§574.7. Custody and supervision of parolees; modification or suspension of supervision;
violation of conditions of parole; sanctions; alternative conditions; administrative
sanctions
A. Each parolee shall remain in the legal custody of the Department of Public Safety
and Corrections, corrections services, and shall be subject to the orders and supervision of
the committee. At the direction of the committee, the chief probation and parole officer shall
be responsible for the investigation and supervision of all parolees. The committee may
modify or suspend such supervision upon a determination that a parolee who had conducted
himself in accordance with the conditions of his parole no longer needs the guidance and
supervision originally imposed.
B.(1) At the time a defendant is released on parole, the committee on parole may
make a determination as to whether a defendant is eligible for the imposition of
administrative sanctions as provided in this Section. If authorized to do so by the committee,
each time a parolee violates a condition of parole, a parole officer may use administrative
sanctions to address a technical violation committed by a parolee when all of the following
occur:
(a) The parolee, after receiving written notification of his right to a hearing before
a court and right to counsel, provides a written waiver of a parole violation hearing.
(b) The parolee admits to the violation or affirmatively chooses not to contest the
violation alleged in the parole violation report.
(c) The parolee consents to the imposition of administrative sanctions by the
Department of Public Safety and Corrections.
(2) The department shall promulgate rules to implement the provisions of this
Subsection to establish the following:
(a) A system of structured, administrative sanctions which shall be imposed for
technical violations of parole and which shall take into consideration the following factors:
(i) The severity of the violation behavior.
(ii) The prior violation history.
(iii) The severity of the underlying criminal conviction.
(iv) The criminal history of the parolee.
(v) Any special circumstances, characteristics, or resources of the parolee.
(vi) Protection of the community.
(vii) Deterrence.
(viii) The availability of appropriate local sanctions, including but not limited to jail,
treatment, community service work, house arrest, electronic surveillance, restitution centers,
work release centers, day reporting centers, or other local sanctions.
(b) Procedures to provide a parolee with written notice of the right to a parole
violation hearing to determine whether the parolee violated the conditions of parole alleged
in the violation report and the right to be represented by counsel at state expense at that
hearing if financially eligible.
(c) Procedures for a parolee to provide written waiver of the right to a parole
violation hearing, to admit to the violation or affirmatively choose not to contest the violation
alleged in the parole violation report, and to consent to the imposition of administrative
sanctions by the department.
(d) The level and type of sanctions that may be imposed by parole officers and other
supervisory personnel.
(e) The level and type of violation behavior that warrants a recommendation to the
committee that parole be revoked.
(f) Procedures notifying the parolee and the committee on parole of a violation
admitted by the parolee and the administrative sanctions imposed.
(g) Such other policies and procedures as are necessary to implement the provisions
of this Subsection and to provide adequate parole supervision.
(3) If the administrative sanction imposed pursuant to the provisions of this
Subsection is jail confinement, the confinement shall not exceed ten days per violation and
shall not exceed a total of sixty days per year.
(4) For purposes of this Subsection, "technical violation" means any violation of a
condition of parole as defined in R.S. 15:574.9(G)(2).
C.(1) If the chief probation and parole officer, upon recommendation by a parole
officer, has reasonable cause to believe that a parolee has violated the conditions of parole,
he shall notify the committee and shall cause the appropriate parole officer to submit the
parolee's record to the committee. After consideration of the record submitted, and after such
further investigation as it may deem necessary, the committee may order:
(a) The issuance of a reprimand and warning to the parolee.
(b) That the parolee be required to conform to one or more additional conditions of
parole which may be imposed in accordance with R.S. 15:574.4.
(c) That the parolee be arrested, and upon arrest be given a prerevocation hearing
within a reasonable time, at or reasonably near the place of the alleged parole violation or
arrest, to determine whether there is probable cause to detain the parolee pending orders of
the parole committee.
(2) Upon receiving a summary of the prerevocation proceeding, the committee may
order the following:
(a) The parolee's return to the physical custody of the Department of Public Safety
and Corrections, corrections services, to await a hearing to determine whether his parole
should be revoked.
(b) As an alternative to revocation, that the parolee, as a condition of parole, be
committed to a community rehabilitation center or a substance abuse treatment program
operated by, or under contract with, the department, for a period of time not to exceed six
months, without benefit of good time, provided that such commitment does not extend the
period of parole beyond the full parole term. Upon written request of the department that the
offender be removed for violations of the rules or regulations of the community rehabilitation
center or substance abuse program, the committee shall order that the parole be revoked, with
credit for time served in the community rehabilitation center.
D.(1) Upon recommendation of the supervising parole officer and approval of the
committee on parole, the level of supervision and the fees associated with the supervision
of a parolee may be reduced after the parolee has served a minimum of three years without
a violation of the terms and conditions of parole for a crime that is not a crime of violence
as defined by R.S. 14:2(B) or a sex offense as defined by R.S. 15:541 and a minimum of
seven years without a violation of the terms and conditions of parole for a crime that is a
crime of violence as defined by R.S. 14:2(B).
(2) A parolee who satisfies the conditions of Paragraph (1) of this Subsection may
be placed on inactive status upon approval of the committee. A parolee on inactive status
shall not be subject to the terms and conditions of parole under R.S. 15:574.4.2(A)(2).
(3) The committee shall maintain the authority to revoke parole as provided in this
Section and R.S. 15:574.9.
(4) Nothing in this Subsection shall eliminate the committee's authority to reduce
terms and conditions of parole prior to a parolee satisfying the requirements of Paragraph (1)
of this Subsection.
E. Repealed by Acts 2024, 2nd Ex. Sess., No. 8, §3.
Acts 1968, No. 191, §1; Amended by Acts 1974, No. 120, §1; Acts 1988, No. 380,
§1; Acts 1992, No. 301, §1; Acts 2010, No. 861, §7; Acts 2011, No. 104, §1; Acts 2012, No.
714, §8; Acts 2017, No. 280, §3, eff. Nov. 1, 2017; Acts 2020, No. 203, §1; Acts 2024, 2nd
Ex. Sess., No. 8, §§2, 3.