It may be a a space issue. It is not unusual for prisons to house locally sentenced inmates or local jails to house felony prisoners. Some (many?) prison and jail systems house each other's inmates on a space available basis, so that they do not fall afoul of court decisions which limit the number of inmates that they can house without exceeding a court-imposed limit.
Inmates typically are notified of the parole decision within thirty days of the hearing. It is possible in some situations for this to take longer, but typically the inmate is notified of this as well.
It depends on the circumstances as to whether or not an inmate can be held in prison after his parole date. On average, once the parole date comes, the inmate is released.
Depends on several factors. For example, if the inmate is arrested on new charges in the county where he is being held, then he will not get credit for time served in the county where the outstanding charges are and for which he is being held. Also, if the person being held for another county is on probation or parole in that county, he will not get credit for time served while waiting to be transferred. Finally, IF the inmate has NOT been charged with new charges in the county where he was picked up and held for the other county, and he is NOT on probation and parole on the county with the hold, then it will be up to the judge who presides over his case in the county he is being held for. Once he is transferred there, that judge can either give credit or not give credit for time served in another county while waiting to be transferred. The good news is that in the vast majority of cases, the judge does give credit if the other conditions above do not apply.
In most cases, place them in a box. Address the package asyou would any mail for the inmate. On the outside of the box, clearly label, "PAROLE CLOTHING." Then mail it.
It depends on the terms of the parole. If those terms state that you must not leave the county, then there is your answer. But before you go anywhere, check with your parole officer to make sure you don't do something to violate your parole.
It depends on which event occurred first. If the parole was granted BEFORE the transfer decision was made, then the parole would take precedence. An order of the court will always take precedence over an internal jail administrative decision.
You don't. There is no federal parole.
According to the site below, it means an inmate has been granted parole but does not have an approved home plan.
The question is a bit obscure, but I will do my best to answer. An inmate who is granted a parole may remain on parole the length of his original sentence. For instance: an inmate who is sentence to a maximum of twenty years, who only serves five years in prison, may be placed on parole for the remaining fifteen years if the parole board determines it would be beneficial to do so.
Can an inmate being released from a Prison in Florida transfer his parole to Georgia? I understand this inmate will be on house arrest for two (2) years however, he does not have a permanent address in Florid. He could live with his mother in Georgia.
Depends on who the parolee is and if he has proven himself trustworthy.
He will receive a letter within thirty to sixty days.