At a minimum, he is looking at serving out the three months remaining on his parole. That is the floor. A new arrest while on parole triggers an automatic violation, and the parole board will revoke his remaining supervision and send him back to complete what was owed.
The bigger question is whether the new meth charges result in a separate prosecution. If the district attorney files new charges, he is now facing two things at once: the parole revocation and a fresh criminal case. A new drug conviction on top of a parole violation means additional time on top of the three months, and the amount depends on the weight of the drugs, his prior history, and how aggressively the case is prosecuted.
The fact that this is a repeat meth offense while on parole is not going to sit well with anyone in the system. Judges and parole boards view a new drug arrest while already under supervision as a signal that the previous leniency did not work. Expect the response to reflect that.
His attorney needs to be focused on both cases simultaneously, the revocation hearing and the new criminal matter, because what happens in one can affect the other.
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