If you know who it is, his or her actual parole officer. If you do not know exactly who that is, the state department of parole office closest to your location. If you cannot easily find the phone number or address, call your local police department, they will know what it is.
If the parole violation is currently happening, and it is something that is a crime even if a person is on parole, you should call the local police, and while reporting the crime advise them that this person is on parole, together with whatever details you have about that parole.
Want to know what to do about a parole officer that is tyring to do everything to put someone back in jail. he has done nothing wrong and this guy is trying everything to violate him.
Parole officers seldom violate their parolees.
It depends on the terms of the parole. If those terms state that you must not leave the county, then there is your answer. But before you go anywhere, check with your parole officer to make sure you don't do something to violate your parole.
While on parole a person must follow more rules than the average citizen. Breaking more laws or not following your special conditions on parole is called a VIOLATION. Violations all have punishments which usually mean going back to the clink.
You can, but if you do your parole officer could revoke your parole and send you back to prison. The conditions of your parole on criminal violations is clear, none.
No. Your PO has a lot of power to put you back inside, but has none in releasing you. You need a judge for that.
They would answer to law enforcement and the courts.
Yes. If you violate the provisions of your parole you can lose your "good time" just as surely as you would have if you had violated regulations while you were still incarcerated.
He may if he has reasonable suspicion that the supervisee is in danger or engaged in activities that would violate the conditions of his parole.
It's pretty much up to the parole agent. There's such a wide scope that corrections has that they can violate a parolee at will.
Parole violations can vary by jurisdiction, but typically, there is no specific number of days that parole must violate to be considered a violation. Instead, a parole violation occurs when a parolee fails to comply with the terms and conditions set by the parole board, which can include missing appointments, failing drug tests, or committing new offenses. The consequences of a violation can lead to a range of actions, from warnings to revocation of parole. Each case is evaluated individually based on the circumstances and severity of the violation.
If those two men meet, each one will violate the conditions under which he was granted parole and be subject to re-imprisonment.