A Guide to “Parole Revocation Hearings” in Colorado

A parole revocation hearing is held when parolees are accused of violating the conditions of their parole. During this hearing, a Colorado State Board of Parole member hears the evidence and decides whether to revoke the person’s parole and return him or her to state prison.

judge at desk with scales of justice and a gavel

A parole revocation hearing is a hearing before a member of the Colorado State Board of Parole to determine whether parole should be taken away after an inmate has already been released on parole.

1. What is a revocation hearing in Colorado?

After an inmate has been released on parole, that release can be taken back and the inmate returned to incarceration, if it is found that the inmate has not followed the conditions of parole. A revocation hearing is a hearing to determine whether parole should be taken back, or “revoked.” 1

A revocation hearing is held before one member of the Colorado State Parole Board. The parolee is entitled to basic fairness, but sometimes evidence that would not be admissible at a trial can be admitted at a revocation hearing. Strict rules of evidence that apply in a court of law do not always have to be followed at a revocation hearing, where the parole board member can hear any evidence that is of value in proving or disproving any part of the case. 2

2. Can the board take back parole after I am already out on parole?

Yes. Even after an inmate has been released on parole, the inmate could be sent back to incarceration, if he or she fails to comply with the conditions of parole. For example, possession of a firearm by a previous offender, commission of a new offense including a drug felony, or removal of an electronic monitoring device are violations that require the parole officer to file a complaint for revocation. 3

Parole officers

Each inmate released on parole is required to follow specific conditions of a parole agreement in order to remain on parole, and is assigned a parole officer who will monitor whether the conditions are followed or violated. If the inmate violates a condition of the parole agreement, the parole officer or anyone else aware of the violation can report it.

If a condition is violated, the parole officer may and in some instances must file a complaint for a revocation hearing, and the parole board can revoke parole. Some violations without an underlying criminal offense may result in other measures, such as a talk with the parole officer, substance abuse treatment, or a brief period in jail, while for other violations the parole officer must file for a revocation hearing.

Parole conditions

Common conditions of parole supervision, which can be changed or added to by the parole officer or parole board, include:

Parole violations

In general, if the violation is a technical one and there is no criminal offense underlying the violation, a parole officer must consider intermediate sanctions, drug treatment or other support services, or modification of parole conditions, before filing a revocation complaint. 5

But if the parolee has received up to four intermediate sanctions committing the parolee to a brief term in jail, or if there is a heightened risk to public safety, the parole officer may bypass intermediate sanctions and file a complaint for revocation. 6

In addition, if a parolee fails more than one drug test, a parole officer may make an immediate warrantless arrest, and may seek parole revocation. 7

Very serious parole violations

Some situations are seen as so dangerous to public safety, that the parole officer has no discretion if such situations occur and is required to file a complaint seeking revocation. These situations are when the parolee: