Felony Level. Term of Supervision. Eligible for Term Reduction? Felony Sex Offense committed prior to Mandatory 5 years. Felony Sex Offense committed after Mandatory 3 years. Discretionary up to 3 years.
Supervised release is an additional term of supervision that must be completed after a person completes his or her term of federal custody. Parole is another type of supervision program that occurs after someone has been incarcerated and conditionally released from prison to serve the remainder of their sentence under community supervision. Community supervision takes a different form in each state or local jurisdiction.
The most popular are intensive probation or parole, house arrest, electronic monitoring, boot camps, drug courts, day reporting centers, community service, and specialized mostly drug-related or sex offender probation and parole caseloads. All individuals under parole supervision within communities in Pennsylvania are required to pay a monthly supervision fee.
Elect to Serve - Probationers not sentenced under the Structured Sentencing Act may opt to serve their active sentence in lieu of complying with their supervision conditions. Enterprise - Enterprise programs involve inmates in an industrial job on site at the prison. Several prisons have Enterprise plants which perform a broad range of industrial-type services.
These programs provide inmates with job skills, as well as some income to assist in the payment of court-ordered debts. The products and services produced by Enterprise activities also help generate income for the prison system itself to offset some of the cost to the taxpayers. House Arrest with Electronic Monitoring - A special condition of Probation , post release or Parole , under which offenders are confined to their residences at all times, with only those exceptions which the Court, Post-Release Supervision and Parole Commission or Supervising Officer may authorize employment, school and the completion of treatment are generally the only exceptions.
The enhanced control techniques used in House Arrest ensure heightened supervision and accountability through 24 hour surveillance and electronic monitoring with immediate response to violations.
The compact is an agreement between North Carolina and other states whereby North Carolina provides supervision to residents who were convicted of crimes in other states, and other states provide supervision to their residents who have convictions in North Carolina. Medium Custody - Units that have all programs and activities operating within the unit under the supervision of armed personnel, except for certain work assignments. Programs available to inmates include academic and vocational education, drug and alcohol abuse treatment, psychological and other counseling programs, and varied work assignments.
Minimum Custody - Units that provide a wide variety of programs for inmates ranging from on-site academic and vocational schools to off-site work or study release.
Minimum custody inmates are misdemeanants and those selected felons that have either little time remaining on their sentence or who have been determined not to present a high security or escape risk. These units do not have manned gun towers or other security devices. Selected inmates are allowed to work outside prison confines in the community for the prevailing wage. They help their families by sending money home, pay taxes and otherwise lessen the financial burden of incarceration.
Parole - A release from prison subject to compliance with conditions set by the Parole and Post-Release Supervision Commission. The Structured Sentencing Act of abolished parole for offenders sentenced after October 1, , but parole will continue to be available to offenders who entered prison under earlier sentencing and DWI laws.
This occurs because of a release from prison subject to conditions set by the Post-Release Supervision and Parole Commission. In some cases an offender may have an existing probation case. This means that the offender is on dual supervision status.
Parole Separations - A person is counted as a parole separation when he changes from being under parole supervision to not being under parole supervision. This can occur because of death, or because he completes his imposed term, or because he is revoked, or because the Post-Release Supervision and Parole Commission terminates supervision before expiration. When this event occurs, he may remain in prison or under probation supervision for another crime.
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