Depending on the circumstances, you can have a term of House Arrest, a Curfew, community service, etc.
It may depend on WHAT you're on probation for, and what the restrictions of your probation are.
can a no contact order be removed from parole restrictions
READ YOUR PROBATION PAPERS - everybody's is different. Or, ask your Probation Officer. Depending on the conditons of YOUR probation you may, or may not, have travel restrictions.
It all depends entirely on what restrictions were placed on YOU for YOUR probation sentence.
Yes. A sentence of PROBATION, is simply a non-jail sentence. While on probation you are subject to any restrictions that the court might place on you. Those restrictions will be enforced by a parole and probation agent. If you violate any of those restrictions, you will be taken back into police custody and forced to serve out the jail time that the judge originally ordered but placed on hold pending your successful completion of probation.
Your probation documents should spell out what restrictions, if any, you may have.
Check your probation restrictions, or ask your PO. You could have travel or movement restrictions on you. If so, you can ask the permission of the court that placed you on probation, to move. Whether or not it will be granted may have much to do with whether or not the state you want to move to will accept the supervision of your probation.
When assigned a sentence of probation EVERYONE is given a set of rules and restrictions under which they must live. READ YOUR PROBATION PAPERS.
The penalty for probation violations are determined by the judge who originally sentenced you to the probation. It is impossible to know what your individual restrictions were.
William R. Outerbridge has written: 'An empirical study of restrictions on eligibility for probation' -- subject(s): Probation
CHECK YOUR PROBATION PAPERS CAREFULLY, or contact your PO and ask. If you have travel restrictions imposed on you, you could be in violation if you do.
You will have to (1) check the papers you were given at the time you were sentenced to probation to see if you are under any travel restrictions (2) ask your Probation Officer or (3) ask the court's permission.