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Ok, my fiance' served his 5 year sentance and was released and told you had 3 years probation, and he was doing good until the last 8 months and he had a parole viloation and is in prison waiting to be extradited back to OHIO, So he may have to serve the five years that he had already served on his sentance or the 3 years of probation may need to be redone? I am not understanding sorry Please some one help me out. I have heard that it could be no more then 90 days, is that correct? And if he does get parole again can he do that parole in the state that we live now or will it have to be in the state of Ohio since that is where he is being sent back to.

2007-01-10 13:46:15 · 4 answers · asked by emilysmom182004 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

4 answers

You say he had 3 years probation which is usually a post release supervision sentence. The time depends on the level of violation and whether it is his first time being violated and whether he has any other incident reports. I violated for another crime and did a six month violation on top of my sentence for the new crime. I've seen people get eighteen months for a curfew violation. It heavily depends on his officers report. Some dirty urine violations get ninety days, second time maybe six months. He is on a Interstate Compact transfer which when released he would have to apply again and both states have to agree the releasing state and receiving state.

2007-01-10 14:08:33 · answer #1 · answered by jcanas34 3 · 0 0

First answer good. This looks like an 8 year sentence, he served 5 so had 3 years left. So, he owe 3 years. If, he goes back to prison he may be eligible for Parole again maybe in the 90 days, but, this is up to the parole board and how many beds the prison has available. They like to use those beds. So, since he violated his parole and depending on what his original charges where for and what the violation is, they could deny parole the first time. So, he may spend another 1 year before he paroled. Hope this the most and it be less. There a lot of "If, And, or Buts" in all this stuff. Sorry, all I really know. Also, Ohio may not be in a hurry to come get him and that wait time may be wasted time, sorry.

2007-01-10 14:00:18 · answer #2 · answered by Snaglefritz 7 · 1 1

The initial sentence would have had to be up to 8 years. If he is convicted of parole violation, he may be forced to serve up to the remainder of huis sentence plus any new time for the subsequent offense. He will not have to "re-serve" any time.

The nature of the sentence and the manner in which it can be carried out is up to the judge.

2007-01-10 13:52:06 · answer #3 · answered by Fletch 2 · 0 0

properly, he has (a million) an offense, or extra, that he replaced into on probation for to start with(2) a probation offense, and (3)a clean cost on best of that this is a generic offense retail theft what number "first offenses" do you think of they permit? He has quite a few offenses. Sorry, yet he could be in reformatory a jointly as -- maybe long adequate for you in looking a regulation abiding boyfriend.

2016-11-28 03:12:09 · answer #4 · answered by heuss 4 · 0 0

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