There is nothing illegal about using a prescribed medicine (even if it is narcotic) and nothing illegal about living with a person who uses medicine. If, however, the medicine being used by this roommate has not been prescribed by a doctor, that is a problem.
Typically not without the approval of the PO of the current parolee.
Huh?
That would depend on the parolee's parole officer and the laws of the court and county. If there was no violence in the home, the parole officer could allow the parolee to live at that home. Also, if the parolee is following the requirements of the court, this would make it seem better for him in the eyes of the court.
His roommate Andre and him
penguines
Sometimes it can be awkward to live with a new roomate at first but you get used to it after a while. You may even find that your roommate is interesting and you could become great friends.
If the contract is legal and binding then repo the car. You can hire a repo company.
It depends on the terms of release. The parole office, where the parolee will report can answer your questions.
If you are unrelated then, your roommate. If you are related then your family/immediate family. Hope this helped :)
The same as you would live with any other person. You set boundaries and take appropriate action if the boundaries are crossed.
Tiffany Thornton lives in a apartment in North Hollywood her roommate is Melissa Carcache
They are typically publicly displayed on the states offender information site. They are generally similar but can differ slightly from case to case.