77-27-11. Revocation of parole.
(1) The board may revoke the parole of any person who is found to have violated any
condition of his parole.
(2) (a) If a parolee is detained by the Department of Corrections or any law enforcement
official for a suspected violation of parole, the Department of Corrections shall immediately
report the alleged violation to the board, by means of an incident report, and make any
recommendation regarding the incident.
(b) No parolee may be held for a period longer than 72 hours, excluding weekends and
holidays, without first obtaining a warrant.
(3) Any member of the board may issue a warrant based upon a certified warrant request
to a peace officer or other persons authorized to arrest, detain, and return to actual custody a
parolee, and may upon arrest or otherwise direct the Department of Corrections to determine if
there is probable cause to believe that the parolee has violated the conditions of his parole.
(4) Upon a finding of probable cause, a parolee may be further detained or imprisoned
again pending a hearing by the board or its appointed examiner.
(5) (a) The board or its appointed examiner shall conduct a hearing on the alleged
violation, and the parolee shall have written notice of the time and place of the hearing, the
alleged violation of parole, and a statement of the evidence against him.
(b) The board or its appointed examiner shall provide the parolee the opportunity:
(i) to be present;
(ii) to be heard;
(iii) to present witnesses and documentary evidence;
(iv) to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses, absent a showing of good cause for
not allowing the confrontation; and
(v) to be represented by counsel when the parolee is mentally incompetent or pleading not
guilty.
(c) If heard by an appointed examiner, the examiner shall make a written decision which
shall include a statement of the facts relied upon by the examiner in determining the guilt or
innocence of the parolee on the alleged violation and a conclusion as to whether the alleged
violation occurred. The appointed examiner shall then refer the case to the board for disposition.
(d) Final decisions shall be reached by majority vote of the members of the board sitting
and the parolee shall be promptly notified in writing of the board's findings and decision.
(6) Parolees found to have violated the conditions of parole may, at the discretion of the
board, be returned to parole, have restitution ordered, or be imprisoned again as determined by
the board, not to exceed the maximum term, or be subject to any other conditions the board may
impose within its discretion.
Amended by Chapter 75, 1997 General Session
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Last revised: Wednesday, July 23, 2008