Yes. People sentenced to life in prison are often paroled. When this happens, they are on parole for life. There is no such thing as "lifetime probation."
You can serve on a jury in CA if you are a felon as long as you are not on probation or parole.
No, if you are on probation you have done something illegal, and can therefore not serve jury duty
VERY UNLIKELY. One of the provisions of most probation and parole requiremnts is that the individual not be around those types of activities.
Better check with your parole officer. You may have to serve out the rest of your sentance.
Parole is in essence an inmate being allowed to serve their time in the community. All parolees have been to prison. Probation which is an alternative to prison is different even though some felons who have topped a prison sentence are granted probation on a new conviction.
Probation and parole officers in Australia serve an active role in recommending community based supervision to Magistrates/Judges. They also make recommendations to parole boards to determine whether a prisoner should be granted parole. Probation officers are expected to not only supervise an offender while he/she performs community service, but to also develop the community service plans themselves.
Yes, they can be arrested for contacting the victim. If they were released before serving their entire sentence, they might have to serve the rest of that sentence. Plus, they might have to serve more time for parole violation/s.
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.
Not a good idea. The one on parole could be in trouble if the other person has any priors and is actually an ex con, which they may not tell the truth about. Ignorance may not help. The one on probation would definitely be violating and have to serve what was sentenced.
Did you mean to say that you were released on PAROLE? Regardless. . . if you violate the provisions of your release you can be returned to confinement to serve the remainder of your sentence.
If parole were abolished, there would be a need for an alternative way to supervise individuals released from prison. Probation could be one such alternative, as it allows for community-based supervision of offenders without requiring them to serve additional time in prison. This would likely result in an increase in the use of probation as a way to manage and monitor individuals reentering society.
Parole differs from probation in that parolees, unlike probationers, have been incarcerated. Parole supported the concept of indeterminate sentencing, which held that a prisoner could earn early release through good behavior and self-imprisonment.