NOT a good thing. It is VERY likely that their parole may be revoked and they could be remanded back to prison.
Within thirty days of being violated, the parolee will be reviewed by a committee of the parole board for the violation to determine if a violation did occur and how serious that violation is. However, in most states, the parolee will be reincarcerated until the review takes place. Real answer: Revocation Hearing.
The parolee is violated.
Yes, Of course.
A PO may not directly "regulate" a parolee's children, but the PO may "regulate" the contact the parolee has with his children.
They will be hunted down and arrested. This is considered fleeing from the law and obstruction of justice.
If it is a term of his/her parole they could be risking going back to prison. They may get a warning, but they may not.
No, a parolee has limited privacy from anyone as long as he is on parole.
The parolee is arrested and his parole is violated. He is returned to prison and serves his term until his next parole date comes up. Understand, these people make the rules. Learn the rules, lay down, and do what you must to get off paper.
In the U.S. YOU are not required to prove your own innocence. If a charge is made against you that cannot be substantiated - then the charge is baseless and 'goes away.'
Typically not without the approval of the PO of the current parolee.
This simply means that a parolee has been put in jail for absconding their parole.
When a parolee fails a drug test just a tiny bit, his parole officer lets him off on the condition parolee reports to drug test immediately afterwards. Parolee's bossman had a talk with parole officer. Suddenly employee cut off all contacts because Parole Officer told employer parolee failed drug test just one time 3 months ago. Does the parole officer have a right to tell employer or did the parole officer violate the parolee's Privacy Right?