Yes and no. They can hold you, but they are not supposed to and if they do you are entitled to compensation.
When released on parole, the State of Texas will do a time credit audit to make sure your discharge date was calculated accurately. This may move the discharge date. I know this because it happened to me. My date was set back 3 months due to some back time I was being credited for that I did not serve. I disputed it and got 2 of those months back, so overall I am forced to do 1 extra month on parole.
If you failed to report and a warrant was issued before your discharge date for not reporting then yes. If you were arrested on a new charge that is prosecuted before your discharge date then I am pretty sure the parole hold would need cancelled on your discharge date. If you were discharged then "caught a new case" it would not be a parole violation because you would no longer be on parole.
You have to wait 5 years after your anniversary date of getting off parole
The time it takes to receive your discharge papers after completing parole can vary depending on the probation department's processing times and workload. In some cases, you may receive your discharge papers shortly after completing parole, while in others, it may take a few weeks to several months to receive them. It is best to follow up with your probation officer or parole officer for more specific information on when you can expect to receive your discharge papers.
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.
Yes, in some states. You can also release on parole a day before your discharge date, which is a more common practice for the Departments of Correction. This way, in states that permit it, the DOC can keep you on a leash for 1-10 years longer, or for a lifetime in the states that permit lifetime parole.
You can search the Texas Department of Criminal Justice online inmate database. It will give you the offender's current facility, maximum sentence date, parole eligibility date, projected release date, and scheduled release date, along with offense history and other details.
a date of releases from parole
If you are on parole, you are likely required to maintain regular contact with an assigned parole officer. This officer should know, or be able to find out, your final date.
For as long as the remaining time on his original sentence or his maximum expiration date. That does not mean they will.
This question is a bit confusing, but I will do my best to answer. I am not certain what you mean by "monthly payments." If this is victim or restitution fees, court costs, fines, or other matters related to your sentencing, you are likely to be released, but the remaining fees will be referred to a collection agency. It is possible too that your parole could be extended until unpaid fees are paid in full. If this is costs associated with your parole, such as supervision fees, tether fees, or vehicle equipment installation cost (breathalizer), you may be required to pay them before you are released. The reference to "full time date" has me a bit thrown. If by this you mean your conditional release date, the date your parole is projected to end, well nothing is certain. If by this you mean the discharge date of your original sentence, this is a bit more certain, and to have parole extended beyond this date, the parole officer, potentially the parole board and State's Attorney General would probably have to motion the original sentencing judge or the supervising judge of the court in which you were sentenced to extend your sentence. The simple solution is to pay the debt and avoid the mess altogether.
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.