The sign emerges at the conjunction of the signified and the signifier, both of which are in parole, or a language's concrete properties. |
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To draw a Saussurian analogy of my own, writing is parole, praxis, not a moribund, non-negotiable langue. |
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The controversial decision follows outrage over the apparent rise in the number of long-term prisoners being released on parole. |
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Now we still in most cases, fix a sentence, and then fix another term which the person must serve before they can be released on parole. |
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Either they could spend 60 days in the slammer with no chance of parole, and pay a hefty fine, or they could go for the second option. |
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Judge Crowther set a period of two years and ten months before parole could be considered. |
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He was freed on parole in August last year after serving half of his one year prison term for assault. |
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The applicant is entitled to have some, very little, credit from that and to have a determinate, long period before he can apply for parole. |
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In fact, according to Bayne, there are about 1,200 federal prisoners currently out on some form of parole, whether escorted or unescorted. |
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He is still on parole from his previous, so he has parole, he has probation and has to be in his live-in treatment program. |
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Yes, I am concerned about offenders who reoffend, whether they have been released on parole or have finished their sentence. |
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Is a prisoner serving a life sentence entitled to know the reasons why he has been refused parole? |
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As part of his parole, the electronic monitor around his ankle keeps track of his comings and goings. |
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The philosophy of the parole office was to be supportive to the offender, but maintain a role as a monitor of behavior. |
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He will be freed in late July after serving two-thirds of his sentence, but had hoped to be released on parole within the next few days. |
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Subject to any agreement between countries as to the exchange of prisoners on parole. |
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On 9 July 2003 he was released on parole without conditions, under the understanding that he would be living with his auntie. |
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In either event, your Honour, the applicant would be eligible for immediate release, not on parole. |
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Over the years, Billie has gained insight into the reasons why prisoners released on parole so often fail and end up back in prison. |
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The earliest he could have been released on parole was in June 1976, some 15 months later. |
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Drug offenders also seem to be the most likely recidivists, and represent the greatest threat of failure on probation and parole. |
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He was told that he was not allowed to go there or to be there under the provisions of his parole conditions, but nothing was done. |
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After all, the punishment for failure is more than just a life sentence without parole. |
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It seems the porky guard's brother-in-law can pull strings on the parole board, and good boxers can write their ticket to an early parole. |
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He was told he must serve three-and-a-half years in prison before his case is considered for parole. |
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Neither probation officer recommends release on parole and the panel agreed with this assessment. |
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While he was on work release at the Queensboro Correctional Facility, the New York State Division of Parole continually denied Ferguson a parole. |
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He served three years behind bars, two years on work release and two years on parole. |
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He did not get parole, he did not get work release, he did not get home leave, he did not get so many other rights that he would have had. |
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Victims live in fear while repeat violators enjoy the benefits of parole under the beneficence of liberal magistrates. |
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They now face life imprisonment without parole in a U.S. jail for the vicious triple murder that took place in a Seattle suburb. |
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I was positive I was on death row with a life sentence the equivalent of Alcatraz without parole. |
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Victims would also have a say in bail applications, applications for early release and parole for criminals under the party's plans. |
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The plot is that the parole officer witnesses a murder committed by a bent copper. |
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Until last week he was out on parole, having served more than half of a seven-year sentence for being a nasty piece of work. |
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Crimes leading to imprisonment included prostitution, drug use, larceny, robbery, parole violation, and extortion. |
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Only fourteen then, she was now up for parole, having been, as they say, a model prisoner. |
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If I'd knocked over a liquor store that day instead of accepting John's offer, I'd have been out of prison and off parole long before now. |
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He was sentenced to life, and must serve a minimum of nine years before he is eligible for parole. |
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A parole petition had to be agreed upon by the public defender, district attorney's office, and the presiding judge. |
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In my opinion this sort of arrogance deserves to be rewarded by denying parole. |
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By retracting his confession he lost the opportunity of being considered for parole. |
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Texas, the leader in prisons and capital punishment nationwide, had 534,260 on parole or probation. |
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When the Prison Commission discussed the virtues of parole it invoked ideas of mercy and clemency. |
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The Canadian public has recently seen several shocking crimes perpetrated by prisoners out on parole. |
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Under section 84 the parole board gives the community adequate notice of the parolee's application. |
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In theory the parole hearings take the behaviour of the offender into account and allow reformed prisoners out before unrepentant ones. |
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He is serving a life sentence in prison without the possibility of parole for the murder and decapitation of his victim. |
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Of greater significance was the parole system, introduced in 1908, the same year as convict leasing was abolished and the chain gang introduced. |
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The decision makes her eligible for parole after serving only half, rather than two thirds, of her sentence. |
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He will have to forgive you and stop being a parole officer, or you'll have to call it a day. |
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His prospects of parole do not look good, as his record grows daily more discreditable. |
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We've asked for a commutation to straight life which would give Stacey a chance for parole after 15 years. |
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If he granted a blanket commutation, it would be just to make it life in prison without parole. |
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The indeterminate sentence means it will be up to the parole board to decide when it is safe for the man to be released on licence. |
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His refusal to admit his crime meant he was classified as IDOM and ineligible for parole. |
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Certainly parole was an effort to demonstrate to critics that she was moving in accord with modern penological opinion. |
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The task of linguistics is to reconstruct the underlying system of a language that makes possible the speech events or parole. |
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I continually move between langue and parole, between the oral and the written, and vice versa. |
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Denied parole nine straight times, he insists he is innocent of the crime for which he was convicted. |
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In New Zealand the recidivist index showed that where people were released without parole, their rate of offending was twice the level of those who were released on parole. |
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Even more worrying, Damian, now 35, is eligible for parole next year. |
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Schubert says that since 1984, close to 25,000 inmates have died in a California prison or on parole. |
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Of course, he knew what to charge in these days of globalisation, and had it not been for Marchizu's release on parole, the community would never have been able to afford him. |
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The pair, who have always protested their innocence, were jailed for life and told they would have to serve a minimum of 15 years before becoming eligible for parole. |
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Cayley's book was written at a time when the rehabilitative theory and practice of prisons, parole and other measures were under attack from the right. |
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On his eighth try, more than three decades after he went in, the parole board finally voted to release Sam. |
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Those that attend can qualify for early release on parole after one third of their term has been served while those who refuse will be made to serve their full term. |
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The judge recommended sutcliffe serve a minimum term of 30 years before any possibility of parole be considered. |
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It is thought to be extremely unlikely that sutcliffe will be granted a parole hearing, or ever released from prison. |
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A series of judges and parole officers had ordered him to go as an alternative to jail. |
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When convicted, those children can receive sentences as severe as life without the possibility of parole. |
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But the law explicitly stated that a resulting life sentence was to be without even the possibility of parole. |
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She is presently wheelchair-bound by multiple sclerosis but suddenly in hope of parole someday, thanks to the Supreme Court. |
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That is a concern, and it is part and parcel of what parole provisions should be, if we are to have a parole system, but it should not ever be at the expense of the sentence. |
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The terms of her parole limit her to working no more than 48 hours a week at her offices and she will have to wear an electronic tagging bracelet. |
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Discretionary parole has given way to longer and longer determinate sentences, coupled with an accelerating erosion of reformative prison programs. |
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Sadly I wasn't able to get a shot of the three guys, who looked like they were on the way to see their parole officer, pushing unicycles across the main bridge. |
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Time and time again, when we are looking at sentences and looking at parole, the overriding consideration seems to be whether the offender, if let out, will pose a risk. |
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Also impacting on the timing issue is the system of potential release on parole after one third of the sentence and mandatory release at two thirds. |
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The result was that the applicant's aggregate sentence is nine years and four months, and the applicant's minimum sentence on parole is seven years and four months. |
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Five others to be released on parole subject to evaluation of their prison records also committed crimes that do not appear to be politically motivated. |
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A decision to release such prisoners on parole can be delayed for years. |
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Most important is Saussure's distinction between langue and parole. |
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The parole officer would then be in a position to immediately suspend the long-term supervision order, or in the case of a parolee, revoke the parole. |
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Farther, he syllogized, saying, These men are but badly skilled in matters of war, for they have not required my parole, neither have they taken my sword from me. |
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Job programs should report no-shows to their parole officer at once. |
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Some believed officers crossed that line with the parole sweeps conducted last month, which resulted in 192 arrests, more than half of ex-cons violating their parole. |
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But the available data offer little proof that ex-cons who are monitored by parole officers are less likely to commit a fresh crime than those who are not. |
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Today he's drug-free and off parole for the first time in almost 25 years. |
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The parole board has decided that the prisoner is not yet ready for release. |
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The jury returned a guilty verdict, and a sentence of life without parole. |
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In 1987, Atkins was married again, to attorney James Whitehouse, who had represented her some of her final parole hearings. |
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People returning home from prison struggle to reconnect with their families, find work and adhere to burdensome parole conditions. |
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Instead of rushing the adjudication process, parole would be more appropriate. |
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Thirty years later, Miller beheld her in another proceeding and asked the board not to parole her. |
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We the jury in the above entitled cause fix the penalty at life imprisonment without the possibility of parole, date, signature for the foreperson. |
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The parole officer investigating his case actually sided with Peltier, noting his good behavior in prison, and recommending parole. |
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In addition, we interviewed 19 parole officers and tracked each parolee for six months after release. |
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The parole agents received the award for successfully preventing the suicide of a parolee with mental health issues. |
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It is of considerable interest that parole boards as discretionary decision makers are more susceptible to attack than is parolelike supervision. |
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Would it not better serve our case to impose life imprisonment without the possibility of parole in capital offense cases? |
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As a free man, even on parole, I can sense that my life has value again. |
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Many of them don't know it, but almost a third of the inmates are eligible to apply for parole or work-release programs. |
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Recent studies address parole issues, and whether corrections should be gender-blind or gender-responsive. |
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The parole board noted his positive efforts while in jail but said releasing him would trivialise the killing. |
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Thomas A Woods, 25, who was already on parole for voluntary manslaughter, faces a charge of attempted kidnapping. |
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Nathaniel Patrick Coley must serve at least two years of the Indeterminate sentence for Public Protection before being considered for parole. |
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And parole in liberta, calligrammes, the vast variousness of lettrist writing require quite other notions of reading. |
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A VIOLENT robber who terrorises elderly women was arrested yesterday just two hours after being released from prison on parole. |
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The tariff sets the minimum time that must be spent in prison before an offender can be considered for parole. |
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Others while accepting retribution as an element of criminal justice nonetheless argue that life without parole is a sufficient substitute. |
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The parolee alleged that the paroling authority discharged him from parole and then continued to treat him as if he were still on parole. |
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He said that, if a parolee gets a job at one business, his or her parole agent will sometimes inquire if there are any other open positions. |
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Horatio contacts his former sister-in-law Yelina, asking her to find out more about the lad, who denies murdering his parole officer. |
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The guard got in touch with Garrido's parole officer who was stunned to hear the rapist had children with him and called him in for questioning. |
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The judge can impose the death penalty even if the jury recommends life without parole. |
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Finally last August, Bayley was warned he'd be sent back to prison after he missed another appointment with his parole officer. |
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This late sign-up often occurs because the ex-offender's parole officer makes a referral or a current or past participant in RIO assures the parolee that the program works. |
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After pleading guilty to sixteen counts of premeditated murder, Bales was sentenced to life in prison without parole and dishonourably discharged from the United States Army. |
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Many are surprised to learn that parole in Canada dates back to 1899 and the passage of the Ticket of Leave Act, which was based on the British model and was a form of parole. |
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A paedophile doctor has been freed from jail after a parole board rejected a Scottish Government plea to keep him behind bars over fears he will attack children. |
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In some neighborhoods with high rates of felony conviction, this creates a situation where many felons live with a constant threat of being arrested for violating parole. |
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He will be under parole supervision until next February, said Mr Leonard Sipes, a spokesman for the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services. |
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Villeneuve attended Nelson's funeral while a captive on parole in Britain. |
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Tolokonnikova not only tried to adjust to life in the penal colony but she even tried to heed the criticism levied at her by colony representatives during a parole hearing. |
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Put a hardcore white supremacist and an equally hardcore black gangbanger in the same halfway house after release on parole from prison, and what do you get? |
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But by the late 1920s, after the introduct ion of parole, forms of early release in Georgia affected over 1000 convicts a year, more than a sixth of the convict population. |
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Alabama's statute was technically not mandatory, according to the respondents, because the sentencer had the option of giving either a death sentence or life without parole. |
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His proposals to the 2007 Legislature call for more community corrections programs to handle more offenders on probation, parole or in prerelease centers. |
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In 2009, he was released on parole, but the position was not restored. |
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Government supervision may be imposed, including house arrest, and convicts may be required to conform to particularized guidelines as part of a parole or probation regimen. |
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A common term of parole is to avoid associating with other felons. |
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Charles' secret pacts and encouragement of his supporters to break their parole caused Parliament to debate whether to return the King to power at all. |
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That man went out gay bashing and killed my brother, now he gets permission to have a gay marriage in prison when his partner is up for parole soon anyway. |
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New York's community-based Bodega de la Familia works with the state parole division to help families deal with parolees and their supervising officers. |
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Members of the prison parole Board attributed their decision to parole one inmate in part to his participation in the Green Life class, Sevin says. |
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At the time of his death he was being sought by authorities for failing to report to his parole officer, as ordered by the court following the 2001 drug conviction. |
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The Court found that Minister considered both positive and negative factors in deciding not to approve NCCS recommendation that Mr Barnard be placed on parole. |
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