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Parole and probation are the two most common forms of supervised release in the American criminal justice system but they work differently and carry different rules and consequences. Parole is granted to someone who has served part of a prison sentence. Probation is typically imposed instead of or alongside a prison sentence. Both involve supervision by an officer, compliance with conditions, and the risk of revocation if those conditions are violated. This section covers the difference between parole and probation, how parole hearings work and what makes a strong case, what supervision conditions typically look like, what happens when a violation is alleged, how to transfer supervision to another state through the Interstate Compact; and what successful completion of supervision looks like. The guidance here is practical and written for people who want to understand the rules clearly enough to follow them without surprises. See also our sections on Release Questions, Halfway House, and Re-entry and Rehabilitation.

Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
You daughter violated her probation, she will be designated to the facility of their choosing. They are not considering her family's hardships, nor is she entitled to decide where they are going to hold her. If she didn't want to go back in, she knew what the rules of freedom were. Maybe after these next eleven months she will listen to you and behave herself. She has to change or the next time will be much, much more severe.
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
You can face up to the full amount of the original sentence. If she got 15% good time, released earlier than her original out-date then all or a portion of what remains on the sentence. It all depends on the judge and the language in the warrant.
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
Parole is an option if the judge has provided language in the Judgement and Commitment order. This is for state offenders only as federal sentencing no longer offers parole. 
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
The 60-90 days is a range. The offenders that comply perfectly with the programming get out way before the 90 days.
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
No, it's very unlikely. For starters, the UK will not allow a felon from the US to even enter or gain temporary visa status with a conviction on their record. There was an incident that occurred when Martha Steewart tried to enter Great Britain for a business meeting after she was released from prison - she was not allowed to enter. A sex offender will no doubt meet the same barrier.
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
Getting charged with a new offense while on probation and enrolled in drug court is a serious situation, and the outcome depends heavily on the judge, the drug court program's rules, and how the prosecution decides to handle it. Drug court programs are structured around compliance. A new drug charge while enrolled is typically considered a program violation, and most drug courts have specific protocols for how violations are handled. In some cases the program allows for sanctions short of termination,...
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Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
Yes, but it comes down to one specific document: the Judgment and Commitment Order. That order is the official sentencing document signed by the judge at the time of conviction. It spells out the exact terms of the sentence including whether parole is a possibility. If the Judgment and Commitment Order contains a parole provision, then parole eligibility exists regardless of the inmate's current security classification. Maximum security and Class 2 status reflect how the facility is managing the inmate right...
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Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
They can keep him for as long as they wabt, related to the original sentence. That is the downside of violating, going back and finishing out your remaining months.
Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
A parole violation hold is one of the most frustrating situations a family member can face from the outside, because the system has almost no obligation to explain itself while it plays out. Here is the reality. A parole hold carries no bond. There is no amount of money that gets someone out while a violation is being investigated or processed. Your friend sits until the system decides what happens next, and that timeline is entirely at the discretion of the...
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Subject: Parole, probation & supervised release
With a twenty-year ten-suspended sentence, your son is serving the active portion and will become eligible for parole consideration based on the rules of the state he is in. Most states require an inmate to serve a minimum percentage of the active sentence before their first parole hearing, typically somewhere between a third and half of the active time depending on the jurisdiction and the offense. At three plus years in, he may be approaching that window depending on how...
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