Under certain conditions, yes, a judge may alter a previous sentence which could modify incarceration time and parole.
Parole board members do not have the authority to override a sentencing judge's decision; their role is to evaluate an inmate's suitability for parole based on behavior, rehabilitation, and risk assessment. While they can grant or deny parole, they operate within the framework set by the original sentence and the law. If a judge imposes a specific sentence, including any conditions, the parole board must adhere to that when making parole decisions.
Yes and no. If the sentencing judge mandated a period of parole, then no one but that judge or one from a higher court can override or modify that sentence. However, being under the supervision of the CDCR or any state's DOC, the period of parole is often under their purview. As an inmate, you are a ward of the state. As such they can determine how you serve your sentence. If your sentence was mandated by judge, and the DOC modifies what the judge ordered, you have the right to judicial review. However, should you choose to do this, your parole could be revoked and the DOC could enforce your entire sentence...incarcerated.
Based on the information provided, the judge is the lawyer's father, as the lawyer's father is a police officer. Therefore, the judge's son, who is the lawyer, has a father who is a police officer, making the judge the lawyer's grandfather.
Yes. My husband is currently on unsupervised parole.
When an inmate is taken before the parole board, they can be accepted or denied for parole. When they are placed on parole, the parole board will assign a parole officer to monitor that person. The parolee is required to follow state mandated conditions as well as conditions that are required for their specific crimes.
My lawyer told me it is possible to get off PRS in NY early. He told me once half of the total supervision time was completed, a request can be put in to the sentencing judge to have PRS terminated early. Since PRS is court mandated with the sentence, parole can not let you off early. It has to be done by the judge with the parole officers consent. I am almost half way through my PRS so I will be contacting my lawyer again soon to have him put in the request to the judge. I am interested to hear if anyone else has been successful with this as I have never heard of it being done before other than from my lawyer. I am pretty sure that my lawyer knows what he is talking about with this though because he is also a judge.
Behave, and POSSIBLY your parole officer will give a favorable recommendation to the judge who sentenced you.
The Judge must be female so the lawyers father is the cop
Judge
The lawyer's dad would be the judge (u made me sit here for a straight 5 hours tryna figure this out i still dont know if this is right is it?
Yes, a lawyer can transition into becoming a judge by being appointed or elected to a judicial position.