It can vary. Contact the Dept. of Parole and Probation for your state and ask their employment requirements.
Depends on where you are located in the country. I'm in a small town in West Texas and have been a probation officer for 5 years now and only earning 34K per year. I work for the County. Federal Probation Officers make much more.
Only if you manage to be released on some type of probation, then, yes, you do.
no they can not. they can only reccommend it. it is up to the board.
No. A Probation Officer is not a Law Enforcement Officer. Only Law Enforcement Officers are required to give the Miranda Warning.
No, a juvenile probation officer cannot make you sell your car. Probation officers can set conditions related to the juvenile's behavior and adherence to the terms of their probation, but they cannot force the juvenile to sell their car.
2 years probation mean you will have to report to a probation officer weekly for 2 months and if you get clean urines for 2 months you go 2 times a moth and if no problem's occur then you only have to once a month but it you violate probation you will have a warrant issued for your rearrest and when you got to court they will most likely offer you 50% of your suspended sentence and some more probation. the time you receive you will only have to do 50% of so out of 2 years you will only have 6 months after you complete you will be released on ts and placed under paroleuntil your sentence is finished or another six months
Not getting busted in the first place is the only way I can think of. If you go on probation, you're going to be tested.
Me and my husband just went on a cruise to Mexico. He is on probation for 10yrs for some pot from 7 years ago. He didnt get a notice from his Probation officer and was never asked about it. We just went. The cruise lines only want people with unpaid warrants.
The only difference is the level of government that they work for. One supervises released violators convicted and sentenced for FEDERAL crimes, the other supervises released violators convicted of STATE crimes.
No, a probation officer does not have the authority to change what was ordered by the court. Court orders can only be modified by the judge who issued them. Probation officers can make recommendations to the court but do not have the power to alter the court's orders.
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.
well in Utah the probation officers can only search the person who is on probation also the probation officer can only search the rooms that the probationer has axcest to they cannot search the probationers wife or girlfriends purse or persons unless he has probable cause to do so and yes that goes for Idaho also