It depends on the terms of release. The parole office, where the parolee will report can answer your questions.
No, once a felon always a felon.
If you're convicted of a felony, you become a felon. You're a felon while you're serving your sentence, and you remain a felon after you've served your sentence. If you end up being acquitted of a felony crime you'd previously been convicted of, then you can legitimately be called an ex-felon, provided you don't have any other prior felony convictions on your record.
In that case, without a stable residence to go to, they will probably not be paroled.
as long as its not out of the state you live in
The single only way to become an ex-felon is to be acquitted of the charges. The term ex-felon is almost always misused. It DOES NOT mean a felon who is now out of prison. Once you are a felon, you are ALWAYS a felon unless you are acquitted, which means that you are, at some point after being found guilty, proven to be innocent.
No. A convicted felon is a convicted felon regardless of WHERE they go or live in the US. Note: Use caution if you're even thinking about it! The federal punishment for felon in possession of a firearm is a minimum of 15 years in federal prison.
Can you go to school for nursing if you are a convicted felon?
You only go around once in life means you only have one life to live, you only live once.
Can a is felon go to Canada if they marry a Canadian citizen
They also become a felon and go to prison.
The felon needs to ask their parole officer how to do it.
Yes.