Contact your State's child support agency. Be patient but persistent (they're understaffed and very busy). Good luck!
Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.
The service you are looking for is -presentence investigation. E.)
No they don't!!!Another View: If their position and/or the agency for whom they work requires it, yes, they do.
supervision of adult offenders presentence reports juvenile servises
Agency jobs are better than contracts when one becomes a permanent employee after the probation period. Contract jobs ends when the contract is over.
The only way to find out the answer to this question OS to contact YOUR state's agency that employes Probation and Parole Officers and ask about the necessary job requirements and disqualifications.
The same way you would report any public official who is not performing their job correctly or is committing wrongding - - write a letter to his superiors. Every state has some kind of agency similar to a Department of Parole and Probation or some similar type of agency to that. Look them up in the blue pages of your phone book and get their address.
As soon as he checks with local law enforcement, runs your record, or is notified by the arresting agency/officers.
There is not enough information disclosed to answer knowledgeably. For a specific answer to this you would have to contact your own state's probation agency. It depends on what rules and regulations they have - the offense that she is on probation for - and the required intrusiveness of the probation supervision. As a general statement it can be said that just because she lives in your home, it does not shield her (and as a consequence, you) from the provisions of instrusive supervision IF HER OFFENSE WARRANTS THAT TYPE OF SUPERVISION.
Yes. Probation means you were convicted of whatever felony offense you committed. The only difference is that you were allowed to serve your sentence at the courts direction and under the supervison of the Probation Agency instead of behind bars. Convicted is convicted.
The question here cannot be altered as there is a notation regarding doing so. Based on that, the answer for prisoners in the United States, is that the huge majority of probation programs are administered on the State level. Eligibility for probation is either based specifically on law or at the discretion of the sentencing judge in the case of criminal offenses.