You will be apprehended. Eventually. There is no statute of limitations.
You will be extradited back to the jurisdiction from which you absconded.
You will be returned to prison where you will likely serve the remainder of your sentence.
You will then serve the sentence you received for absconding or escape, depending on which you were charged with.
Fpr the state of California see below
You will have a warrant in NCIC. So if you get pulled over or arrested, you will have a parole hold. They will eventually send you back to the parole revocation unit assigned to your parole office. You will await a Parole Revocation Hearing. The maximum you can get is 12 months for any type of parole violation. Absounding is technical violation. If you weren't actually arrested on a new crime, the norm is 4 - 9 months with half time if you are eligible for half time (not a violent offender). At the end of your violation time you will be returned to parole.
If it is necessary for you to report an absconder, you may contact the local Parole Office and ask to speak to the Parole Officer of the abscondee.
The absconder would be arrested for a Parole Violation. The absconder would most likely spend the rest of their sentence in a state prison (unless the judge specifies otherwise), and may face additional charges.
what is a TIS absconder
An absconder from probation is someone that stopped reporting to their probation officer as directed. They are no longer making themselves available for supervision and most likely a warrant is active for their arrest.
hells no. never.. i had felony warrants from cali and was in wi and they never wanted me ever.. i got wisconsin new cases too and every time cali said non exterdiatable
The abscondee will be detained by that state, who will notify the state of supervision. The supervising state will file for extradition, with which the detaining state will cooperate. The absconder will then be extradited back to the supervisong state where he will be charged with either absconding, fleeing and alluding, or escape. He will do a portion or all of his remaining sentence, and then satisfy the sentence of the second charge. In the case of being charged, usually a parolee is not charged with another offence. He is merely arrested on a technicality of absconding , failure to report, failure to pay fines and anything else they can dream up.(failure to attend req. classes etc) The parole sentence can sometimes "run out" before the offender is caught. The parole board can someteimes "toll" the sentence which means that the time credited towards the sentence stops running until the absconder is captured. In some cases the parole board can decline to pick up the abscondee due to budget concerns. (ex. spending $3000 to transfer a parole absconder from 4000 miles away when he only has days left on his sentence)
It depends on the terms of parole, severity of the offense, and the laws of the state. Most likely, the parole will be revoked and the offender will be returned to prison to complete sentence.
This would be at the parole board's discretion and can happen anytime. Usually if serving a long sentence (20+ years) after the first parole hearing parole may be denied. A parole date can also be taken if the inmate behaves very poorly in prison.
The Illinois department of correction can extend a person's parole. They has happen in some cases.
http://www.dc.state.fl.us/Absconder/
The defendant decided to abscond from the courthouse before the trial.
I think you will you will be re-united with your old friends.