Wednesday, November 23, 2011

If a prisoner is released from prison can a judge order them not to see their spouse?

A friend of mine was in prison but was released with a sentence reduction. The judge stipulated in the reduction that he could not have contact with his spouse until he was off paper which was about 6 years. Is this a civil rights violation. His spouse had no part in his crime.If a prisoner is released from prison can a judge order them not to see their spouse?
As long as there is no restraining order i don't think they can force you not to see any bodyIf a prisoner is released from prison can a judge order them not to see their spouse?
A judge can impose any conditions to early supervised release that he / she likes. Parole is a CONDITIONAL and supervised early release from prison. If the client (inmate / parolee) doesn't agree with it, then they don't have to be released. If they don't comply with the conditions of parole, they will be in violation, and a no-bond warrant will be issued for their arrest. In my state, however, the conditions of parole aren't determined by a judge, but rather, the prisoner review board. Their conditions are not as legally binding, so the parole agent has more discretion when it comes to enforcing the conditions of release.
If the judge stipulated that he couldnt have contact, then ';no'; he has to wait until them 6 yrs are up,and if she does have contact with him, then if he is caught he will automatically get 5yrs in prison if convicted.
i think its stupid, but we need to know if he was put there in the first place for abuse, if so i would say the that may be that right thing





answer mine if you want:


http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;鈥?/a>
If the spouse is a felon too, they cannot associate while your friend is on parole.





We don't have all the facts that the judge had, so my guess is it is probably legal.



The judge can put any conditions he wants on a order.





There must be a reason the judge is doing it.





I think there's more to this story.
NO, NOt everything is a violation of someones civil rights.
Jazz hit the nail on the head if he does not like the deal he can always go back to jail

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