Yes. Many rental apps will ask this question anyway. And, your sentence is public information so there is no reason your landlord couldn't find out anyway.
Yes.
If employment is a condition of your parole, then it can be required of you.
Report periodically and pee in a cup.
a parole officer is a person you report to when you get out of jail or prison they make sure you are acting right and getting your life on track the right way , makin sure your not doing drugs , carrying wepons etc. whatever your parole terms are
I would be very surprised if LPNs didn't make more than parole officers.
A parole officer, in the state of California, can be paid as little as $24,000 a year and as much as $55,000 per year. The rate of pay is dependent upon several factors.
Parole officers for the US Average make more. PO: $50,378 MA: $28,705
A parole officer is an officer of the court who meets with people after they get out of prison or jail. Parole is a supervised monitoring of individuals after they leave prison, including making sure people have a job, stay off of drugs and alcohol, and keep a curfew set by the court. The parole officer monitors and checks a person, sometimes just by meetings in their office, but sometimes by checking a person in their home. A parole officer has authority to arrest a person and put them back in jail if they break the rules of parole, which are the conditions for staying out of jail.
It depends on the terms of the parole. If those terms state that you must not leave the county, then there is your answer. But before you go anywhere, check with your parole officer to make sure you don't do something to violate your parole.
Yes. Parole officers do not necessarily HAVE to be assigned to your particular case to supervise you. That would be like saying that a police officer can't make an arrest unless it is on the street he normally patrols.
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.
Yes, parole officer are law enforcement officers with full police powers in NJ. The difference is their day to day duties. Parole officers primary job duty is to supervise parolees under parole supervision. That means to make sure the person under supervision is complying with the conditions imposed by the State Parole Board before they were released. Most parole officers spend their time filing administartive charges (parole violations) on violators, but at times new charges (family, friends, or on the parolee) are unavoidable.