Most likely.
Hi, In Texas, when an offender is on parole and gets arrested or charged with a felony crime against the state, parole will put a "no bond" on them until the new charges are resolved. They may have a bond amount set for the new charge, even if you pay that bond, they will not be released.
Yes, testing positive for drugs while on parole can result in a new charge for violating the terms of your parole. This violation could lead to consequences such as revocation of parole, additional penalties or even a return to prison.
what are the charges for a mistiminor on a person that has two year parole
You will be apprehended. Eventually. There is no statute of limitations. You will be extradited back to the jurisdiction from which you absconded. You will be returned to prison where you will likely serve the remainder of your sentence. You will then serve the sentence you received for absconding or escape, depending on which you were charged with. Fpr the state of California see below You will have a warrant in NCIC. So if you get pulled over or arrested, you will have a parole hold. They will eventually send you back to the parole revocation unit assigned to your parole office. You will await a Parole Revocation Hearing. The maximum you can get is 12 months for any type of parole violation. Absounding is technical violation. If you weren't actually arrested on a new crime, the norm is 4 - 9 months with half time if you are eligible for half time (not a violent offender). At the end of your violation time you will be returned to parole.
Yes, parole officer are law enforcement officers with full police powers in NJ. The difference is their day to day duties. Parole officers primary job duty is to supervise parolees under parole supervision. That means to make sure the person under supervision is complying with the conditions imposed by the State Parole Board before they were released. Most parole officers spend their time filing administartive charges (parole violations) on violators, but at times new charges (family, friends, or on the parolee) are unavoidable.
rehab. parole.
If you failed to report and a warrant was issued before your discharge date for not reporting then yes. If you were arrested on a new charge that is prosecuted before your discharge date then I am pretty sure the parole hold would need cancelled on your discharge date. If you were discharged then "caught a new case" it would not be a parole violation because you would no longer be on parole.
In short, potentially life. There are very few charges that can carry a lifetime parole in any state. Typically these are very serious charges, and typically the parole matches the original sentence were you incarcerated.
If the result of absconding was a Technical Rules Violation, you should consider yourself fortunate and take what comes. Absconding is in itself a felony, comparable to escape. If you were not charged with a new felony, learn your lesson and if you are fortunate enough to be given another opportunity of parole, live right and discharge.If you absconded and then violated again and were given a Technical Rules Violation as a result of a second incident, you go back to prison and do your time.
The question is unclear. If you are on parole and violate the law and have to appear in court on another charge, it is quite likely that your parole may be affected or even revoked, depending on the severity of the new charge. If you are simply on parole and subpoenaed to attend a hearing relating to your parole case, you had BEST attend or risk having a bench warrant issued for you. Parole is NOT a -get-out-of-jail-free" card! You are still serving your sentence.
If you were to leave the state of Wisconsin and were on parole would you be charged with a new crime.