The Florence McClure Women’s Correctional Center (FMWCC) is a women’s-only prison in Las Vegas, Nevada. The 145,000-square-foot facility holds 950 beds.
People can use the Nevada Department of Corrections’ online inmate search to find their friends and loved ones. The FMWCC is located at 4370 Smiley Road, Las Vegas, NV 89115:
In this article, our Las Vegas Nevada criminal defense attorneys discuss:
- 1. How do I find an inmate at the Florence McClure Women’s Correctional Center?
- 2. What is the address and phone number?
- 3. What are the FMWCC visiting hours?
- 4. Can I phone or email inmates?
- 5. Can I send mail to inmates?
- 6. How do I send money?
- 7. Inmate programs and health
- 8. History
1. How do I find an inmate at the Florence McClure Women’s Correctional Center?
FMWCC inmates can be found through an online search. People can also call the jail directly at (702) 668-7200.
2. What is the address and phone number?
The Florence McClure Women’s Correctional Center is located about eight minutes from Nellis Airforce Base at the following address:
4370 Smiley Road
Las Vegas, Nevada 89115-1808
The prison’s phone number is (702) 668-7200.
3. What are the FMWCC visiting hours?
For the most current information, friends and family are advised to call FMWCC at (702) 668-7200 and ask for visiting. Visitors should dress conservatively and be prepared to be checked for outstanding warrants.
There are separate visiting hours for friends and family and for lawyers:
3.1. Friends and family visiting hours
3.2. Professional visiting hours
Professional Visitors must call the Warden’s office no more than two weeks in advance and at least 48 hours in advance. Visits occur on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday (unless the inmate is segregated) at 9:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m., or 1:00 p.m.
Learn more about FMWCC’s visiting hours and FMWCC’s visiting rules.
4. Can I phone or email inmates?
4.1. Phone privileges
Family and friends may not phone inmates. Instead, persons in custody are given time throughout the week to make phone calls out through CenturyLink.
Family and friends can set up accounts to receive collect calls and/or set up prepaid accounts to permit inmates to call them. Learn how at the Nevada Department of Corrections phoning policies page.
Receiving FMWCC phone calls costs the following:
See also SB 234 (2023) re. a pilot program providing free telephone calls between inmates and family.
4.2. Emailing persons in custody
Family and friends may email inmates for 30 cents a message after setting up a free account at Corrlinks. The prison will then print out the email and deliver it to the recipient. Inmates are not allowed to email back. Learn more about the Nevada Department of Corrections inmate email policies.
5. Can I send mail to inmates?
Friends and family can mail postcards or letters to FMWCC inmates at:
INMATE NAME, INMATE NUMBER
Florence McClure Women’s Correctional Center
4370 Smiley Road
Las Vegas, Nevada 89115-1808
Persons in custody may not receive packages. Books and magazines must be mailed directly by the publisher. Call (702) 668-7200 for more information about mailing rules and regulations.
Note that the prison screens inmate mail.
6. How do I send money?
There are several ways friends and family can gift money into an FMWCC inmate’s account to allow them to purchase products from the prison commissary. Click on the below links for more information:
- Sending Money by Mail
- Sending Money from a Correctional Facility
- Sending Money from a Walk-In Location
- Sending Money Online or by Phone
The inmate account deposit service rates are as follows:
Also refer to the Nevada Department of Corrections’ frequently-asked-questions guide.
7. Inmate programs and health
FMWCC offers various programs to help people in custody better themselves, including:
- AA (Alcoholics Anonymous)
- Anger and Aggression Management
- Clark County School District, providing inmates with academic and vocational activities with the ultimate goal of earning an Adult High School Diploma and passing Hi-Set (High School Equivalency)
- Commitment to Change (CTC) cognitive behavioral therapy
- Employment skills
- New Path Cosmetology Class, a vocational program
- Parenting classes
- Pups on Parole, training inmates to train rescue dogs and to be dog handlers (in conjunction with Heaven Can Wait Animal Society)
- Re-Entry, assisting participants with skills to reenter society
- Seeking Safety, a therapeutic program for traumatized women
- Sex Offenders Treatment Program
- STARS/New Light, a 120-bed intensive in-house substance abuse program
- Survivors Overcoming Abuse and Rape
- Thinking for a Change
- Toastmasters Program
- Turning Point, providing occupational and financial management training
- Victim Impact
FMWCC inmates are provided healthcare through the Nevada Department of Correction’s Medical Division, but there have been controversies:
In 2002, an inmate had her ankles shackled shortly before and after giving birth.1 In 2015, the prison denied a heavily pregnant inmate furlough to finish her pregnancy at a hospital.2 And in 2017, an inmate reported being unable to receive Hepatitis C treatment.3
8. History
FMWCC was designed and built by the Corrections Corporation of America and was opened in September of 1997. The Nevada Department of Corrections took control of the prison on October 1, 2004.
Florence McClure was a prisoner advocate, though the prison did not officially take her name until 2007.
FMWCC currently employs 171 people. At any time, Silver State Industries currently employs 15 to 80 inmates.
Call a Nevada criminal defense attorney…
Do you have a loved one incarcerated at Florence McClure or elsewhere in Nevada? Call our Las Vegas criminal defense attorneys. We may be able to review the case and file an appeal or other post-conviction relief such as a motion to withdraw a guilty plea.
Go back to our Nevada jail and prison information page.
Legal References
- “Female prisoner in labour ‘forced to wear shackles in ambulance on way to hospital and chained ten minutes after delivering daughter’“, Reuters (June 29, 2012).
- Ken Ritter, “Nevada judge denies pregnant inmate furlough ahead of birth,” Associated Press (August 6, 2015).
- Ben Botkin, “Some inmates frustrated by lack of treatment for hepatitis C,” Associated Press (January 13, 2017).