this: I would have had a different way to fight back, because that’s what prison does: it takes away every resource you ever thought you had, makes you less than nothing, and you don’t get to fight back. It’s become a part of the fabric of prison life, or die. You become a convict by necessity. If you don’t you will not make it out. Either someone will get you, or you will get yourself. That’s the most dangerous aspect of prison to the incarcerated person themselves.

Mass incarceration is an epidemic to some. For those of us on the inside, those of us who have no resources, no loved ones who care because they’ve died or moved on, what can we hope for? I’ve been locked up since I was 13 years old. I got out when I was 19, only to be picked up when I was 21 for a crime I had several different alibis for. I’m 32 now. I’ve been locked up for almost 2/3 of my life–well over half of my life has been spent in the Federal Prison System. Society never gave me a chance to prove myself. I hold no resentment over it, but I hold little love for society for that same reason. Someone voted for the people who passed these laws. I have 15 years left. My daughter will be 26 or 27 when I get out. Maybe she’ll know who I am by that time, but I have no one to tell her.

Until then, I am an abstraction, a prison number. I only exist on the payrolls of the federal prison worker who “looks after my safety,” and in the vague memories of my siblings, all of whom are younger than me. Few even remember me in any true sense, some have never met me. Until next time.
– Federal prisoner

LaDarius Oglesby #69598-018

 

Darius

  

 

Birth Date:
October 11, 1994
Incarcerated Since:
2017
Release Date:
2032 or 2033
Convicted Of:
Drug crime
Home Town:
Lakeland, FL
Ethnicity:
Black
Religion:
Christian
Height:
5’11”
Weight:
187 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Women only
Sexual Orientation:
Straight
Seeks:
Friendship

 

Hi, and greetings to the outside world. Hopefully this reaches you all in good spirits. As for myself, I’m doing well. But I will be much better after receiving my first response, or responses, hopefully. My purpose for reaching out to the outside world is in the hopes to prepare myself for my reentry back into society for new people, for new places, and hopefully for new opportunities.

So if you are interested and want to reach out to me, here’s a couple of ways. My address is U.S.P. McCreary PO Box 5000 Pine Knot, KY 42635, or you may send your email to me and I’ll message you. Or you can send your phone number and I’ll call if you don’t mind talking. “Because I don’t” LOL. And to all my picture takers, I like looking at photos. “Smiles.”

LaDarius Oglesby #69598-018
Unit 3A
USP McCreary
PO Box 3000
Pine Knot, KY 42635

Source: LaDarius Oglesby #69598-018

Eric Haywood #06756-579

 

9MAGNETIC

  

 

Birth Date:
May 17, 1979
Incarcerated Since:
January 2020
Release Date:
Pending
Convicted Of:
Bank robbery
Ethnicity:
Human
Religion:
Peace / life
Height:
5’6″
Weight:
175 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Anyone
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
Yes
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Friendship, legal help

 

We only know ourselves. When we see ourselves in the eyes of others I find that hard to believe. But, I do believe that we can learn things about ourselves through the eyes of others. Looking at my photos, what do you see? Would you indulge me in conversation or let a chance encounter pass us by? My name is Eric, and my world calls me by a few other nicknames all ending with “Ton.” If allowed into your world, you’ll find that I’m easy to talk to and honest in my responses. Loyal to a fault as well. I’m looking to connect with someone that loves life and equality for all. I’m a people person and I appreciate the ones that are true to themselves. So will you indulge me or let this chance encounter pass us by? Talk to me. I talk back…Peace.

Ton

Eric Haywood #06756-579
Federal Detention Center
PO Box 526255
Houston, TX 77052

Source: Eric Haywood #06756-579

Charles Colbert #01417277

 

Charles Colbert #01417277

 

Birth Date:
January 5, 1984
Incarcerated Since:
2005
Release Date:
2030 / or sooner!
Convicted Of:
Robbery
Home Town:
Houston, TX
Ethnicity:
Black
Religion:
Spiritual
Height:
6′
Weight:
172 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Anyone
Sexual Orientation:
Straight
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
Yes
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Friendship

 

Why should I write this guy? If you’re asking yourself that ~ allow me to assist you…

I grew up in Texas (no cowboy), but I do love and ride horses! I know when people hear you’re from Texas, they think cattle and land which we do have. But it’s way different! My father was in the military and I’ve traveled a few places like California, Mexico, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Arizona, and Germany. I love Germany and can speak a lil German. I like to see new things and meet all nationalities of people. Learning new cultures and different ways of life is beautiful to me! I am adventurous and love climbing to the next highest mountain. I go to the beach as much as possible 😊 While in prison I’ve grown to see how precious the world is; including us in it.

While incarcerated I have taken classes. But my 2 favs are: business and culinary arts. I plan to run my own company and I love to cook (a plus right?) 😊 and see the smile on people’s faces when I prepare a dish. I play handball, basketball, watch movies, work out, and write books and scripts.

Q: How do you view ppl incarcerated? How do you look at the world and current events? Where do you see yourself 5 years from now? Remember a stranger is just a friend you haven’t met yet 😊 I look forward to hearing from you ~ Take care!

Sincerely,
New Friend

Charles Colbert #01417277
​Goree Unit
7405 Hwy 75 South
Huntsville, TX 77344

Source: Charles Colbert #01417277

Osie Dean #Y11299

 

Osie Dean #Y11299

 

Birth Date:
March 7, 1995
Incarcerated Since:
2016
Release Date:
May 28, 2027
Convicted Of:
Aggravated battery, discharge firearm
Home Town:
Chicago, IL
Ethnicity:
Black
Height:
5’11”
Weight:
203 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Women only
Sexual Orientation:
Straight
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
No
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Friendship

 

Hello world,

I would first like to thank you for taking the time out of your day to read my profile. My name is Osie, but everybody calls me “O.” I’m 27 from Chicago. I only have 23 months left before I’m released “but” I’m also waiting on work release so I can be out any day now at a program place with weekend passes. I have been incarcerated 7 years and decided to join this site in hope that I meet a lady friend, become friends, share some stories and make each other laugh, etc. Although I’m young I’m true to myself and others. I’m a very ambitious and focused man. I always try to stay 10 steps ahead on anything I do. I’ve overcome many obstacles in my life which enables me to be a good listener and also very capable of giving sound advice. Being in here has opened my eyes to small things other people may not be thankful for or overlook. Too often we underestimate the power of touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to make someone’s day. I understand that more than ever now!

I’m gone stop here. You have to write/email to find out more about me. But don’t be shy. Hit me up and tell me about yourself. And the only way to have friends is to be one. No cap!

Osie Dean #Y11299
Pinckneyville C.C.
5835 State Route 154
Pinckneyville, IL 62274

Source: Osie Dean #Y11299

Calvin Shadley #18130732

 

Looking for Pen-Pals

  

 

Birth Date:
June 12, 1991
Incarcerated Since:
April 2, 2020
Release Date:
January 29, 2024
Convicted Of:
Burglary 1
Home Town:
Portland, OR
Ethnicity:
Native / white
Height:
5’9″
Weight:
180 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Anyone
Sexual Orientation:
Straight
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
Yes
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Romance, friendship, donations

 

Hello free world. I’m looking for pen-pals to help me along my journey. I’m not in contact with my birth family and I don’t get any letters from the outside. Letters are a positive way to pass time and can help build good long-lasting friendships.

A little information about me is I struggle with attention deficit disorder and spelling, but I love to smile and I love nature. I’ve been homeless a big part of my life. I plan to live in an ARV when I get out. I’m an open and honest person who wants to share my life experience with anyone and everyone. I hope to find new people to connect with so send me a letter and watch our friendship grow.

I’m looking for pen-pals all across the world so wherever you are I’m looking forward to getting a letter from you.

Sincerely,
Calvin Shadley

Calvin Shadley #18130732
Two Rivers Correctional Institution
82911 Beach Access Rd.
Umatilla, OR 97882

Source: Calvin Shadley #18130732

Frayno Crumb #H20376

 

Sincere & Genuine Conversation

    

 

Birth Date:
February 3, 1969
Incarcerated Since:
2007
Release Date:
2025
Convicted Of:
Robbery
Home Town:
San Manteo, CA
Ethnicity:
Black
Religion:
Spiritual
Height:
5’9″
Weight:
200 lbs
Wants To Write To:
Women only
Sexual Orientation:
Straight
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
No
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Friendship

 

Hi, my name is Frayno and I am hoping to meet some interesting pen pals who I can possibly build a friendship with. Someone who is willing to invest some time and share positive goals and aspirations. Someone with an open mind, adventurous personality, and likes to laugh. As for myself, I have a good sense of humor with an outgoing personality and loyal mentality. I am adventurous, love to laugh, and I am always looking for the opportunity to bring a smile to a friend’s face. I am patient, nonjudgmental and a good listener. I am at the end of completing a 20-year sentence and would appreciate someone who can enlighten me on the many changes in the world. I spend most of my spare time attending self-help classes and helping inmates with legal problems and filing grievances when needed. I am also studying law, learning to write business plans and grant proposals so that I will be mentally focused and physically fit with the rest of my spare time. I like to listen to music and exercise. Everything I do now is to succeed and be the best version of me once I am released. So if you feel like sharing some of your time, send me a direct letter, email or a letter through J-Pay letters. Please include a return address or a po box and we can go from there. Hope to hear from you soon.

Frayno Crumb #H20376
CHCF / B6 – A – 107
PO Box 32110
Stockton, CA 95213

Source: Frayno Crumb #H20376

Channing Wright #22099-032

 

Channing Wright #22099-032

  

 

Birth Date:
December 31, 1987
Incarcerated Since:
2018
Release Date:
October 8, 2025
Convicted Of:
Distribution
Home Town:
Somerset, KY
Ethnicity:
White
Religion:
Christian
Height:
5’7″
Wants To Write To:
Anyone
Sexual Orientation:
Bisexual
Open to Gay/Bisexual Contact:
Yes
Will Write Overseas:
Yes
Seeks:
Romance, friendship, legal help, donations

 

150 words? Alright, here we go: I have a glass half-full outlook. A witty and wicked sense of humor, and an outgoing disposition.

I like dogs over cats, comedies over horror, and anything with peanut butter. Also, I’m an avid reader. And, well, I can play the flute. I can usually be found in ball shorts and t-shirts. But I really do love to dress up. Travel, a trip to Paris and the Eiffel Tower are on my ever-growing bucket list.

I am seeking an engaging and off-the-wall conversation with a mature man who knows himself, has a healthy sense of funny, and can surprise me on occasion? Tell me ~ what makes you curious? Makes you get out of bed everyday? Or jump back into it? Top 5 films of all time?

These simple things reveal a lot. You tell me yours, I’ll tell you mine…

With anticipation,
Channing

Channing Wright #22099-032
FMC Lexington Satellite
PO Box 14525
Lexington, KY 40512

Source: Channing Wright #22099-032