All agencies have their own rules and regulations and it is dependent on the jurisdiction. However, as a general statement of procedure; the PO acts as an investigator - submits his report to the sentencing judge - and the judge will hold a hearing in which he will hear your testimony - after which he will make a ruling as to what action he will take regarding your probation. NOTE: Probation IS a sentence for a crime for which you have already been tried and found guilty. You possessed all your criminal procedure safeguards during the trial - and this heaing on your violation is merely a procedural hearing on whether you will lose your privileged sentence and be remanded to jail.
You can, but if you do your parole officer could revoke your parole and send you back to prison. The conditions of your parole on criminal violations is clear, none.
It is totally at their discretion.
Parole Officer can file a request with the court to have your parole revoked. You will be required to appear in court, will be appointed an attorney if necessary, and the Parole Officer will admit evidence to prove the violation. The court can revoke your parole and you can be required to serve the balance of the prison sentence (if originally imposed). It is likely that the court will continue the parole terms in your case, and require you comply with additional terms. Recommendation is to enroll yourself in a drug rehabilitation program prior to any court hearings.
It is going to be up to the parole board. It is possible that they will allow him to continue on parole, or will revoke his parole, where he will have to complete his sentence.
no they can not. they can only reccommend it. it is up to the board.
Depends on your parole/probation officer. They may sanction you anywhere from 30-90 days. Was told by one that they can't revoke you for that, but some may get on a power trip and say it is a violation of your rules, and do it anyway.
No, the President does not have the power to revoke someone's citizenship. Citizenship can only be revoked through a legal process, such as a judge's order in a criminal case or renunciation of citizenship by the person themselves.
If YOU are the one who violated, and you believe you are going to be revoked - I wouldn't write a letter of explanation - I would write a request to appear in person to plead your case. It would probably make a better impression.
Chances are in this case your probation officer would revoke your probation and you would have to serve time in jail.
While your question is unclear, the answer is irrefutable for all questions related to the parole board: The parole board has ultimate authority over the parolee and nearly every aspect of his life. If the parole board choose to, for instance, revoke your parole because you are directed to stand on one foot and bark the National Anthem like a dog and you refuse, you have only one recourse...return to prison. Once this is understood, and the parolee determines to "Lay Down" and stay off the radar (by simply living right) the problems encountered with the parole office will be dramatically reduced.
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.
It depends on the circumstances. If you are found in violation of the terms of your probation or parole due to a motion to revoke on misdemeanors, you could face consequences such as fines, community service, or imprisonment. However, the severity of the punishment will vary based on the specific details of the case and the judge's ruling.