if you dont have to pay your parole fee will you get locked up
Yes, they may petition for parole unless the sentence specifically states"without parole."
No states are "non-extradition" for any state parole violation. Neither are the US territories.
Parole is a controversial political topic. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, 16 states have abolished parole and 4 have abolished parole for violent offenders. The Department of Justice stated in 2005 that about 55% of parolees did not complete their parole. 38% were returned to prison, and 11% disappeared. These stats remain fairly consistent, which is why states, like New York, have abolished parole for some crimes. It simply does not work.
Life in prison, WITHOUT parole.
In many states, parole violators may be returned to prison (at the discretion of the parole agent) for up to thirty days, during which time the parole board will make a determination regarding the parolee's case.
In most states, yes.
Yes, in some states. You can also release on parole a day before your discharge date, which is a more common practice for the Departments of Correction. This way, in states that permit it, the DOC can keep you on a leash for 1-10 years longer, or for a lifetime in the states that permit lifetime parole.
In the US, each state has its own corrections policies for their respective prison systems. This is because the US Constitution is set up to allow states to handle all powers not granted to the Federal government. With that in mind, states create policies for parole that meet their needs. There is one common thread, however, that all states agree about. That policy is this: anyone on parole who breaks the parole "rules", will be sent back to prison and their parole is revoked.
Parole rules and regulations are set by the various states or countries and are normally done by the Parole Board. In most cases I would say, yes, any criminal activity you committed while on parole would have an effect on your terms of parole and could have you returned to jail.
A blue warrant is a violation of probation/parole
All states have both. Probation is a term of supervision in the community that is sentenced by a Court. Parole is a term of supervision in the community following release from prison, usually for the remainder of a person's original sentence.