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.
as long as its not out of the state you live in
In that case, without a stable residence to go to, they will probably not be paroled.
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
The felon needs to ask their parole officer how to do it.
They also become a felon and go to prison.
Yes.