Bryan Federal Prison Camp

General Prison Information

Official Prison Name: Bryan Federal Prison Camp
Prison Code: BRY
Prison Type: Federal Prison Camp
Region: South Central Region
State: Texas
Security Level: Minimum

Contact Information

Below you have the street address and mailing address for Bryan Federal Prison Camp. Use the mailing address if you are mailing a letter or package to a prisoner at Bryan Federal Prison Camp, and make sure to use the physical address if you need to know the actual location of the prison.

Mailing Address

Be sure to read over the Inmate Mail and Package Procedures section on this page if you are going to send a package or letter to an inmate to make sure that you correctly address the package or letter, and do the right procedure for sending a package or letter. If you do not use the correct steps, it could not get delivered.

INMATE NAME & REGISTER NUMBER
FPC Bryan
Federal Prison Camp
P.O. Box 2149
Bryan TX, 77805

Street Address / Prison Location

Use the street address if you are visiting a prisoner. Be sure to read over the Inmate Visitation Procedures and Inmate Visitation Schedule sections on this page if you are going to visit an inmate at Bryan Federal Prison.

Bryan Federal Prison Camp
1100 Ursuline Avenue
Bryan TX, 77803

Phone Number

Inmates don’t have phones, so you can’t call inmates, however, there are times when it might be helpful to know the telephone number to the prison.

(979) 823-1879

Fax Number

Bryan Federal Prison Camp inmates don’t have faxes, so you can’t fax your inmate, but there are cases when it may be helpful to know the fax number to Bryan Federal Prison Camp.

(979) 821-3316 

Email Address

The email address below is the main email for the facility. You can’t reach prisoners at this email. If you need to email a prisoner, read the Inmate Email information below.

BRY/PUBLICINFORMATION@BOP.GOV

Inmate and Staff Statistics

Total Inmates:   916 

Inmate Email

In order to send email to an inmate you must follow an exact process to ensure that the email gets to the inmate.

TRULINCS – Trust Fund Limited Inmate Computer System

Federal inmates are allowed to email letters only to people listed on their approved contact list. An prisoner has to make a formal request to recieve and send emails with someone by putting that person into their contact list.

Every email is subject to monitoring. Prison inmates give consent to email monitoring when they join the email program. Inmate contacts give their consent to getting monitored when they agree to corresponding with the prisoner and are reminded every time that they get an email from the inmate.

When a contact is approved they will get an email confirmation which sends them to the CorrLink system at www.corrlink.com.
CorrLink Inmate Email System

Email correspondence may not endanger the public or the security, safety, or operation of the prison. Also, email should not be larger than 13,000 characters. Email messages that are not consistent with these rules will not get sent.

Inmate Internet Access

Prisoners don’t have access to the internet.

Inmate Mail and Package Procedures

There are special protocols that you have to follow when sending mail to a federal prisoner. If you don’t then the letters and packages might not make it there.

before you send a letter or package, make sure to read the sections below:

Mail Monitoring

Bryan Federal Prison guards do open and inspect and read all received general mail and packages. Received general correspondence is read as frequently as deemed necessary to ensure security or watch a particular problem having to do with any inmates.

How to Address a Letter to an Inmate

Shown here is the proper format for how you must address mail to a federal inmate at Bryan Federal Prison:

INMATE NAME & REGISTER NUMBER
FPC Bryan
Federal Prison Camp
P.O. Box 2149
Bryan TX, 77805

To read the entire Bureau of Prisons Policy on Correspondence, go to: Bureau of Prisons – Correspondence Policy

Inmate Money

Every prison has a Commissary which was started to provide inmates a bank type account for prisoner money and for buying things not issued by the facility.

How to Send an Inmate Money

Family, friends, or other sources can deposit money to these Commissary accounts using the U.S. Postal Service and Western Union.

Via U.S. Postal Service: An inmate’s family and friends can to send prisoners money in the mail and have to send funds to the following address and follow the steps given below:

Federal Bureau of Prisons
Insert Valid Committed Inmate Name
Insert Inmate Eight-Digit Register Number
Post Office Box 474701
Des Moines, Iowa 50947-0001

The deposit has to be in the form of a money order that is made out to the prisoner’s full committed name and complete eight-digit register number. It is best if you use a U.S. Postal Service money order, since all non-postal money orders processed through the National Lockbox will be placed on a 15-day hold, and in this time the prisoner will not get the funds. The Bureau of Prisons will return to the sender funds that don’t have correct prisoner info if the envelope it was sent it has a return address. Cash and personal checks will not be deposited to the prisoner’s account so do not send any cash or checks.

Via Western Union Quick Collect Program: Prisoner’s friends and family are also able to send prisoners money using Western Union’s Quick Collect Program. Money sent to a prisoner with the Western Union Quick Collect Program can be sent by one of these methods:

  1. At a physical location using cash. In order to locate the closest agent, you should call 1-800-325-6000 or go to www.westernunion.com.
  2. By phone with a credit or debit card: Call 1-800-634-3422 and select phone prompt option 2.
  3. Online with a credit/debit card: Go to www.westernunion.com and choose “Quick Collect.”

For the Western Union Quick Collect transaction, this info has to be included:

  1. Correct Inmate Eight-Digit Register Number (entered with no spaces or dashes) followed immediately by Inmate’s Last Name
  2. Committed Inmate Full Name entered on Attention Line
  3. Code City: FBOP, DC

If the wrong register number and/or name are used and accepted and sent to the wrong prisoner, the money might not get returned to you.

For additional info about how to send an inmate money, check out the official Bureau of Prisons website:
Bureau of Prisons – Inmate Money

Inmate Locator

Federal inmates are often moved to different prisons around the nation, so you might need to find where an inmate is located using the inmate locator. Follow the link here to locate an federal inmate.
Inmate Search

Inmate Visitation Schedule

Visiting hours are from 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, as well as every federally recognized holiday.

Inmate Visitor Procedures

Every prison has its own rules for inmate visitation and they get changed frequently. The policies listed here could be different by the time you are reading this, so be sure to also check the prison’s official website to find the latest rules for visitation.

Visitation Sign-In and Check-In

The visitation guard ensures every visitor signs the prison visitors log upon entering the correctional facility and also when they leave.

Identification Required

Picture id of all visitors is required. Acceptable forms of id are Driver’s License and Social Security Card; but, a state issued photo ID is OK.

For all of the things shown below, read the official prison website as this info changes often:

  • Visitation Rules
  • Visitation Dress Code
  • Things You Can and Cannot Take to Visitation
  • Special Rules For Children, Special Visits, Pastoral or Attorney Visits

To read the entire Guide to Bryan Federal Prison Camp Visitation click here: Inmate Visitation Guide

Prison Jobs & Hiring

Trying to find a job at a prison? Have experience? Have you worked at a prison in the past?

If so, click here: Bryan Federal Prison Camp Jobs

Website

The official website: Bryan Federal Prison Camp Website

Tell Your Story – Write a Review of Bryan Federal Prison Camp

Have you ever spent any time in Bryan Federal Prison Camp? Do you know someone that spent time there? Have you ever been to visit a prisoner at this prison?

If you have, then we would like you to write your review about it. Tell us about your experience so that other people can find out what to expect.

Things you could write in the review:

  • Prison conditions
  • Prison layout and facility
  • Staff and guards
  • Commissary and food
  • Visitation
  • Inmates
  • Inmate safety
  • Gang activity
  • Inmate programs and activities

If you are a prisoner here, leave your address if you want people to be able to mail you.

Speak Your Mind

*