Get Help

If you or your loved one needs administrative remedies filed in a Federal Bureau of Prisons institution, follow these steps and we will be in touch.
1

Register to Get Help

The first step to get help from The Remedy Project is to sign-up as a member. You can do this for your loved one or have them reach out to us with this information directly.
Information about your loved one:
Prison information:
Unit Information (if accessible):
Sentencing Judge Information (if accessible):
Your Information:
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
2

Submit Your Issue

Have your loved one contact us with a detailed description of the issue via:

We help with requests, complaints, disciplinary appeals, and initial tort filings across the Federal Bureau of Prisons through the administrative remedy process. The description of their issue should include specific dates, officer names involved (if relevant), and the relief that they are seeking. They should also mail us copies of any relevant past filings, disciplinary tickets, medical reports, or any other relevant paperwork. Our student advocates will complete the first administrative remedy, normally a BP-8, as quickly as possible. The completed BP-8 along with copies of the written complaint will be mailed to your loved one for them to submit to their counselor. They should contact us as soon as they receive a response. If they do not get a response within 7 days, they should ask their counselor for a response and contact us. We may then send a BP-9 to submit to the counselor. This process will continue until the issue is resolved or the administrative remedy process is exhausted. Please keep us up to date throughout the filing process. If at any time they have problems sending or receiving mail, please let us know.

Legal Disclaimer

Please remember we are not a legal service. Tasleemah Lawal’s representation only extends to you for the purpose of legal mail status at this time. Our primary goal as students is to assist you in filing administrative remedies and shining a light on any violations you might be suffering while incarcerated. Services provided are not intended to create an attorney-client relationship outside of helping you exhaust administrative remedies.