If the person on parole has access to the entire house - yes, they can.
The whole house. If he smells marijuana, he has reasonable suspicion. As the supervising officer of a probee, he has police authority. With this he can conduct the search. If he finds anything in the search (be it a single seed) he has probable cause and can take the probee into custody. He can additionally hold any other persons in the house for law enforcement and affect arrest when they arrive. Don't poke the bear!
They can it just depends on the chargers they have.
Are you on parole or probation? If so, yes. If you are not on parole or probation, do the police have a search warrant? If not, I guess I wouldn't let them in my house in the first place. If they do have a search warrant, yes.
Generally, yes. But be wary of harrassment. YEP... As a parolee you lose your rights to privacy in your residence. A parole officer can do unscheduled searches without warrants at any time to make sure you are following the rules. It is a condition that you agree to when you go on parole. Know that a regular officer is sometimes with the parole officer when they search, but the regular officer cannot participate in the search though. If a regular officer participates in the search anything he/she finds may be thrown out because the right to search only extends to the parole/probation officer.
Law enforcement officials cannot search a house with a warrant on suspicion alone. The law is specific in that there must be some probable cause in suspecting a violation of the law exists. Without probable cause or an eye-witness, there is nothing but suspicion.
The parolee signed a waver of rights when he met his parole officer for the first time. Essentially, in order to stay free, the parolee is made to give the parole officer that right.
Parole House - 2012 was released on: USA: September 2012
The government, in speaking about law enforcement officials, need a warrent issued by a judge to search a home. Good cause to search is normally needed to obtain a warrent.
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.
Yes. Exceptions are almost always made for family members.
If you are the non-parolee roomate or housemate of a parolee, all common areas are open for search. Any area that is yours alone is not subject to search. However, anything you refuse to a parole officer, in reality, reflects upon the parolee he supervises.
It is at the discretion of the parole board. Anything from no sanction to incarceration for the rest of your sentence.