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Question about parole


Alpo

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You get arrested for some felony and you get sentenced to 20 years. You get paroled after 10. So you are back on the street.

 

You got to check in with your parole officer, periodically, for the rest of the 20 years?

 

If, after 9 years 11 months and 18 days you do something to break your parole (rob a bank, smoke some dope, hang around with a convict), they throw you back in the lock up, and you have to finish your 20-year sentence? So you do another 10 years in prison?

 

Just curious how this thing works.

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Everything is correct except one detail:  Your sentence ends after 20 years expires (in this example) INCLUDING your time on parole.  So after 9 years, 11 months, and 12 days, you would have just a few weeks of sentence left to serve.  That said, whatever crime you committed to get your parole revoked would undoubtedly create a new sentence (assuming conviction) to serve.

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Okay, now let's talk probation. Because I ain't really sure what the difference between parole and probation is.

 

You're found guilty and the judge sentences you to 5 years probation. After 3 years you commit another crime. That violates your probation and you go to prison for the rest of the original five years - in this case two more years? Plus whatever you might get sentenced for for this new crime?

 

 

But when you're on probation, do you have to check in with somebody, like when you're on parole you have to check in with your parole officer?

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Parole is when you are released from prison, contingent upon good behavior.

 

Probation is keeping your nose clean in lieu of going to jail or prison.  Further screw-ups trigger the jail/prison sentence from the original crime.

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As to terms of probation, it depends on what the sentencing judge says is appropriate. Probation can be either supervised or unsupervised at the judge’s discretion or by statute.

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