If accompanied by or at the direction of your probation officer, any law enforcement officer may search your home. On probation, you are still in custody. It is only the conditions of that custody that are altered. Probation is a conditional release, and one of the standard conditions is that you, your residence, and your vehicle are subject to periodic and potentially unannounced search.
Yes, they can do it without giving prior warning as well.
When a probation officer visits a house, sometimes he feels he might be in danger. Sometimes he is dealing with a person he feels is a dangerous criminal. Sometimes he wants backup. After all, good honest law abiding citizens are not on probation. Crooks, thieves, robbers, and murderers are on probation. Some of those people and their friends are dangerous. As a result, sometimes probation officers have police officers work with them.
Yes.
This depends on what type of house arrest you're under. House arrest administered by the local sheriffs office can't help yourself incarceration. In that particular case, the sheriffs office can enter to your house as many times as they need to, to ensure you are complying with their conditions. If your house arrest is a form of probation, then only your probation officer and their team may enter your house as often as they need to, to ensure you are complying with those conditions.
Theoretically yes: a probation officer can still come to your house or visit your workplace regardless of what type of probation you are on. However, in most states if you were placed on administrative probation this normally doesn't happen. Administrative probation basically means you are still subject to your terms and conditions of probation but are not being supervised by a probation officer. If you violate any of the standard conditions of administrative probation, it's the same as violating your probation if you were supervised. However, even under those circumstances, you could still get a visit from a probation officer, although that is extremely rare: probation officers have their own caseloads to deal with.
Your mother needs to file a motion to modify.
he would go to jail or it depends on what the probation officer says to that person and how bad he violated his probation and what he did cause if its serious he would get put in jail or if it ain't serious he could go on house arrest and it all depends on what the probation officer says and what the court says to the probation officer and him and even though its a miner thing he could still get locked up for it
Not code officers but that may depend on the municipality. However if someone calls the police or the code officer suspects criminal activity and calls the police, than the police may have probable cause to enter.
Locked In - House - was created on 2009-03-30.
Your sentence: Joy was locked out of the house. Joy is a girl. was locked is the verb out of the house is the clause. Out of the house means she was outside of the house, not inside. If you lock your keys inside the car, you are outside the car and locked out. If the school doors are locked and you are outside, you can't go into the school.
no, if u violate probation it will b revoked by the judge due to ur probation officers request---known as an m.t.r.---motion to revoke.after the revocation is finalized there will b a warrant 4 ur arrest. then they will still need a warrant 2 enter ur house w/out ur permission or they would need 2 c u flee n2 said house w/proof that u r who they belive u 2 b and proof that u r a fugitive.--------------------Added: Not enough information was disclosed about the situation to give an answer.Are you actually referring to your Probation Officer and not the police?PO's are ALLOWED to check the on their "clients" and where they live.If it was the police - WHY did they come to your house?Did you commit, or are you suspected of committing, another offense?Unless they were executing a warrant or a pick-up order, the police do not enforce the provisions of your probation sentence.Too much is unknown to give you a complete answer.
No you are not allowed to have a job unless your probation lets you. Everytime you leave the house you have to call your probation officer for permission.
yes any room in the residence can be searched if the parolee has reasonable access to it. If your room is locked and your room mate does not have a key then the parole officer can not search the room.