Within thirty days of being violated, the parolee will be reviewed by a committee of the parole board for the violation to determine if a violation did occur and how serious that violation is. However, in most states, the parolee will be reincarcerated until the review takes place. Real answer: Revocation Hearing.
It all depends on what state your in, what your conditions of parole are & what happened leading up to the alleged assault.
The parolee is violated.
A parolee or probationer can be violated and returned to incarceration any time they fail a urine test, be it the first test to establish a baseline or the last test given on the final day of reporting. The conditions of your release state "no illegal drug use." There is no starting point, and the end point only comes after you are discharged.
A parolee can be violated by being in close proximity of the commission of the crime of simple assault. So, yes.
From the US Department of Justice website:After a parolee is released, may any of the conditions be changed? Can additional ones be imposed? The Probation Officer or the Commission itself may propose changing or adding to the conditions. The parolee will be notified of any such proposal and will be allowed up to ten days to make any written comments to the Commission. A form for this purpose is made available to the parolee, and it can be used for comments. The parolee may write directly to the Commission (with a copy to his or her Probation Officer) if he or she wishes to have any of the conditions amended or deleted.That looks like a "yes". There are also catch-all clauses in the general conditions of parole that state that the parolee "shall cooperate fully with those responsible for [the parolee's] supervision" and "shall carry out the instructions of [the parolee's] Supervision Officer".
He may find a residence anywhere; unless his parole stipulates conditions on where he can stay.
An act or a failure to act by a parolee that does not conform to the conditions of his/her parole (or probation).
The parolee is arrested and his parole is violated. He is returned to prison and serves his term until his next parole date comes up. Understand, these people make the rules. Learn the rules, lay down, and do what you must to get off paper.
A parole hold is generally the authorization to detain a person suspected of violating condition(s) of their parole. Parole holds are governed by federal and state laws, which vary by state. For example, under California laws, a parole officer can impose a hold if the officer concludes that there is reasonable cause to believe the parolee has violated a condition of his parole and is a danger to himself, a danger to the person or property of another, or may abscond. A parole hold authorizes the detention of a parolee charged with an alleged parole violation pending a parole revocation hearing. The parole officer is not required to obtain an arrest warrant prior to placing the hold and taking the parolee into custody. Within seven days after detention pursuant to the parole hold, the parolee must be notified of the reasons for the hold.
Yes, Of course.
NOT a good thing. It is VERY likely that their parole may be revoked and they could be remanded back to prison.
A PO may not directly "regulate" a parolee's children, but the PO may "regulate" the contact the parolee has with his children.