No.
Yes, your criminal status does not enter into whether you can be issued one or not. HOWEVER - your felon status may cause the court to restrict your travel and the use of it. ADDITIONALLY: the prison authorities who have control over your mail may administratively restrict your ability to contact the US Passport Office.
It would be most dependent on your past record, the nature of the offense you were convicted of, and your behavior while in max.
It depends on what options are offered and available in your state's prison system.
In general, no. In order to collect unemployment, you must be seeking employment, and accepting it when found. While in prison, that's not going to happen.
Someone has already answered this question. While many states do not have federal prisons, every state has at least a federal detention center. In addition to the states answered by the other question, South Carolina does not have a civilian federal prison. But they do, however, have military prisons and other specialized federal detention centers.
No Not currently. He was in prison a while back. He was release in September of 2007. He did 9 months in a federal prison in Louisiana. He has been clean and sober since his incarceration.
Yes, you can obtain a temporary passport while renewing your regular passport.
Real ID does not replace a passport; rather, it serves as a state-issued identification that meets federal standards for secure identification. While a passport is required for international travel, a Real ID can be used for domestic air travel and to access certain federal facilities. Essentially, Real ID is an option for those who may not have a passport but still need a compliant form of identification for specific purposes.
According to Judge David Grey Ross, Commissioner of the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement, while in prison, there is no specific obligation or accumulation of arrears.
Yes, my passport expired while I was abroad.
There are federal education policies, federal education loans, and federal education standards.However, unlike state schools (public colleges and universities) the only use of 'a federal education' I've ever heard referred either to:# being in the military* akin to the school of hard knocks, life university, and other witticisms;* On the job training in the military;* Officer training schools such as West Point or Annapolis 2. being in federal prison * sarcastically, referring to the prison sentence, or* tongue-in-cheek, referring to obtaining further education while in the federal prison)
Eugene V. Debs