Primarily by officers of the court called probation/parole officers.
all 50 states have signed two the compact for the supervision of parolees and probationers and the compact on juveniles
Probationers are under the jurisdiction of the courts and are attempting to avoid the imposition of a suspended prison sentence by complying with the conditions of probation. Parolees are inmates allowed to serve their time in the community and are under the jurisdiction of the Department of Corrections. In some states one agency supervises both types of offenders and in others there are separate probation and parole agencies. I personally supervise a combined caseload of adult felony probationers and parolees.
In general terms it involves how Probationers/Parolees are handled when they violate the conditions of their release.To see the entire law sub-section - see the below link:
In short. Yes. You don't have a right to probation or parole and therefore may be required to agree to waive your 4th amendment rights as a condition of probation or parole. That is common in many states.
The Michigan Department of Corrections has an online searchable database of inmates, probationers, and parolees. You can see their mugshots along with their current location, status, possible release date, parole date, offenses, and any aliases.
The majority of probationers in the United States are:
Approximately 59% of probationers in the US had committed felonies in 2011, according to data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
If the 2010 report has been released I didnt find it; these figures are for 2009, reporting being turned in at the end of 2008: 828,169 people on parole from prison/jail.This does not include the number of convicted criminals on probation, never having served any time behind bars (probationers are sentenced and the sentence suspended with probation terms, assigned a probation officer; if probation is violated, they will then go to prison/jail to serve out the remainder of their sentences). Following are the complete stats:Nearly 5.1 million adults were under community supervision at yearend 2008.the equivalent of about 1 in every 45 adults in the United States.Probationers (4,270,917) represented the majority (84%) of the community supervision population in 2008; parolees (828,169) accounted for a smaller share (16%).The probation (0.9%) and parole (0.9%) populations grew at the same rate during 2008. The probation population increased by 36,446 probationers while the parole population increased by 6,992 parolees during the year.You can see this and other stats on the website Bureau of Justice Stats at http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/index.cfm
No indication is given of the conditions of your probation. Read your papers carefully. Most parolees and probationers are forbidden from consorting with known criminals. If the felon (in this case) has served his time - is released - and has an otherwise currently clean record I would think that it is allowable. Check with your PO to be certain!
You will find a list of parolees in California at large in the link below.
Probably not: caseloads are typically 25 probationers, not 250. You must've inserted a zero or misread zero.
First, you will have to ask the permission of the sentencing court (NY). If they consider it, the first thing they must do is determine whether, or not, PA will accept you for supervision. It costs money to supervise probationers and parolees, and PA may not want to accept any more workload from out of state. Only after PA agrees to accept your supervision, will NY grant you the permission to move.