Unable to determine what the questioner is asking. The wording sounds like it is being quoted from a notation on a document, and the wording makes no sense.
Adam-12 - 1968 The Parole Violator 4-17 was released on: USA: 26 January 1972
For parole violation, a violator can be immediately sent back to prison to finish their sentence, or have their parole term extended. They could also have certain restrictions placed on their parole such as curfew or electronic tagging, however all punishments depend on severity and the jurisdiction one is in.
Parole violations do not have a limit. A violator can be picked up and returned to prison to finish their sentence at any time.
what are the charges for a mistiminor on a person that has two year parole
In many states, parole violators may be returned to prison (at the discretion of the parole agent) for up to thirty days, during which time the parole board will make a determination regarding the parolee's case.
It means the jurisdiction of your case has shifted from state to federal agencies. As a parole violator, only state authorities would take an active part in attempting to locate you. As a fugitive, the FBI and US Marshalls become involved.
To report a parole or probation violation, you should call the police department or the local parole/probation office. Tell them what is going on and they will handle it. Most likely the violator would be arrested.
Well, you could be charged with aiding and abetting. If the violation was a new felony, you could be charged in connection with that crime, tried, convicted, and sentenced to prison.
Different states have different rules, but most are similar and there is no reason Lousiana should be different.If you fall behind on your parole supervisory fees or other fees assessed to you while on parole, typically the parole office has two options: extend your period of parole to give you opportunity to pay it; or, release you from parole and turn the outstanding balance over to a collection agency. Indebtedness is not a criminal offense.
It can be called paroleFreedictionary.com defines parole as "The conditionalrelease of a person convicted of a crime prior to the expiration of that ..."
Not unless you are required to do so by law. Parole stipulations are not typically laws, they are administrative rules. While they carry with them the authority of law, they do so only for those who are required to live under them, the parolee. The decision to report a parole violator is entirely yours. It is a moral decision you must make.Parole stipulations, the conditions that make a parolee a parole violator if he breaks them, are not criminal statues; that is they are not laws.So, unless the violation committed is actually an instance of criminal activity, there is nothing with which you can be charged. If the violation is criminal activity, and you neither report it nor do you provide information to investigating law enforcement officers, you could then be charged with Impeding and Investigation or worse.
Violator - comics - was created in 1992.