No. The parole condition prohibiting contact with police is not the incidental type. Any parolee who witnesses a crime is expected by his parole officer to contact the appropriate law enforcement department and report it. This demonstrates responsible behavior. Having done so, the parolee would need to contact his PO and report it, typically within 24 to 72 hours.
Contacting is another name for the word calling.
calling out
The first step would be to speak to her probation officer directly. Have thorough documentation for exactly how she has violated a probation order (e.g. you observed her with drug paraphernalia on this date; she had an unreported auto accident on that date; she left the children unattended for 36 hours on these dates). You can generally learn who the probation officer is by calling the court and properly identifying yourself and your ex. If the probation officer is unsupportive, take your materials to family court in order to get the custody order altered.
calling upon
taddle tale
Certainly. The rules for sick leave are decided by the employer and are unregulated. Employers need not accept doctors' notes.
It is not very smart, in some places the guards are actually police officers, or work for the police department.
A calling crab is another name for a fiddler crab, a genus of crab in which the male has an enlarged paw.
Calling or capacity.
Every phone plan from a major provider will have conference calling included into the plan. If you are having trouble finding it, three way calling is another name for it.
Note please that drug testing takes time so officers need three or four days minimum to send your samples to the laboratory, then for testing itself and then for a receiving the results. So be patient: you can wait up to a week or even two until results will be received. And if the results will be positive for dome drug they will call you or write a letter about it - not an arrest warrant! You can be asked to repass a drug test, probably it will be hair or sweat path. Or you can ask for a repass by yourself
In prison settings, officers typically address inmates by their last name or inmate number, rather than as "mister." Using formal titles like "mister" may not be common practice in correctional facilities.