- The perpetrator knows the gun was in the home
- The person had the ability to maintain control of the gun
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It is possible that you can meet your probation officer by phone
Meeting your probation officer is a requirement for formal felony parole. After your initial meetings, and if the probation officer determines that you are in compliance, he or she may, at their discretion, allow you to maintain contact via telephone or video communications such as Skype and FaceTime.
Typically, one of the conditions of your parole will be that you cannot leave the state without notifying your parole officer or obtaining the parole officer’s permission (if your case requires it). It’s also a good idea to notify your parole officer, even if you only intend to travel outside of your home country. Before making any travel plans, be sure to work with your probation officer so that your travel is not considered a violation of your probation.
Consequence: career damage
Criminals often encounter barriers when starting a career. If a person is already in a professional career and later becomes a convicted felon, they may lose their professional license or be faced with other disciplines within their profession.
Employers often ask potential candidates about their criminal record, and many automatically disqualify someone from potential employment if they are convicted of a felony. Although prohibited by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act 1964, a disqualified candidate may never know the real reason they did not get the job, and proving this type of discrimination is often nearly impossible given the boss’s input required by the employer.
Transcription:
Well we do. We don’t call it that. This is jargon from some other states but our situation is called a common felony or a common misdemeanor but it depends on your criminal history. It’s a weird part of the law because it’s a state, it’s not something you’ve done, you’ve committed a crime, and then they add an indictment that you’ve been convicted enough times that you’re a so-called are habitual offenders. The jury, in a separate trial, after you’re found guilty, consider it a formality, just look at the documents, and then you’ll be convicted. It’s odd as far as the legal formalities go, but in practice it means that in North Carolina you can be tried as a common criminal if you’ve been convicted of three felonies before being convicted of a fourth. . It significantly increases and increases the sentence depending on the crime you are convicted of. We also have, it’s unusual, but we have a common misdemeanor that makes it a crime and that applies to assault. If you have committed two or more assaults within a 15-year period and have been convicted of two or more assaults in North Carolina, your misdemeanor assault will be escalated to a felony if you receive your third assault that causes injury. You will be punished as a criminal.
Long story short, North Carolina has a three strike law, but it is different from other states and is not called a three strike law.
Can 2 felons live together in NC?
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