Reviewed on: April 06,2026
Prison Violence

How Should a First-Timer Handle Their First Days in Jail?

my son has never been locked up at a county facility - he is now at andrew c. baird which I've heard is really bad - is it ? and I do get to talk to him when he calls do you please have any advice...we are from a small town way outside of Detroit and I know the worst offenders go to this facility - the judge considered him a flight risk because he went to Florida for a 7 month re-hab program (drug addiction) and we never knew of this warrant from 2011. I thought he was going to Dickerson and from his conversations I can tell he is afraid to say anything I think he may already be getting harassed (entered last night). Please send any advice you can I am very scared...thank you.

The first few days are the hardest, and they are also the most important in terms of how someone establishes themselves in a new environment.
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer May 21,2014 · Prison Violence
1

The first few days are the hardest, and they are also the most important in terms of how someone establishes themselves in a new environment. What your son does and does not do in the first week will shape his experience for the duration.

The most important thing he can do is keep to himself. Not rudely, not fearfully, just quietly. Greet people respectfully, do not engage in conversations about charges or sentences, do not accept anything from anyone without knowing what it will cost him later, and stay out of other people's conflicts entirely. Most of the testing that happens to new arrivals is exactly that, a test. Staying calm, unafraid, and unbothered is the right response.

Staying visible to staff is genuinely good advice. Not in a way that marks him as an informant, but simply existing in spaces where officers can see him. A cell is often the safest place to be, especially in the early days. If he has reading material, time in the cell with a book is productive, safe, and sends the right signal to the people around him.

What feels like harassment in the first night or two is often the kind of low-level pressure that new arrivals face from people testing the waters. Most inmates are not looking to add time to their sentence over a confrontation with someone they do not know. That calculus protects your son as much as it protects anyone else.

Send books. Send them now and keep them coming. Reading is the single most protective and productive thing an inmate can have. It occupies the mind, keeps someone out of idle situations, and makes the time pass in a way that nothing else does quite as well.

Be strong in your conversations with him. He needs to hear that you are stable and that you are not panicking, even if you are. Your steadiness on the outside is a genuine source of strength for him on the inside.

Accepted Answer Date Created: May 21,2014
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About this answer: This response was prepared by InmateAid’s editorial team in consultation with former inmates who have direct experience with the federal correctional system. InmateAid has served families of the incarcerated since 2012. This is general information only — not legal advice. Last reviewed April 2026.