It depends on the stipulations of his parole and the courts. It will also depend on the crime and how much longer he has to serve on his parole. He needs to contact his Parole Officer. Each state does things differently, but also each person's case is different as well.
My husband cannot transfer to another state unless he has an immediate family member currently living there. But this is HIS status of his own parole. It would be different for someone else on parole.
2007-03-19 08:36:12
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answer #1
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answered by Erica, AKA Stretch 6
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it is up to his parole officer, it all depends on how long he's been on parole, usually you have to be on it for awhile, and do everything required (pass drug tests, do meetings, check in, etc) before they will help you out and transfer parole. he will most likely need a really good reason also. like a job opportunity or something
2007-03-19 08:24:15
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answer #2
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answered by ripcity3200 2
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yes. he has to ask his present parole officer for permission to transfer and then get the parole board to ok it
2007-03-26 20:42:32
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answer #3
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answered by leeaterry 2
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go to his parole officer , but i don't see why not .
2007-03-25 11:22:45
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes it is possible. Have him contact his officer and do the paperwork.
2007-03-19 08:19:15
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answer #5
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answered by csucdartgirl 7
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it is possible. he needs to know his conditions, and get permission from his P.O.
2007-03-26 02:52:49
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answer #6
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answered by knnygrl 2
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