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''' | A '''self-surrender checklist''' is a practical reference for a person who has been ordered to report to federal prison on their own rather than be taken into custody at the moment of sentencing. Voluntary surrender means you drive yourself to the prison gate on a set date and walk in. No deputy puts handcuffs on you in the courtroom. The judge sets the date, the U.S. Marshals Service tells you where to go, and the rest of the preparation falls to you. This page walks through what to handle before that day, what to carry through the door, and what to expect once you are inside. | ||
== Overview == | == Overview == | ||
Two things can happen at a federal sentencing. The judge can remand you, which means the U.S. Marshals take you straight from the courtroom into custody. Or the judge can grant voluntary surrender, which lets you remain free for a stretch of time and then report to a designated facility yourself. Voluntary surrender is common in white-collar and lower-level cases where the defendant is not a flight risk and has been compliant on bond. | |||
The | The gap between sentencing and your report date is rarely fixed. Sometimes it is a few weeks. Sometimes it is two or three months. The judge sets it, often at the recommendation of the parties or the probation officer. Use every day of it. | ||
== | You do not pick the prison. The Bureau of Prisons does. The Designation and Sentence Computation Center (DSCC) in Grand Prairie, Texas, reviews your case materials and assigns you to a facility.<ref name="dscc">{{cite web |title=Designations |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/designations.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> The BOP tries to place people within 500 driving miles of their release address, but that is a goal, not a guarantee. Security level, medical needs, and bed space all factor in.<ref name="dscc" /> | ||
Once the designation is made, the U.S. Marshals Service notifies you of your surrender date and the name of the institution where you report. In some cases you are directed to surrender to the Marshals instead of directly to a prison.<ref name="vs">{{cite web |title=Voluntary Surrenders |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/custody_and_care/voluntary_surrenders.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref> Do not assume you know your facility before that letter arrives. People are sometimes designated somewhere other than the prison the judge recommended. | |||
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== | == Before You Surrender == | ||
The weeks before surrender are for closing loops. You are about to be unreachable for ordinary business. Anything that needs a signature, a password, or a decision should be handled or handed off now. | |||
=== Confirm your designation and report logistics === | |||
* Get the surrender letter from the U.S. Marshals or your attorney. It states the date, the time, and the facility. | |||
* | * Confirm the exact reporting time. Many facilities expect you before a set hour. Call the institution's front desk to verify; reporting requirements vary by prison. | ||
* | * Look up the facility's address and visitor entrance. The intake door is not always the main visitor lobby. | ||
* | * Plan transportation. Someone should drive you. They cannot come inside, and you will not be driving home. | ||
=== Finances === | |||
A lot of money problems start the day you stop being able to log in to anything. Set up access before you go. | |||
* Give someone you trust power of attorney for financial and legal matters. A durable POA lets a spouse, parent, or attorney act on your behalf. | |||
* Set recurring bills to autopay or hand them to the person holding your POA. | |||
* Freeze your credit at all three bureaus to reduce identity theft exposure while you cannot monitor it. Store the PINs with the person who can unfreeze them if needed. | |||
* Write down account numbers, logins, and where documents live. Leave that list with your POA holder, not lying around. | |||
* Ask your attorney when restitution or fine payments begin and how they are made. | |||
* Send money to your inmate trust account ahead of time so you have commissary funds in the first days. Each facility posts its own deposit instructions, usually through an approved electronic service. | |||
=== | === Family === | ||
* Tell your kids in plain, age-appropriate terms. A calendar marking calls, visits, and your expected return helps younger children. | |||
* | * Settle custody, childcare, and any school notifications. | ||
* | * Arrange care for pets. | ||
* | * Give family the facility's mailing address so mail can start arriving early. | ||
* | * Explain how prison phone and email work so no one is surprised by the limits. | ||
=== Legal documents === | |||
* Keep a copy of your judgment and commitment order. | |||
* | * Note your federal register number once you have it. | ||
* | * Discuss any appeal deadlines with your attorney before you go quiet. | ||
* | * Leave originals of important documents with your attorney or family. Bring copies only. | ||
=== Medical and dental === | |||
Prison medical and dental queues are long. Handle what you can on the outside. | |||
* | * Get a physical and a dental cleaning. Finish any pending dental work; wait times inside can run months. | ||
* | * Obtain written documentation from your doctor for current conditions, medications and dosages, and any physical restrictions such as a lower-bunk need. | ||
* | * Ask your prescriber to put your medication list in writing. You cannot carry medication in, but documentation helps the prison's medical staff continue care. | ||
* | * If you have an eyeglass or contact prescription, get current copies. | ||
* | * If you take controlled substances or drink heavily, talk to your doctor about tapering safely before you report. You will be subject to drug testing. | ||
== | == What to Bring == | ||
= | Keep it minimal. Most of what you carry in either gets mailed home or stored. The BOP limits what a self-surrendering person may bring, and the authorized list is set out in BOP Program Statement 5580.08.<ref name="vs" /> When in doubt, bring less and call the facility to ask. | ||
Bring: | |||
* Government-issued photo ID, such as a driver's license. | |||
* Your surrender letter and register number. | |||
* A small amount of cash to seed your commissary account, if the facility accepts it at intake. Confirm the limit first; some take a money order instead. | |||
* Written medical documentation and your prescription list. | |||
* A plain wedding band with no stones, if you want to keep a ring. Rules vary. | |||
* Prescription eyeglasses. | |||
* A printed contact list with names, mailing addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses for the people you want to reach. Mailing a copy to yourself at the facility ahead of time is a common move so it is waiting for you. | |||
Do not bring: | |||
* Cell phones, tablets, or any electronics. | |||
* Medication. It will be confiscated; the prison provides its own. | |||
* Credit cards, checkbooks, or debit cards. | |||
* Jewelry beyond what the facility allows. | |||
* Extra clothing. You will change into prison-issued clothes, and what you wore in gets mailed home. | |||
* Books, magazines, or food. Have reading material mailed from a publisher or approved vendor later. | |||
Wear plain, simple clothing you do not mind losing track of. Plain white cotton underwear and socks are a safe choice because some facilities let you keep basic undergarments. Leave anything valuable or sentimental at home. | |||
== Reporting Day == | |||
Arrive on time. Not early, not late. If your letter says report by a certain hour, build in margin for traffic, but do not show up hours ahead expecting to be processed early. | |||
Have your driver drop you at the correct entrance. Say your goodbyes outside. They cannot walk in with you. | |||
Carry only your ID, your surrender paperwork, and the few permitted items. Have the ID and the surrender letter in hand when you reach the gate. | |||
What happens next is intake, also called Receiving and Discharge (R&D). The order varies by facility, but the process generally includes: | |||
# Identity verification against your paperwork and register number. | |||
# A strip search. | |||
# Surrender of the clothes you arrived in, which are mailed to your designated contact. | |||
# Issue of prison-issued clothing and a basic bedroll. | |||
# Fingerprinting and a booking photograph. | |||
# An initial medical and mental-health screening, where your doctor's documentation matters. | |||
# Assignment to a housing unit. | |||
# Orientation, where staff explain counts, schedules, and rules over the following days. | |||
The first hours feel slow and impersonal. That is normal. Once you are through R&D, a unit team handles the rest of your placement. | |||
== Frequently Asked Questions == | == Frequently Asked Questions == | ||
| Line 295: | Line 109: | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = | |question = What is the difference between voluntary surrender and being remanded? | ||
|answer = | |answer = Remand means the U.S. Marshals take you into custody in the courtroom at sentencing. Voluntary surrender means the judge lets you stay free for a period and then report to a designated prison on your own, on a set date. Voluntary surrender is common for defendants who are not flight risks and have complied with their bond conditions. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = | |question = How do I find out which prison I report to? | ||
|answer = | |answer = You do not choose it. The Bureau of Prisons designates you through its Designation and Sentence Computation Center, which reviews your case file and assigns a facility, generally aiming for one within 500 driving miles of your release address. The U.S. Marshals Service then notifies you of your surrender date and the institution where you report. Wait for that notice before assuming a location, because designations sometimes differ from the judge's recommendation. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = | |question = What time do I report on my surrender date? | ||
|answer = | |answer = The reporting time is stated in your surrender letter and varies by facility. Many institutions expect you before a set hour. Call the prison's front desk ahead of time to confirm the exact time and the correct entrance. Arrive on time, not early and not late. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = | |question = Can I bring money when I self-surrender? | ||
|answer = | |answer = Some facilities accept a small amount of cash at intake to seed your commissary account, and others require a money order or an electronic deposit made ahead of time. Confirm the limit and method with your designated facility before reporting. Sending funds to your inmate trust account in advance is the most reliable way to have commissary money available in your first days. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = | |question = Can I bring my prescription medications? | ||
|answer = Bring your | |answer = No. Medication is confiscated at intake. The prison provides its own through its medical system. Bring written documentation from your doctor listing your conditions, medications, and dosages so the facility's medical staff can continue your care, and request sick call as soon as possible after arrival. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = | |question = What documents should I bring? | ||
|answer = | |answer = Bring your government-issued photo ID, your surrender letter with the date and location, your federal register number, and written medical documentation for any conditions. Bring copies of legal documents, not originals; leave the originals with your attorney or a trusted family member. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = | |question = How long do I have between sentencing and surrender? | ||
|answer = | |answer = There is no fixed period. The judge sets it, often weeks to a few months, sometimes on the recommendation of the parties or the probation officer. Use the time to handle finances, family, medical care, and legal matters before you report. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQ | {{FAQ | ||
|question = What happens | |question = What happens during intake when I arrive? | ||
|answer = | |answer = Intake, handled in Receiving and Discharge, generally includes verifying your identity, a strip search, surrendering your clothing to be mailed home, receiving prison-issued clothing, fingerprinting and a booking photo, an initial medical and mental-health screening, assignment to a housing unit, and orientation over the following days. The order varies by facility. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{FAQSection/End}} | {{FAQSection/End}} | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
| Line 364: | Line 154: | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Checklist, Self-Surrender}} | |||
[[Category:Life Inside Federal Prison]] | |||
{{#seo: | {{#seo: | ||
|title=Self-Surrender Checklist | |title=Self-Surrender Checklist for Federal Prison - Prisonpedia | ||
|description= | |description=A practical checklist for voluntarily surrendering to federal prison: the designation letter, report date and location, what to bring, what to leave home, and the intake process. | ||
|type=Article | |||
|site_name=Prisonpedia | |||
|locale=en_US | |||
|modified_time=2026-06-03 | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{MetaDescription| | {{MetaDescription|A practical self-surrender checklist for federal prison: voluntary surrender vs. being remanded, the BOP designation letter, report date and location, what to bring and leave home, handling finances and family, and the intake process.}} | ||
Latest revision as of 14:03, 3 June 2026
A self-surrender checklist is a practical reference for a person who has been ordered to report to federal prison on their own rather than be taken into custody at the moment of sentencing. Voluntary surrender means you drive yourself to the prison gate on a set date and walk in. No deputy puts handcuffs on you in the courtroom. The judge sets the date, the U.S. Marshals Service tells you where to go, and the rest of the preparation falls to you. This page walks through what to handle before that day, what to carry through the door, and what to expect once you are inside.
Overview
Two things can happen at a federal sentencing. The judge can remand you, which means the U.S. Marshals take you straight from the courtroom into custody. Or the judge can grant voluntary surrender, which lets you remain free for a stretch of time and then report to a designated facility yourself. Voluntary surrender is common in white-collar and lower-level cases where the defendant is not a flight risk and has been compliant on bond.
The gap between sentencing and your report date is rarely fixed. Sometimes it is a few weeks. Sometimes it is two or three months. The judge sets it, often at the recommendation of the parties or the probation officer. Use every day of it.
You do not pick the prison. The Bureau of Prisons does. The Designation and Sentence Computation Center (DSCC) in Grand Prairie, Texas, reviews your case materials and assigns you to a facility.[1] The BOP tries to place people within 500 driving miles of their release address, but that is a goal, not a guarantee. Security level, medical needs, and bed space all factor in.[1]
Once the designation is made, the U.S. Marshals Service notifies you of your surrender date and the name of the institution where you report. In some cases you are directed to surrender to the Marshals instead of directly to a prison.[2] Do not assume you know your facility before that letter arrives. People are sometimes designated somewhere other than the prison the judge recommended.
Before You Surrender
The weeks before surrender are for closing loops. You are about to be unreachable for ordinary business. Anything that needs a signature, a password, or a decision should be handled or handed off now.
Confirm your designation and report logistics
- Get the surrender letter from the U.S. Marshals or your attorney. It states the date, the time, and the facility.
- Confirm the exact reporting time. Many facilities expect you before a set hour. Call the institution's front desk to verify; reporting requirements vary by prison.
- Look up the facility's address and visitor entrance. The intake door is not always the main visitor lobby.
- Plan transportation. Someone should drive you. They cannot come inside, and you will not be driving home.
Finances
A lot of money problems start the day you stop being able to log in to anything. Set up access before you go.
- Give someone you trust power of attorney for financial and legal matters. A durable POA lets a spouse, parent, or attorney act on your behalf.
- Set recurring bills to autopay or hand them to the person holding your POA.
- Freeze your credit at all three bureaus to reduce identity theft exposure while you cannot monitor it. Store the PINs with the person who can unfreeze them if needed.
- Write down account numbers, logins, and where documents live. Leave that list with your POA holder, not lying around.
- Ask your attorney when restitution or fine payments begin and how they are made.
- Send money to your inmate trust account ahead of time so you have commissary funds in the first days. Each facility posts its own deposit instructions, usually through an approved electronic service.
Family
- Tell your kids in plain, age-appropriate terms. A calendar marking calls, visits, and your expected return helps younger children.
- Settle custody, childcare, and any school notifications.
- Arrange care for pets.
- Give family the facility's mailing address so mail can start arriving early.
- Explain how prison phone and email work so no one is surprised by the limits.
Legal documents
- Keep a copy of your judgment and commitment order.
- Note your federal register number once you have it.
- Discuss any appeal deadlines with your attorney before you go quiet.
- Leave originals of important documents with your attorney or family. Bring copies only.
Medical and dental
Prison medical and dental queues are long. Handle what you can on the outside.
- Get a physical and a dental cleaning. Finish any pending dental work; wait times inside can run months.
- Obtain written documentation from your doctor for current conditions, medications and dosages, and any physical restrictions such as a lower-bunk need.
- Ask your prescriber to put your medication list in writing. You cannot carry medication in, but documentation helps the prison's medical staff continue care.
- If you have an eyeglass or contact prescription, get current copies.
- If you take controlled substances or drink heavily, talk to your doctor about tapering safely before you report. You will be subject to drug testing.
What to Bring
Keep it minimal. Most of what you carry in either gets mailed home or stored. The BOP limits what a self-surrendering person may bring, and the authorized list is set out in BOP Program Statement 5580.08.[2] When in doubt, bring less and call the facility to ask.
Bring:
- Government-issued photo ID, such as a driver's license.
- Your surrender letter and register number.
- A small amount of cash to seed your commissary account, if the facility accepts it at intake. Confirm the limit first; some take a money order instead.
- Written medical documentation and your prescription list.
- A plain wedding band with no stones, if you want to keep a ring. Rules vary.
- Prescription eyeglasses.
- A printed contact list with names, mailing addresses, phone numbers, and email addresses for the people you want to reach. Mailing a copy to yourself at the facility ahead of time is a common move so it is waiting for you.
Do not bring:
- Cell phones, tablets, or any electronics.
- Medication. It will be confiscated; the prison provides its own.
- Credit cards, checkbooks, or debit cards.
- Jewelry beyond what the facility allows.
- Extra clothing. You will change into prison-issued clothes, and what you wore in gets mailed home.
- Books, magazines, or food. Have reading material mailed from a publisher or approved vendor later.
Wear plain, simple clothing you do not mind losing track of. Plain white cotton underwear and socks are a safe choice because some facilities let you keep basic undergarments. Leave anything valuable or sentimental at home.
Reporting Day
Arrive on time. Not early, not late. If your letter says report by a certain hour, build in margin for traffic, but do not show up hours ahead expecting to be processed early.
Have your driver drop you at the correct entrance. Say your goodbyes outside. They cannot walk in with you.
Carry only your ID, your surrender paperwork, and the few permitted items. Have the ID and the surrender letter in hand when you reach the gate.
What happens next is intake, also called Receiving and Discharge (R&D). The order varies by facility, but the process generally includes:
- Identity verification against your paperwork and register number.
- A strip search.
- Surrender of the clothes you arrived in, which are mailed to your designated contact.
- Issue of prison-issued clothing and a basic bedroll.
- Fingerprinting and a booking photograph.
- An initial medical and mental-health screening, where your doctor's documentation matters.
- Assignment to a housing unit.
- Orientation, where staff explain counts, schedules, and rules over the following days.
The first hours feel slow and impersonal. That is normal. Once you are through R&D, a unit team handles the rest of your placement.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the difference between voluntary surrender and being remanded?
Remand means the U.S. Marshals take you into custody in the courtroom at sentencing. Voluntary surrender means the judge lets you stay free for a period and then report to a designated prison on your own, on a set date. Voluntary surrender is common for defendants who are not flight risks and have complied with their bond conditions.
Q: How do I find out which prison I report to?
You do not choose it. The Bureau of Prisons designates you through its Designation and Sentence Computation Center, which reviews your case file and assigns a facility, generally aiming for one within 500 driving miles of your release address. The U.S. Marshals Service then notifies you of your surrender date and the institution where you report. Wait for that notice before assuming a location, because designations sometimes differ from the judge's recommendation.
Q: What time do I report on my surrender date?
The reporting time is stated in your surrender letter and varies by facility. Many institutions expect you before a set hour. Call the prison's front desk ahead of time to confirm the exact time and the correct entrance. Arrive on time, not early and not late.
Q: Can I bring money when I self-surrender?
Some facilities accept a small amount of cash at intake to seed your commissary account, and others require a money order or an electronic deposit made ahead of time. Confirm the limit and method with your designated facility before reporting. Sending funds to your inmate trust account in advance is the most reliable way to have commissary money available in your first days.
Q: Can I bring my prescription medications?
No. Medication is confiscated at intake. The prison provides its own through its medical system. Bring written documentation from your doctor listing your conditions, medications, and dosages so the facility's medical staff can continue your care, and request sick call as soon as possible after arrival.
Q: What documents should I bring?
Bring your government-issued photo ID, your surrender letter with the date and location, your federal register number, and written medical documentation for any conditions. Bring copies of legal documents, not originals; leave the originals with your attorney or a trusted family member.
Q: How long do I have between sentencing and surrender?
There is no fixed period. The judge sets it, often weeks to a few months, sometimes on the recommendation of the parties or the probation officer. Use the time to handle finances, family, medical care, and legal matters before you report.
Q: What happens during intake when I arrive?
Intake, handled in Receiving and Discharge, generally includes verifying your identity, a strip search, surrendering your clothing to be mailed home, receiving prison-issued clothing, fingerprinting and a booking photo, an initial medical and mental-health screening, assignment to a housing unit, and orientation over the following days. The order varies by facility.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Designations". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Voluntary Surrenders". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved 2026-06-03.