You don't. A parole officer is not a law enforcement officer. The parole officer is a supervising agent. If you have evidence that someone on parole or off has committed a crime of any type, contact law enforcement, give the evidence you have to them, and let the system take care of it.
When you do report to your parole officer, he'll arrest you.
Report periodically and pee in a cup.
You may get sent back to prison.
If it is necessary for you to report an absconder, you may contact the local Parole Office and ask to speak to the Parole Officer of the abscondee.
a parole officer is a person you report to when you get out of jail or prison they make sure you are acting right and getting your life on track the right way , makin sure your not doing drugs , carrying wepons etc. whatever your parole terms are
If the parole officers have email available for outside use, you could call the Parole Office to ask for that PO's email address. Or, you could simply write a letter and send it by snail mail. Or, you could just call the parole office and speak directly to the PO.
Yes, typically a parolee is required to report to their parole officer within 72 hours of being released from incarceration. This timeframe can vary by jurisdiction, so it's important for the individual to check the specific requirements set by their parole agreement or local parole office. Failure to report within this timeframe may lead to violations of parole conditions.
Check your release papers. Everything you need to know is there, and largely specific to your release.
Usually these are conditions or release or parole. If the person released fails to adhere to the requirements, he can be returned to jail or prison. Typical conditions of release might include no use of alcohol or narcotics, no association with felons or gang members, commit no crimes, not leave the jurisdiction, report regularly to a parole officer and so on.
A parole officer is an officer of the court who meets with people after they get out of prison or jail. Parole is a supervised monitoring of individuals after they leave prison, including making sure people have a job, stay off of drugs and alcohol, and keep a curfew set by the court. The parole officer monitors and checks a person, sometimes just by meetings in their office, but sometimes by checking a person in their home. A parole officer has authority to arrest a person and put them back in jail if they break the rules of parole, which are the conditions for staying out of jail.
It's up to your parole officer. I would report it to your supervisor with a good explanation.
Call the PO from a pay phone and don't give a name. But they probably can't or won't do anything with an anonymous tip. For the court to find that a person violated probation, the PO must produce evidence of the violation. The PO's testimony of receiving an anonymous tip is not admissible evidence.