That's false, the DA doesn't get a say in this, the parole board decides to revoke parole all on their own, the parole officer never initiated parole revocation.
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Replying to @plscallmekimi @FutureExCali and
The parole board by itself, without the authority of the DA, can revoke parole, they could have sent him back to prison for up to half a year.
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Replying to @plscallmekimi @FutureExCali and
Honestly, if he had been charged it probably makes no difference, they were liable to release him as a non-violent felon. The parole board however can actually send him to prison w/ a lower burden of proof, evidence he committed a crime, doesnt need conviction or filled charges.
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Replying to @plscallmekimi @FutureExCali and
I must have snoozed on something. I’m vaguely familiar with prop 49, but since when exactly is armed robbery considered non violent?
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Replying to @pailhead011 @FutureExCali and
He was arrested for stealing a car, not armed robbery, unless I am missing a fact.
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Replying to @plscallmekimi @FutureExCali and
I’m not sure how this works but please check out this article from 2015https://www.sfexaminer.com/news/man-arrested-in-connection-with-armed-robbery-at-mission-store/ …
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Replying to @pailhead011 @plscallmekimi and
To be fair, he neither hurt nor killed anyone in 2015, so I’m not sure if that counts for violence :/ Is “armed robbery” on its own enough to deem someone “violent”? Is it even a felony to begin with (I’m an immigrant)
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Replying to @pailhead011 @plscallmekimi and
Whatever it may be, I think you need to be a special kind of asshole to go terrorize kids with a gun at 40 years of age. There should be a law against that if there is none.
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Replying to @pailhead011 @FutureExCali and
that was in 2015 though, I am talking about the crimes he committed after he was released.
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Replying to @plscallmekimi @FutureExCali and
Right, that’s what I’m curious about, does this status have an expiration? Once you get out of jail, you’re no longer considered a felon? Is some kind of rehabilitation assumed as well? Ie. If one went to prison as a violent person, they are guaranteed to come out as non violent
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Once you finish your prison sentence you are presumed to have the same legal status of anyone else, parole and some other restrictions notwithstanding. Regardless he was on parole so the parole board did have the authority to revoke his parole.
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