BOP Announces New Policy on Home Confinement and Time Credits
June 21, 2025
Defend · Educate · Liberate
The Defendant Aid Society is a 501(c)(3) charity and a national network of attorneys, paralegals, and volunteers — standing with defendants, federal inmates, and the families who love them.
“You can only protect your liberties in this world by protecting the other man’s freedom.” Clarence Darrow, Trial Attorney
For inmates, defendants, and their families. Start with a simple request — a real person will follow up, usually within 72 hours. Free and low-cost support is available.
Request HelpReal Cases · Real Outcomes
Behind every case number is a person, and a family waiting. A few of the people we’ve been privileged to stand beside.
What We Do
Three commitments, one mission: to stand between ordinary people and the overwhelming power of the state.
Case reviews, second opinions, document review, paralegal and pro se support, and access to affiliated attorneys for anyone accused or targeted by a government agency.
Learn more →
Clinics, seminars, and resources teaching individuals, families, and businesses how to protect their rights, prepare in advance, and engage in civic activism.
Learn more →
FSA & Second Chance Act help, administrative remedies, pro se § 2255 / § 2241 / § 3582 support, and our free Inmate Support service connecting families across the wall.
Learn more →
A Smarter Way to Help More People
With more than 100 people in our care at any time, every minute counts. We use AI tools to handle first-touch questions, intake screening, and routine communication — so our small professional staff can focus where it matters most: real legal work.
For the safety of our volunteers, our team members communicate using protective first names. You are always speaking with a real, dedicated member of the DAS team.
See How It WorksNews & Updates
June 21, 2025
December 11, 2024
March 12, 2024
This feed will update automatically once News automation is connected.
D.A.S. takes no government or corporate funding. Just $50 covers an hour of help for someone who has nowhere else to turn.