Question:

If you have parole violation & picked up by another state if state does not pick u up n 10 days do u get out?

by Guest10647  |  earlier

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i know someone who left the state of mississippi had 2 yrs. on parole did 1 year 3 months moved to alabama been out of trouble for 4 years now she is picked up for leaving state if mississippi does not come to get her in 10 days doe's alabama let her go

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  1. Of course not.  You wait until Transcor comes and picks you up.  Transcor is a company with buses that transports inmates across state lines.  They stop all over the state before moving on to the next one.  It can take weeks to get picked up and more to get dropped off.


  2. IF IT IS A PAROLE VIOLATION IT IS TOTALLY UP TO THE DEPT OF CORRECTIONS WHERE THE VIOLATION OCCURRED. THEY MAY BE CONTACTED TO TRY TO EXPEDITE THE SITUATION BUT YOU MUST BE PERSISTENT. USUALLY THEY WILL HOLD UP TO 90 DAYS BUT THIS CAN BE EXTENDED IF THE STATE WHERE THE VIOLATION OCCURRED REQUESTS SUCH. IF THIS VIOLATION IS NOT CORRECT A WRIT OF HABEAUS CORPUS CAN BE ISSUED BY YOU OR YOUR ATTORNEY WHICH MUST BE HEARD WITHIN 7 DAYS OF FILING ALLOWING YOU TO PROVE TO A JUDGE THAT THIS HOLD IS IN ERROR AND IN VIOLATION OF HER CIVIL RIGHTS. ONCE TRANSPORTED TO THE VIOLATING STATE IT CAN TAKE AS MUCH AS 90 DAYS TO COME TO THE PAROLE BOARD AND THEN YOU ARE TOTALLY AT THEIR MERCY.

  3. yes .....

    they will let you go after a certain amount of days ....

    because they have no need for you ....

    so tell your friend to pray that  they dont come pick her up ....

    and if they dont come pick her up they will release her

  4. Your friend is in a world of trouble.  There is no magic number of days that once reached one state has to release the person.  Your friend can be held for parole violations for as long as the receiving state requests she be held.

  5. Nope. She will set in jail for as long as they wish until the come and get her. Because she probably signed a waiver of extradition at the same time she signed her release papers from prison. In most states that is the procedure when you are released from prison. Technically that waiver is signed under duress, meaning if she hadn't signed she wouldn't have been released. That procedure has been tested many times in court and has always been ruled in favor of the release procedure. If she has an Attorney in Alabama he may petition the Mississippi authorities to re-enstate her parole and sometimes that works as long as she has community support and documentation as to her behavior while being a parole violator.

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