Only if the chief tells them too.
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.
Well if they wanted to I supposed they could.
Parole Officers - 2013 TV was released on: USA: 2013
Parole officers seldom violate their parolees.
To figure out how much time is left on parole.
Rank is irrelevant in this case, because parole officers and police detectives work for different organizations. A police detective usually works for a police department, and a parole officer works for the Dept. of Corrections or a Parole and Probation agency.
If you are charged with a federal crime, found guilty, and sentenced to a federal prison - if you are subsequently released on parole, it will be FEDERAL PAROLE, and you will be supervised by federal parole officers.
Parole officers in Maine look like plain clothes cops---they dress however they want. I don't know if its the same everywhere. I think it is though because parole officers dressing in normal clothes gives them an edge--they come knocking and your dumb roomate thinks it's just a normal person and ANSWERS the door. If parole officers wore a uniform, you'd see them coming a mile away and shut off the lights and close the shades. :)
Primarily by officers of the court called probation/parole officers.
If the Parole Officers in your state are classified as Law Enforcement Officers (they ARE in most states) yes, in the performance of their official duties, they may.
no
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.