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".
Yes, however if the parolee does not have the permission (preferably written) of his Parole Officer, it would not be advisable.
Typically not without the approval of the PO of the current parolee.
Want to know what to do about a parole officer that is tyring to do everything to put someone back in jail. he has done nothing wrong and this guy is trying everything to violate him.
Well she probably could do it, but if she did you would be able to report her to the principle most likely.
Most likely not, but there are strict rules about avoiding the circumstances of past crimes or associating with people that will encourage you to commit crime, so if your potential spouse is a criminal or someone who has a bad influence on you, there could be repercussions. Also, if the original crime was sexual in nature and the object of that crime is the potential spouse, especially if there is any hint of coercion or power games, then of course it would affect parole.
Tell someone that will help you, And they will be punished
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.
Doctor Massage Therapist Professional Athlete Police Officer
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.
to contact something or someone to contact something or someone
I am 53 years old, I am on parole, homeless, jobless and without any money. How does someone like myself qualify gor a gov. grant? how can i qualify gor a gov. grant being a parolee, homeless,jobless?
If it is necessary for you to report an absconder, you may contact the local Parole Office and ask to speak to the Parole Officer of the abscondee.