The term of their parole is given to the parolee at the time they are released on parole. If they satisfactorily complete their parole they will be notified of that fact by their Parole Officer or the court.
Ask the parole agent, if you are sentanced and or released and are just waiting for the hold to be lifted, then your just waiting for your parole agent to release the hold and your free to go. my boyfriend has a parole hold, so if he goes to jail, and charges are dropped, he has to wait for his Parole agent to lift the hold.
unsure but my fiance is on parole and probation he was violated for drugs. He has gone to court and given credit for time served and ordered released but he cant because he now has his parole hold. His parole officer will be taking hold off as we speak?
Parole curfews last for the length of the parole or until it is lifted by the Parole Officer.
A parole hold is generally the authorization to detain a person suspected of violating condition(s) of their parole. Parole holds are governed by federal and state laws, which vary by state. For example, under California laws, a parole officer can impose a hold if the officer concludes that there is reasonable cause to believe the parolee has violated a condition of his parole and is a danger to himself, a danger to the person or property of another, or may abscond. A parole hold authorizes the detention of a parolee charged with an alleged parole violation pending a parole revocation hearing. The parole officer is not required to obtain an arrest warrant prior to placing the hold and taking the parolee into custody. Within seven days after detention pursuant to the parole hold, the parolee must be notified of the reasons for the hold.
That's up to your parole officer and the parole hearing officer.
Yes and no. They can hold you, but they are not supposed to and if they do you are entitled to compensation.
It's pretty much up to the parole agent. There's such a wide scope that corrections has that they can violate a parolee at will.
72 hours
Yes. If the person was on parole at the time they were taken into custody by authorities he or she can be detained until it is decided if they have violated the terms of their parole or probation. Typically, a parole hold can only be enforced for a limited amount of time. Some states permit no more than thirty days without new criminal charges, some permit as long as ninety days, with or without new criminal charges.
3056pc is a California Code for "Violation if Parole"
Hi, In Texas, when an offender is on parole and gets arrested or charged with a felony crime against the state, parole will put a "no bond" on them until the new charges are resolved. They may have a bond amount set for the new charge, even if you pay that bond, they will not be released.
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