Generally, yes. But be wary of harrassment.
YEP... As a parolee you lose your rights to privacy in your residence. A parole officer can do unscheduled searches without warrants at any time to make sure you are following the rules. It is a condition that you agree to when you go on parole. Know that a regular officer is sometimes with the parole officer when they search, but the regular officer cannot participate in the search though. If a regular officer participates in the search anything he/she finds may be thrown out because the right to search only extends to the parole/probation officer.
No, the parole officers responsibility only extends to the living and working space of the parolee. If however the parolee is residing at this home in any way, say a weeks visit, he may have the authority to conduct a walk through, especially if the parolee has no other place of residence.
Yes. Any individual under supervision of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Parole programs are subject to search of their person and property at any given moment. This is a condition of Parole in most states
A parolee can certainly be searched for the same reasons as other citizens. If your question refers to "surprise inspections" of parolees in their home or on the street, the Supreme Court has recently upheld laws permitting such searches. Currently, only California has such a law, but other states might follow suit in the near future.
No, law enforcement officer do not have the right in any state to enter any home without a warrant, probable cause, or an emergent need to enter to protect the life of someone inside. It matters not that the person inside is on parole or not. Being on parole does not suspend ALL of the parolee's Civil Rights.
However, the parole agent cannot be denied entrance if it is the parolee's home of record. And, if the law enforcement officers are in the company of the PO, they may enter too at his request.
do parole officers have the right to search my home,if i have a parolee living with me
Yes, the conditions of your parole will "usually" allow a search of your home, or area under your control, without a search warrant. Read the terms of your parole to be sure.
Not without permission from your parole officer.
Not without violating the conditions of your parole. You must comply with any lawful order given by your parole officer, and collecting a DNA sample, is a lawful order.
The duration of The Parole Officer is 1.55 hours.
The Parole Officer was created on 2001-08-10.
The salary of a parole officer will vary depending on experience and where they are employed. The average parole officer salary is $52,343 per year.
Yes. As a parolee, you have limited rights. A condition of your parole is to allow searches. Sorry
no if she is not under supervision they can't but if someone else is on parole they can
Parole curfews last for the length of the parole or until it is lifted by the Parole Officer.
To become a parole officer you need a degree in either psychology, criminology or sociology.
That's up to your parole officer and the parole hearing officer.
if you dont have to pay your parole fee will you get locked up
You don't. A parole officer is not a law enforcement officer. The parole officer is a supervising agent. If you have evidence that someone on parole or off has committed a crime of any type, contact law enforcement, give the evidence you have to them, and let the system take care of it.