Contrary to all the BS you find from purported know-it-alls, yes, you most certainly can travel outside the USA while on parole. I speak from experience of course, on state parole in NY. The Department of State has issues passports to virtually anyone, except if you have had charges of importing drugs into the states within the last 7 years. Traveling out of the country while on Parole is no different than traveling out of the state while on parole. All that is required aside from submitting the dates of departure/return, is for the parolee to ask permission from their parole officer, state the purpose of the visit, and provide address and telephone number of where you can be reached. The country must have US extradition policy and of course permit a felon in. At the end of the day, persons with felonies can go wherever they want. They simply have to ask first.
Another common myth about felons is that they cannot vote. This also is BS. Yes we can, yes we do.
No. It is definitely a violation (unless, for some reason, your parole officer decides to let you). And, remember, using a passport leaves a record, so even if you were to "get away with it" at the time, you could be charged after the fact based on records.
Probably not.
Your question is vague. If you mean with a current parole violation, not likely; the DOC should be there to pick you up shortly, and even if not, it isn't likely that your PO would release you to move, nor approve you leaving the state, and if you left without that approval, that's another parole violation or perhaps a new label--absconder or fugitive.
If you mean with a violation on your record after completing parole, no employer is ever going to know, not one who would hire a formerly convicted felon in the first place.
Unless the provisions of your parole do not allow it, or being out of state prevents you from being supervised by your P.O., you shuold be able to. Ask your P.O.
Yes, under Interstate Compact; however the approval and release process can take much more time, six months to a year longer.
It is probably a violation of your parole. Check with your parole officer and avoid getting sent back to prison.
Unless your probation explicitly allows you to leave the state, you would be in violation of your parole and liable to being remanded to jail to serve the remainder of your sentence.
Parole is defined differently in each state. You'll need to work out the details with your parole officer and depending on the offense and your status, you may need to contact MD.
It depends on the state in which you are wanting to work in along with experience and requirements(certifications) for each individual state
They will providing the charge is a felony which it would be. Depending on what the charge is, then MD may not be in a big hurry to do it since it often involves a lot of money and both states work on it together.
Type your answer here... can you get section 8 in one state and work in another state.
Parole officers typically work for government agencies, such as the Department of Corrections or local probation and parole departments. They work primarily in office settings, but they also conduct field visits to meet with parolees in the community, monitor their compliance with parole conditions, and provide support and guidance.
Any person living in one state can work in another state.
Not knowing you were breaking a law is no excuse. They could get you for violation of parole or just stick you with the ticket.
You probably won't get the job. Or be found in violation of your parole. Adulterating the test by finding work arounds is tantamount to admitting that you are guilty of drug use.
The labor laws of the state in which you work are the ones that apply to you. If a company is headquartered in one state, you live in another state, and work in still another state, the state you work in has jurisdiction.
If employment is a condition of your parole, then it can be required of you.
This is a state by state and case by case basis. The trend is moving toward not at all. The previously convicted are seen increasingly as second class citizens regardless of the time elapsed since their conviction, and incarceration and release.