Reviewed on: April 13,2026
General Prison Questions-Terminology

What Does DOC Inmate Status Mean?

Okay so if the inmate is in a Regional jail system and his imprisonment status says division of corrections offender does that mean he will have to spend time in a prison?

When an inmate's status shows as a Division of Corrections offender while they are still housed in a regional jail, it means they have been sentenced and
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer August 24,2014 · General Prison Questions-Terminology
1

When an inmate's status shows as a Division of Corrections offender while they are still housed in a regional jail, it means they have been sentenced and formally committed to the state prison system. The regional jail is simply holding them temporarily until a bed becomes available at the appropriate state facility and the transfer is arranged.

So yes, in short, they will be moving to a state prison. The regional jail is a waiting point, not the final destination.

What the status does not tell you is what type of facility they will be sent to or what the custody level will be. That determination comes from a classification process that evaluates several factors including the nature of the charges, the length of the sentence, criminal history, and in some cases the results of a risk and needs assessment conducted during intake.

A first-time non-violent offender with no prior record is likely to receive a minimum security classification and be placed in a lower-security facility or camp. Someone with a violent offense, a longer sentence, or a prior criminal history will be classified at a higher custody level and sent to a medium or higher security prison accordingly.

The classification decision is made by the state DOC, not the regional jail. The inmate will typically learn more about their designation during the intake process once they arrive at a reception or classification center, which is where most state systems send newly committed offenders before assigning them to a permanent facility.

Accepted Answer Date Created: August 24,2014
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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.