The standard is thirty days.
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.
Parole boards do not try cases, therefore those they see are no longer defendants. If a parole case is "dismissed," the offender is "released" immediately after his hearing to return to his "house" (That is cell, room, cubical, bed--the place he is housed).
Parole curfews last for the length of the parole or until it is lifted by the Parole Officer.
The boy was sentenced to a long parole.
Life without parole in Montana is natural life.
The PO doesn't grant or arrange hearings. They report the violation(s) to their office which notifies the court. The court THEN arranges a hearing, or issues a warrant for your re-arrest, whichever is more appropriate.
The sentence was 20 years to life. He first became eligible for parole in 2000 and was denied. He is now entitled to a parole hearing every two years. Chapman has been denied parole six times, by a three-member board, in October 2000, October 2002, October 2004, October 2006, August 2008 and most recently September 2010.
51 years
what does signing a deferral mean if on parole and got arrested
You are on parole for the prescribed period of parole, that is until you are discharged. This may seem confusing, but it is not intended to be. Parole is typically a matter of two years. It can be as little as one, but rarely is. It can also be for periods of five years, ten years, and is some instances life. But, once a parolee is discharged from parole, the period of parole and the jurisdiction of the DOC (Department of Corrections) over the offender are over.
Min is 3 years
15 to 25 years with parole.