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
It is unlikely. But there are instances where the probationer petitions the court and asks to have the terms served in another district. They might approve it if she offers to incur any extra cost of this transfer.
Subject: Parole & probation
It can't hurt to speak the parole officer but you know that they have little sympathy or tolerance for the violator. The POs role is to keep the integrity of the judicial process when rewarding an inmate with parole. If the inmate cannot keep their end of the deal - or worse catch another charge, they will get violated and must return to prison to do the remaining time left on their original sentence. They might even catch more time...
Read moreSubject: Parole & probation
It is unlikely that there will be a second change. The "circumstance" would have to be VER compelling for the Board to even entertain the thought
Subject: Parole & probation
If he went back in on a violation, the original sentence is what he is probably going to serve. When an inmate gets granted leniency and then violates, the courts are not happy. They are not happy because it makes them look bad in deciding to give that offender a break. Usually no second chances there.
Subject: Parole & probation
When someone is returned to prison for violating parole, the situation is different from a fresh sentence and the good time picture changes significantly.
A parole violation typically results in the inmate being required to serve the remainder of the original sentence, meaning the portion they were released early to serve in the community. That unserved time gets reinstated and they go back in to finish it. Because this is not a new sentence being imposed but rather a reinstatement of...
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No, marriage after incarceration is not a determinate in considering whether an inmate is fit for parole.
A parole hearing is an opportunity for the offender to present his or her side of the story, and express their own thoughts as to why they feel they should be paroled. Many subjects come up during the course of the hearing. These typically include the details of the offense, prior criminal history, the guidelines which the Commission uses in making their determination, the...
Read moreSubject: Parole & probation
Yes, it is legally possible to be on state parole and federal probation simultaneously. The two supervision systems operate independently of each other and one does not automatically preclude the other.
What it means in practice is that the person is answering to two separate supervising authorities at the same time. A state parole officer oversees compliance with state parole conditions, while a federal probation officer monitors the federal probation terms. The conditions imposed by each may overlap in some areas...
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This is one of the most difficult location situations families face because the US Marshals Service is deliberately quiet about inmate movements for security and safety reasons. Unlike the Bureau of Prisons, which maintains a public inmate locator, the USMS does not have an equivalent public-facing database that updates in real time as people move through their system.
When someone is picked up by the Marshals for a federal probation or supervised release violation, they typically go through a series of...
Read moreSubject: Parole & probation
Once parole is approved, the paperwork has to travel through several administrative steps before an inmate is actually released, and the timeline can be frustratingly slow even when everything is moving in the right direction.
After the parole board approves the release, the decision goes to the facility's records or release office, which prepares the release paperwork and coordinates with the supervising parole officer in the jurisdiction your boyfriend will be reporting to. That parole officer needs to confirm the release...
Read moreSubject: Parole & probation
A technical parole violation, meaning one that involves breaking a condition of parole without committing a new crime, is treated very differently than a violation that involves new criminal conduct. That distinction matters enormously going into a parole board hearing.
When someone violates a parole condition unknowingly or due to circumstances outside their direct control, the parole board does have discretion to take that context into account. A signed affidavit from the person responsible for putting the parolee in the situation...
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