Update for Incarcerated in Florida: Legal Mail Access Tightens: New Rule Takes Effect August 5th, 2025
Starting August 5th, 2025, new changes to F.A.C. 33-210.102 regarding legal mail will place additional barriers on attorneys writing to incarcerated individuals in Florida. This recently approved rule change will severely limit how attorneys can send legal correspondence and may result in delays, denials, or returns of legitimate legal mail.
What’s Changing:
Attorneys must now register with FDC and obtain an Attorney Registration Number (ARN) before sending legal mail.
Each mailing must be pre-logged through a unique tracking link and include a Legal Mail Tracking Number (LMTN) on the envelope — no labels or stamps are allowed.
Legal mail sent without this strict tracking process will be returned to the sender.
Only very specific legal documents are allowed. Items like greeting cards, photos, blank paper, postage stamps, or stickers are now prohibited — even if they are related to a legal case.
Legal mail must be sent only through the United States Postal Service (USPS), not other carriers.
This rule will make it harder for attorneys to communicate with incarcerated individuals and add bureaucratic hurdles that could delay time-sensitive legal filings. If you are corresponding with an attorney, be sure that you have them register for an Attorney Registration Number once the portal goes live on FDC’s website.
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It’s July 31st and the system is not up and running yet with DOC. Crazy but not unexpected.
To Tim and all,
I was locked up by the feds for 5 years. In my experience, the guards are the usual culprits for bringing all sorts of contraband into the facilities. After all, they have the easiest access to the contraband and the inmates. I watched as one guard was caught red handed with the help a a PFR for bringing creatine into the prison. The PFR, who was a body builder, set up the guard with cooperation of the warden. 😃
I’m guessing that this applies to all inmates? Bad enough when the state restricted regular mail. I guess that the manpower shortage continues.
This may slow attorney and inmate communication but personally I like it and agree with it. While I was incarcerated due to a FTR charge, a lot of inmates was getting suboxon/subutex, acid, LSD and other drugs sent to them under the stamps on the envelopes or the stamps and paper themselves was soaked in some type of narcotic. However, the major drugs and cellphones was getting into the facility through employees ie kitchen employees, laundry, maintenance, guards etc etc.