I cannot imagine why you would not be able to be married while released on parole.
It depends on the conditions of the parole.
Yes.
Oh yes, felons on parole are permitted to marry.
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.
It depends on the specific terms of the parole of each person.
An offender's parole term cannot be extended, but probation can. It is possible to be discharged from both early, but early discharges from parole are rare. While parole cannot technically be extended by a Parole Officer, it can be extended by the Parole Board, and can effectively be extended by situations that create "dead time" such as time spent in rehabilitation or in custody for a potential violation of conditions.
Some states have supervised parole and unsupervised parole. A felon graduates from supervised parole and then is still on parole for a number of years without having to check in. They can be 'violated' for offenses in that time. If a person on parole is shown to have committed a serious offense while on parole, but it only becomes known after parole has ended, it was still a violation and is still punishable. Also some states have certain crimes where the parolee will always be effectively on parole, forever. Child molesters and rapists sometimes receive this. Once, however, the parolee is discharged, the jurisdiction of the DOC is ended. Keep in mind that parole stipulations are Administrative Rules and do not carry the weight of law. Once the parolee is free of the jurisdiction of the DOC, he is free, no matter what rule it may be discovered he bent or broke while on parole. The time for the DOC to act is while the individual is under their custody. They may try, but can be effectively blocked by a court of law.
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 count on a parole violation.
Being on probation or parole does not limit anyone's right to get married. Indeed, even people who are actually in prison sometimes get married, strange though that may seem. So yes, an African student can marry a US citizen who is on probation or parole.
what is a hardship parole and who quilifys in texas
Yes