The whole house. If he smells marijuana, he has reasonable suspicion. As the supervising officer of a probee, he has police authority. With this he can conduct the search. If he finds anything in the search (be it a single seed) he has probable cause and can take the probee into custody. He can additionally hold any other persons in the house for law enforcement and affect arrest when they arrive.
Don't poke the bear!
upon arrest/ if the officer see's an illegal object/substance (called in plain view), or if the individual is on probation or parole
Yes
Everywhere. He has full authority over the parolee.
The parolee signed a waver of rights when he met his parole officer for the first time. Essentially, in order to stay free, the parolee is made to give the parole officer that right.
no
No NO NO they cannot.
You may send any correspondence "Care Of" the parole office to which the parolee reports. His parole officer will see that the mail is received.
Yes. As a parolee, you have limited rights. A condition of your parole is to allow searches. Sorry
In most cases an officer who is serving a Search Warrantwill have it in his possession. However in special cases such as a warrant obtained over the radio or telephone the search warrant may not be immediately available. Arrest Warrants are most often 'unplanned.' An officer stops a person or a vehicle and is told over the radio that an there is an arrest warrant for a person. Since a warrant is a command from a court to arrest a person, the officer will arrest with only the work of the poilce dispatcher.
yes any room in the residence can be searched if the parolee has reasonable access to it. If your room is locked and your room mate does not have a key then the parole officer can not search the room.
Unless the officer discovered probable cause during the traffic stop (or had probable cause prior to), then no, the search was illegal. The officer would have needed to obtain probable cause to search the vehicle, in reference to Carroll v. United States. The prior answer referenced "Search Incident to Lawful Arrest" and that was incorrect. During a traffic stop for speeding, generally, no one is being arrested, and "Search Incident to Lawful Arrest" only allows the the officer to search for evidence related to the arrest, which for speeding, there wouldn't be any such evidence.
If you have lost your SBI parole number, you can get the number from your parole officer. Depending on your state, you might also be able to search for your number using your name.