No
You may send any correspondence "Care Of" the parole office to which the parolee reports. His parole officer will see that the mail is received.
ADDED: Sorry, but the other answer is not totally correct. There is no "allowing" about it. With 'probable cause' the police may search you at any time without anyone's permission. You need to review your parole agreement, but it is likely that he can allow others to search whether or not he is there.
Generally, yes. But be wary of harrassment. YEP... As a parolee you lose your rights to privacy in your residence. A parole officer can do unscheduled searches without warrants at any time to make sure you are following the rules. It is a condition that you agree to when you go on parole. Know that a regular officer is sometimes with the parole officer when they search, but the regular officer cannot participate in the search though. If a regular officer participates in the search anything he/she finds may be thrown out because the right to search only extends to the parole/probation officer.
Any violation of any criminal statute, felony or misdemeanor, is a violation of parole.
The answer to this all depends on the specific conditions of the parole agreement. If it states in the agreement that only the parole agent (if agent is the only one listed) can conduct monthly home searches, then the officer cannot conduct a search unless the homeowner consents to the search. It likely says in the agreement that the parole agency, any law enforcement officer, and/or anyone it also would choose can conduct a search. Read the Agreement! It is a legally binding contract that was mutually agreed to by the multiple parties involved in it.
yes any room in the residence can be searched if the parolee has reasonable access to it. If your room is locked and your room mate does not have a key then the parole officer can not search the room.
No you can not join on parole, on probation or any fines not paid.
Any police officer or sheriff.
The answer to this all depends on the specific conditions of the parole agreement. If it states in the agreement that only the parole agent (if agent is the only one listed) can conduct monthly home searches, then the officer cannot conduct a search unless the homeowner consents to the search. It likely says in the agreement that the parole agency, any law enforcement officer, and/or anyone it also would choose can conduct a search. Read the Agreement! It is a legally binding contract that was mutually agreed to by the multiple parties involved in it.
If you are the non-parolee roomate or housemate of a parolee, all common areas are open for search. Any area that is yours alone is not subject to search. However, anything you refuse to a parole officer, in reality, reflects upon the parolee he supervises.
Parole and Probation Officers (in any State in the United States) have the right to ask you to take any kind of drug test at any time.
Non-revocable parole!! What's the point? Just because you are on parole doesn't mean that you are immune from arrest for ANY offenses.