My sister was on house arrest. We had a CO leak and she left the house after the fire department told us to vacate the building immediately. The police that came for her ankle monitor going off arrived before the first responders did.
My brother and I have a close childhood friend that we're still friends with who was under house arrest as a teenager. The police allowed him to come to hang out at my parents' house because my mom treated him as her son and was strict with him, which his grandmother confirmed with the officer. He straightened his life out real fast and thanked his Mom(my and my brothers Mom) for taking him in and believing in him.
Most often, "unruly" kids just need a good role model and someone who really cares about/for them. Too many children don't get to have this experience sadly. Glad your friend did :)
One of the biggest issues with ankle monitors is that when my old man got one it was already broken and they tried charging him for it and it wouldn't charge half the time,and apparently according to some of my buddies whose had some this was pretty common Edit: For people who are confused I live in one of those county areas if that gives a bit more context on why I know that many people with ankle monitors
My brother was on house arrest. He had to move every few hours because it made it seem like it was off. Which meant waking up early in the morning to move around. There was an instance where the tracking messed up and he was accused of leaving the house at 2am. He was asleep. My room is across from the room he was staying in. (He was stuck at our house because he was visiting when he screwed up and got on house arrest.) I was awake at that time and he was snoring away. They got a GPS booster he had to pay for so it wouldn't happen again..
@hiiiii-t6j You don't have to do all that much now because the city and county use house arrest as a huge cost savings measure. It costs my city $48K to $72K per year to jail someone. But if the criminal has house arrest, that huge cost is gone. AND the criminal pays their own health costs since they are at home not jail. And they pay their own food and utilities but in jail, all that stuff including A/C and heating are paid by the taxpayers.
Basically every major grocery store has delivery for a nominal fee these days, if you really had an emergency. When they are setting up the agreement they discuss what errands you need to run and set up a a few hours a day or two a week for that. Its really not that bad in most areas as long as you are proactive about letting them know.
@@kylehenline3245 I had a schedule approved my my p.o. I could go to N.a. meetings 3x a week pre scheduled but had to have a slip signed by the meeting leader and had a time limit. I got 2 hrs twice a week to go to the grocery store or take care of personal needs, I had 40 mins travel time to and from my job. I had one incident where I hit a deer on the way home from work. I called the cops and when they got there I asked them to arrest me and why. the cop did. I didn't make my in time. When I went to my hearing my p.o. let it slide because I was not trying to "escape" and had proof by turning myself into law enforcement and was in custody before my out time was up.
Nah, you just give them your schedule. I had a guy who came into my store before he went to the gym who was on house arrest for a DUI. He was allowed to go to the gym, the grocery store, and work. He had to ask for doctors appointments and other stuff.
I always have had these questions 1) What about food, food shopping? Are there certain windows you’re allowed to go food shopping, or must you alert your PO first and get permission? 2) Do you shower with the ankle bracelet on? Is it waterproof?
You have to get permission from your PO before you can leave basically to do anything and if you have a job, you have to be there within a certain time limit, or they'll arrest you for breaking house arrest. As for the shower, I don't think they're water proof but also not sure.
You can also get permission to work. I had a coworker who was on house arrest and he was able to work at our shop. But he could only be there until 15 minutes after the shop closed
What most people do not know is that the monthly cost for an ankle monitor for set up and daily monitoring is as low as $150.00 and can go as high as $1,200.00, depending on which jurisdiction you are in. There is very little statutory limitations on fees. It can be expensive to stay out of lockup.
Not to mention how often the GPS messes up to where youll be sleeping and the alarm woll randomly go off and you'll have to explain that you are still in the house
No it depends on which ankle monitor you have like the smart tag from Buddi LLC would register the wearer as not moving and interestingly enough the collection rate on the wearers positional data will decrease. I used to work as an ankle monitor technician. 😌
I have a question, what if someone is on a house arrest and he sees (let's say) a person getting kidnapped and he runs out to save them, then what will happen?
Police would know locations of him if kidnapers aint take it out. If they take it out they would think that you cut of ankle monitor and escape. And u would be have arest warrant, cops would be search for you. And next if they would find you u would be send to jail, and if they findout about those guys they also was be send to jail. And next u would must to battle in court and say what happen
He gets arrested, charged, and then brings a defense of "necessity", or that his breach of his conditions should be overlooked because it was in pursuit of the greater good / to preserve life and health of the other person. Then it becomes a matter of if the judge bounces it out of court or if the jury will acquit.
They set my buddies range to his front door, so he couldn’t even go to his driveway, always remember stopping by and watching him sprint to the mailbox and back home lol
They are not animals. For example, there is normally a "curfew" early in the day that allows you to go out and run whatever errands you may need to complete. Also, it's an estimated position, which means that if you need to take the trashcan out to the street, that's fine as long as you return to your assigned area in a decent length of time.
Sometimes you get a curfew its all how it's worded in the condition as someone whose been on house arrest i could go to work but no where else meaning I couldn't even get gas i would have to have someone else get me gas
Well, more people work from home nowadays, but not everybody can do that. Paying 12-15 dollars a day maintenance seems like a real burden if you can't work from home.
Okay. Its a punishment for breaking a crime. Its not supposed to be fun and enjoyable. They don't want that they can go to jail and daddy taxpayer will pay for them to live.
@@ZairuK9001 no one said it should be fun but it should be possible i hate the idea of the rich getting more benefits being abled to make your punishment less with money is just corruption
@@ZairuK9001The entire point of it is to keep people out of jail and avoid cost the the taxpayers. Im sick of playing for people's legal screw ups. Your logic is dumb.
They aren’t animals. For example, there is usually a type of “curfew” early in the day-but giving you time to go out to take care of any errands you may have to do. Also, it’s an approximate location, in the sense that, if you need to take the Trashcan out to the street that’s okay as long as you return back to your designated area in a reasonable amount of time.
@shadowrylander they only have a 40ish km range, so they wouldnt be of much use to a mobile phone. You can find maps of RTK base stations online pretty easily
House arrest usually has some conditions such as being able to attend work or school within pre determined hours. Also if something is absolutely necessary you can get approval to leave the zone for a set period of time to get food, toilet paper or handle an emergency. This is based on the seriousness of the crime however. Also the ankle monitor if you had any form of drug conviction will monitor alcohol and drug consumption through your sweat, so don’t do that.
Also it depends on the degree of emergency as well. Like if your house was on fire it would be ok if you broke house arrest without permission, if it was just a work issue it would be harder
Exactly, working is typically a requirement for being on house arrest. In the area I'm in, you have a set route from home to work and back. You schedule when you go to the store or Dr. Apps or anything else like treatment, religious services, etc. You're being monitored, not really confined. Heck, Life 360 does almost the same thing and it's a whole lot cheaper.
@@micwclar true for me no specific route to go to work just have one hour before and after work and have to have my schedule on me at all times in case I'm stopped
Yeah here in the UK when you're on house arrest you're allowed to go and do whatever during the day. They only care that you're home between 7pm-7am. There is some flexibilty in that curfew on a case by case basis but it's always a 12 hour stretch they're required to be home and it's always overnight. Also in the UK tags don't monitor alcohol or drug use, instead they take some hair and urine samples. Weirdly if you test positive for drugs they don't care, but alcohol is a 1 way ticket back to prison.
@@micwclar in my state a job or schooling is required and you have to set up a schedule with your PO or monitoring agency. For low level offenses you can contact whoever is monitoring you in order to make arrangements to go shopping see a doctor etc. I’ve never spoken to a higher risk individual dealing with this, mostly alcohol and drug violations so I don’t know if it gets more restrictive as the crime gets more severe but I assume so.
Question... How do they get groceries? (If they don't have internet access) And how would they get clearance to leave ie. Hospital, dental or a funeral?
I used to work with two criminals that had ankle bracelets they got permission to go to work they just had to show the parole officer their schedules for the week before they were allowed to go back into work.
"you are under arrest for leaving ur house" "my house got destroyed by an earthquake" "ur supposed to tell us" Edit: HOW DID I GET 5.3K LIKES IN 2 DAYS-
Well yeah you need permission to leave, otherwise it's your own fault that you're getting arrested, it doesn't even penalize you at all if you're too lazy to report it despite having a phone on your foot, you just have to deal with police for 6-12 hours before being sent home
"But I never left my property. I was there the whole time, right there. In my living room. I think it was my living room..." "You think?" "It was dark under all that rubble." "I attended your address at twelve noon. The sun was shining, it was not dark and you were nowhere to be seen." "I was there, I swear! Under something really heavy. Come on, man. I didn't leave my house, my house left me. The earth threw it up in the air and it fell back down on top of me. That's what earthquakes do!" "Mr Criminal, neither adverse weather events nor seismic inconveniences are sufficient grounds for failing to abide by your bail conditions." "Why do you talk like that?" "I certainly did not allow it to prevent me from meeting my obligation to attend our appointment. And it wasn't easy. The roads were a mess." "Earthquake." "The citizenry were much more idiotic than usual - and that's certainly saying something for this city." "Again, earthquake. And this close to Christmas everyone's crazy." "I was forced to trek the last five blocks on foot. When I finally arrived at your property I was able to locate what was left of your front door and I knocked on it. Loudly. Several times. You failed to answer. Didn't you hear that? I even yelled your name, loudly. Three times." "Yeah, I heard you and I yelled back as best I could. I yelled to you where I was. I yelled I needed help and get me out of here and a whole lotta other stuff." "I heard nothing from you, Mr Criminal. Not a word." "Yeah, well, maybe better you didn't hear some of it actually." "Even so, you surely saw me standing there, at your front door? If I remember correctly from previous visits, your front door opens into your living room. Your windows had no curtains. Indeed, on this occasion they had not a single intact pane of glass. If you were in the living room like you say, not six feet from where I stood, you must have seen me." "Why do you talk like that? It's wierd." "Why did you not come to the door?" "I couldn't get to the door! I couldn't even stand up until the firefighters dragged me out and by that time you'd left already." "You were unable to stand without assistance? Have you been violating the conditions of your bail by using intoxicants?" "No! My damn leg was broken?" "Ah yes, your leg was 'broken'. And it just happened to be the leg our ankle monitor was attached to - which is now damaged beyond repair. I have a replacement unit here. Perhaps we'll have more luck if we attach it to your other leg. There. And now I'll need you to sign this equipment damage slash replacement form. Thank you. And this invoice." "Invoice? What the-? I can't pay this!" "We have a range of payment plans available if-" "I'm not paying this! I didn't break the damn monitor, the earthquake did!" "Then by all means sue the earthquake or its legal representatives to recover these costs but in the first instance, you owe us this amount for replacement of our equipment damaged while in your possession, as agreed by you when you signed the original monitoring agreement with us under the agreed guidelines of our contract with the county court." "What is all this? Equipment hardware cost - monitor - strap. Equipment delivery fee. Monitor calibration fee. Representative attendance fee. That's you?" "Indeed." "Off-site attendance travel levy?" "This hospital is 14 miles outside the standard service radius covered in our county court contract." "Customer orientation and education service fee - i.e. you again." "Correct." "Fine, gimme the pen. But this is harassment! Extortion! You should be the one wearing this thing, you thief!" "I'm merely fulfilling the terms of the contract you signed, Mr Criminal, and I'm certainly no thief. In fact, I expect to study for the bar next year!" "You're a lawyer?" "Almost." "A lawyer. So that's why you talk like a really old dictionary? "Thank you for the compliment, Mr Criminal." "Welcome." "And thank you for your signatures. Here is your copy. Payment options are outlined on the reverse and I suggest you give particular attention to the fine print in section G under the heading "How To Pay". "Thanks a lot. Will do." "That concludes my business with you today. Can I be of any further of assistance?" "No! Absolutely not! I can't afford another... off-site attendance travel levy." "Excellent. Very wise."
@@halimacamara4744 Its not a good question. There is a system in place. The courts are aware that people get evicted. Its not a situation that would be a surprise to law enforcement.
@@christopherlane5238 your expecting a level of competence and communication that has been shown time and time again not to exist in America. Good luck with that
Man… My uncle was framed for a crime and got one of these, he was confined to my parents house for a little over a month before he got it off Makes me miss him… (He died recently, well after this)
When i was 17 i used to have that bracelet for a whole year and it was a nightmare after that i didnt do bad stuff again. Edit: for those who are asking (nobody is) i need to ask permition everyday to work and thats it. I was all day working. And i couldnt have free time at home cause my parents didnt let me chill. So yeah
@n3h4_sh31kh hush now bud he isn't trying to act hard he just has a personal story that's relevant to this short. Have some respect, this man turned his life around.
“You’re gonna be on house arrest! Oh, and by the way, we know you won’t be able to work the entire time but we’ll still charge you.” Edit: y’all need to chill. How can you see my name and profile picture, fucking Berserk shit, and think I am being serious? I am not.
@@Recckklessssometimes they don't coming from experience i was on full house arrest for 8 months no work nothing only after 8 months could I go to job interview and after the job interview the judge would have to approve it if I did get the job
I used to work at company that had a lot of ex convicts some with moniters on still. They were allowed to be at work allowed outside those zones a specific amount of time before an alarm went off. Thats for going work/home and to the store quickly if necessary. Thats more or less what i remember
Same for ignition interlocks. You have to pay for the device. Pay to have it installed. Pay to have it removed. Etc. Oh and the installation of the interlock almost always fucks up you vehicles eletrical system after they remove it.
I've got question's about the house arrest thing, 1. How do you buy food? 2. How do you get money to buy food or for the maintenance fee? 3. If you let the battery die out of accident would be there still an arrest warrent even when you doesn't leave the house and 4. How do you change the batteries?
Dude, I don't know about any of this. I've seen this in movies and cartoons but that's it, I don't even think the country where I've from have this either🤷♂️
The bracelet seems like a problem if it can't be removed for any reason, as if it causes skin problems, that can be irritating. Not to mention showering. Even if its water proof, ideally you want to clean your leg when showering.
@@skunknoodles6426 These are usually alternative to bail before your trial, which means lots of innocent people who have done nothing wrong have worn these. Their use as sentencing is much rarer.
Ideally it is more healthy to not commit crime to get yourself in this position in the first place. Ideally other people around you want to feel safe and you’re clearly putting them in danger.
I knew a 12 year old on house arrest (a former friend of my daughter). The judge did not want to send him to juvenile hall because he was too young and he would likely get roped into a bad crowd. The kid violated house arrest three times: once because he “forgot” to charge his ankle monitor, another time because he didn’t think the ankle monitor could actually track him, and the third time was to meet his friends at the gas station down the road. He ended up going to juvenile hall and his mom was charged for failing to support him in the process.
The zone is not actually just "inside the house" it's more of a radius of the address. At least where I'm at, people are given a little distance outside of the address every now and then for a smoke break. So long as you're like "right there" and don't abuse it or you'll have problems. Idk the law on this. This is just how my pretrial department treats it. It's a "abuse it, lose it and then some"
Thank you, that is the comment I was looking for. I asked myself, if the system was so strict that you could breathe fresh air by walking a few meters away from the house, or not.
Here in the UK you are allowed to go anywhere during the day but have to be home between 7pm-7am. From 7pm-7am you're not allowed outside at all. They calibrate the machine to all the doors and windows of the property.
i have just realized that i have been watching you for over a year now, I can't help it tho, hearing you laugh and enjoy yourself playing makes me happy and cheery also!
If your monitor dies or starts malfunctioning, PLEASE follow this advice: Get your smartphone and immediately start recording yourself that you're at your home at the time you discovered that it died; show in the video that you're at home. Don't stop recording yourself at your home until you get a hold of the phone number you were given if such an event were to occur. You're gonna need ALL the proof you can get to show that you never left your home while it was dead. Show other clocks, timestamps, get witnesses, or get whatever evidence you can get to show that you never left the perimeter. Cameras don't lie, and this could save your ass at a termination hearing. Your lawyer will thank you.
I had a friend on house arrest. He could do everything he normally would besides drink alcohol and do drugs. Other than that it was like he had a curfew from 6am to 6 pm
It's normally used for crimes that are deemed very low to no threat at all. They use it because prisons have an overcrowding issue so those who aren't deemed a threat to anyone are put on house arrest and those who are a danger to those around them are put in prison.
So probation is a bit different. There's basically two kinds: Supervised and unsupervised, both generally come with some sort of suspended sentence. Supervised is the one where you have to stick to whatever set of rules (check-ins, drug tests, sobriety programs, whatever else, you know it all depends what the offense was) and if you re-offend or violate the rules of the probation then you can be send to jail to serve off the sentence. Unsupervised is basically just you're free to go, don't reoffend because you will have to serve off the suspended sentence. Both have a term. Supervised might release you early if you behave. With unsupervised there's really nobody to release you from it.
my mom had a friend back when she was in highschool who got put on house arrest, so she had the range of the neighborhood around her school which included the grocery store. her parents had to go on a trip and was having my grandma (my mom's mom, obviously) watch her. she took her to the store while my mom was at band practice and got caught trying to steal alcohol, while already on house arrest.
The equipment must be hooked up to a land line. So if you don’t have service for one already, you have to start one. And if you don’t have a jack, you also have to pay to have one installed.
How do you oay your mortgage if you can't work? Is it just paused until your time is up? If not, what do they do if your house is foreclosed and you're homeless?
Someone I know was on house arrest, and he was taking the trash out, when the trash can fell over and was rolling down the street. He was looking around for someone to help, but there was nobody around and he ended up going after it, and that got him in more trouble.
You notify your governing authority that you would like to do a grocery store trip. A written request that is generally approved. You'll be given a date and time to go, and a return home time. Just always be where you are supposed to be. You can also request to visit the homes of relatives and friends, even attending funerals. Submit your request as per the rules and you will generally be approved for your request. Provided you adhere to their rules. If you violate the rules you will eventually end up back in jail. Just be where you are supposed to be, when you are supposed to be there.
@@deantodd8103No everyone can have delivery though. DoorDash and other delivery services like that aren’t available in my area so if I were to ever be out with an AB I’d have to ask to do a shopping trip
sometimes the house arrest has a set time where the perimeter extends to include a direct path to the grocery store and the grocery store itself. it may also do the same for your work, provided you get back on time.
"Hey, you can't leave your house while you got this bracelet on, and you owe us 15 dollars a day" "... How do i work to get the 15 dollars a day?" "That's your problem 👉👉"
He forgot to mention, somebody is listening to you through the ankle monitor, and they can issue you commands through it too...basically gotta watch what you say too.
I’ve always wondered, in an emergency situation like if the house was on fire or the person was having a medical emergency would they then be able to leave the house WITHOUT incurring further penalties?
My friend has a NCR flag and the first time I saw it I asked him why because I mistook it for the actual California flag until I got a good look at it.
Question from someone outside USA. If the person isn't allowed to leave the perimeter of their house, how are they meant to get money to pay each day? Do they have to call family members to help out?
Remember, on top of the cost of wearing an ankle monitor. House arrest makes it impossible to go to work for many people. Even during the pandemic, many of us couldn’t work from home, and even less people can now. Also, good luck if you get sick. Even if you get the option to leave during the day, the curfew often makes it impossible to get to appointments or work non-office hours (ie an hourly job with shifts).
I always wondered, are forbidden to leave your house or your property because I feel like as long as you are on your own property there shouldn’t be an issue
Question with the last part what is when the house in that case beginns to burn is he allowed to leave the area then to get in safty or is he still getting in jail ?
I’m assuming they have a little leniency in case of life and death emergencies- the house is on fire, neighborhood flooded, emergency room, events where staying in your house could mean death?
Currently on house arrest in Indiana, I have to pay $13 a day, go to the home detention department of the court house weekly to make a schedule of times I will be out of my house, where I will go, and when I will return, there is a 200ft radius around my house that I am allowed to be in so I can let my dogs out, mow my yard, and other things like that, I have to charge my device for an hour each day (it’s a magnetic charger that pops off easily so I cannot do it in my sleep). If my device breaks I have to pay $750, if my charger breaks I have to pay $40, if my device dies an officer for the home detention department will come to my house and I will get a violation, I cannot drink or use drugs of any kind and I can be required to submit a drug test at any point in time, I will have 3hrs to submit my drug test after requested to do so Sorry this comment is long but I hope that fills anyone’s curiosity
From my understanding, certain leeway is given, at the court's discretion, for a certain distance from your domicile. As in they wont ding you for going to your next door neighbor to borrow a cup of sugar. It also allows for X number of possible discrepancies or GPS errors in the tracking. Seldom is it an immediate do not pass go thing to have a negligible amount or frequency of discrepancies.
*I just uploaded a new long form video! Check it out by clicking the link above this video's title, and let me know what you think*
23sec ago is wild good video
I will not let you know what I think because I invoke the fifth
2 min ago
could you follos me please🖤
No t'y mr worry
My sister was on house arrest. We had a CO leak and she left the house after the fire department told us to vacate the building immediately. The police that came for her ankle monitor going off arrived before the first responders did.
Was she re arrested or did they figure out it was an actual emergency?
@@CrabJelly5225I’m curious too
DID SHE GET ARRESTED AGAIN OR SMTHING WHAT HAPPENED PWEASE
Surely the police understood there was an emergency- right?
Tell us the whole story
My brother and I have a close childhood friend that we're still friends with who was under house arrest as a teenager. The police allowed him to come to hang out at my parents' house because my mom treated him as her son and was strict with him, which his grandmother confirmed with the officer. He straightened his life out real fast and thanked his Mom(my and my brothers Mom) for taking him in and believing in him.
Most often, "unruly" kids just need a good role model and someone who really cares about/for them. Too many children don't get to have this experience sadly. Glad your friend did :)
K but who asked
I asked @@ConorJames905
@@Wishtelle 🗿🗿
@@ConorJames905 I asked
One of the biggest issues with ankle monitors is that when my old man got one it was already broken and they tried charging him for it and it wouldn't charge half the time,and apparently according to some of my buddies whose had some this was pretty common
Edit: For people who are confused I live in one of those county areas if that gives a bit more context on why I know that many people with ankle monitors
jeez- hope he's okay now
underrated
how 1.7k likes but 2 well now 3 replies???!
Bro's saying it with confidence about what happened with his old man 😂
You've had more than a couple of friends who were under house arrest?
My brother was on house arrest. He had to move every few hours because it made it seem like it was off. Which meant waking up early in the morning to move around. There was an instance where the tracking messed up and he was accused of leaving the house at 2am. He was asleep. My room is across from the room he was staying in. (He was stuck at our house because he was visiting when he screwed up and got on house arrest.) I was awake at that time and he was snoring away. They got a GPS booster he had to pay for so it wouldn't happen again..
what did he do
@hiiiii-t6j You don't have to do all that much now because the city and county use house arrest as a huge cost savings measure. It costs my city $48K to $72K per year to jail someone. But if the criminal has house arrest, that huge cost is gone. AND the criminal pays their own health costs since they are at home not jail. And they pay their own food and utilities but in jail, all that stuff including A/C and heating are paid by the taxpayers.
@hiiiii-t6j I'd rather not say for privacy sake.
@@novafiregalaxy204privacy? We don't know his name or other personal details man
I had a stroke reading that. How old are you?
"Can i go get food, im starving" "we'll get back to you in 2-3 business days
"Sir I was mid boss fight and couldn't pause how was I meant to change the battery"
Basically every major grocery store has delivery for a nominal fee these days, if you really had an emergency. When they are setting up the agreement they discuss what errands you need to run and set up a a few hours a day or two a week for that. Its really not that bad in most areas as long as you are proactive about letting them know.
@@kylehenline3245 interesting
@@kylehenline3245 I had a schedule approved my my p.o. I could go to N.a. meetings 3x a week pre scheduled but had to have a slip signed by the meeting leader and had a time limit. I got 2 hrs twice a week to go to the grocery store or take care of personal needs, I had 40 mins travel time to and from my job. I had one incident where I hit a deer on the way home from work. I called the cops and when they got there I asked them to arrest me and why. the cop did. I didn't make my in time. When I went to my hearing my p.o. let it slide because I was not trying to "escape" and had proof by turning myself into law enforcement and was in custody before my out time was up.
Nah, you just give them your schedule. I had a guy who came into my store before he went to the gym who was on house arrest for a DUI. He was allowed to go to the gym, the grocery store, and work. He had to ask for doctors appointments and other stuff.
I always have had these questions
1) What about food, food shopping? Are there certain windows you’re allowed to go food shopping, or must you alert your PO first and get permission?
2) Do you shower with the ankle bracelet on? Is it waterproof?
I think for the food thing they use delivery services, not sure about the shower
You have to get permission from your PO before you can leave basically to do anything and if you have a job, you have to be there within a certain time limit, or they'll arrest you for breaking house arrest. As for the shower, I don't think they're water proof but also not sure.
Pretty sure you can just call delivery for food.
1 that's your problems to clear with departments
2 yes it is waterproof, you are not meant to remove it, it also knows if the strap is cut
You can also get permission to work. I had a coworker who was on house arrest and he was able to work at our shop. But he could only be there until 15 minutes after the shop closed
What most people do not know is that the monthly cost for an ankle monitor for set up and daily monitoring is as low as $150.00 and can go as high as $1,200.00, depending on which jurisdiction you are in. There is very little statutory limitations on fees. It can be expensive to stay out of lockup.
thanjs
It's all about that revenue generation
It’s a really good example of how the rich get special privileges in regards to legal consequences.
It's expensive inside too they can charge u per day u are inside
Can such a person run a business from home?
Not to mention how often the GPS messes up to where youll be sleeping and the alarm woll randomly go off and you'll have to explain that you are still in the house
No it depends on which ankle monitor you have like the smart tag from Buddi LLC would register the wearer as not moving and interestingly enough the collection rate on the wearers positional data will decrease.
I used to work as an ankle monitor technician. 😌
“I’m in, I’m out”
Moments before disaster
Pause.
🗿
🗿
Lil' bit of-in-and-out, my brother
ვააა მეც ქართველი ვარ
How do u pay 12-15 dollars a day if u can't go to work
b a l l s
Savings a partner or a wfh job
They will chop off your ba-
Fuck the poor!
Depending on the agreement several people on house arrest have a mapped out route to their work and to a grocery store covered for certain hours
I have a question, what if someone is on a house arrest and he sees (let's say) a person getting kidnapped and he runs out to save them, then what will happen?
Police would know locations of him if kidnapers aint take it out.
If they take it out they would think that you cut of ankle monitor and escape.
And u would be have arest warrant, cops would be search for you.
And next if they would find you u would be send to jail, and if they findout about those guys they also was be send to jail.
And next u would must to battle in court and say what happen
He still gets arrested and charged because he still committed a crime 😭🤦♂️
that falls under being a vigilante innit, i suppose thatd still be wrong (not morally ofc)
Bro saw someone got kidnapped
He gets arrested, charged, and then brings a defense of "necessity", or that his breach of his conditions should be overlooked because it was in pursuit of the greater good / to preserve life and health of the other person.
Then it becomes a matter of if the judge bounces it out of court or if the jury will acquit.
They set my buddies range to his front door, so he couldn’t even go to his driveway, always remember stopping by and watching him sprint to the mailbox and back home lol
They are not animals.
For example, there is normally a "curfew" early in the day that allows you to go out and run whatever errands you may need to complete. Also, it's an estimated position, which means that if you need to take the trashcan out to the street, that's fine as long as you return to your assigned area in a decent length of time.
Thanks for copying and pasting another person's comment in case I can't see it ☺️
You’re right, they’re not animals. Animals don’t know right from wrong. These are for people who have broken the law.
Sometimes you get a curfew its all how it's worded in the condition as someone whose been on house arrest i could go to work but no where else meaning I couldn't even get gas i would have to have someone else get me gas
Oh bot bot
Teleporting comments are still a thing, apparently.
Well, more people work from home nowadays, but not everybody can do that. Paying 12-15 dollars a day maintenance seems like a real burden if you can't work from home.
Okay. Its a punishment for breaking a crime. Its not supposed to be fun and enjoyable. They don't want that they can go to jail and daddy taxpayer will pay for them to live.
You can still go to work on house arrest
@@ZairuK9001 no one said it should be fun
but it should be possible
i hate the idea of the rich getting more benefits
being abled to make your punishment less with money is just corruption
@@ZairuK9001The entire point of it is to keep people out of jail and avoid cost the the taxpayers. Im sick of playing for people's legal screw ups. Your logic is dumb.
(In response to Zairu)Still doesn’t mean they should be treated like shit
They aren’t animals.
For example, there is usually a type of “curfew” early in the day-but giving you time to go out to take care of any errands you may have to do. Also, it’s an approximate location, in the sense that, if you need to take the Trashcan out to the street that’s okay as long as you return back to your designated area in a reasonable amount of time.
I was wondering how they got the GPS so accurate...
@@shadowrylanderit’s down to the meter they measure movement.
@@shadowrylander could work on RTK gps, its what farmers use on GPS guided equipment and its accurate to the centimeter
@glaze_tpf9791 Damn... Wish we could get these into our mobile devices one day... Do you know how much energy they use?
@shadowrylander they only have a 40ish km range, so they wouldnt be of much use to a mobile phone. You can find maps of RTK base stations online pretty easily
House arrest usually has some conditions such as being able to attend work or school within pre determined hours. Also if something is absolutely necessary you can get approval to leave the zone for a set period of time to get food, toilet paper or handle an emergency. This is based on the seriousness of the crime however.
Also the ankle monitor if you had any form of drug conviction will monitor alcohol and drug consumption through your sweat, so don’t do that.
Also it depends on the degree of emergency as well. Like if your house was on fire it would be ok if you broke house arrest without permission, if it was just a work issue it would be harder
Exactly, working is typically a requirement for being on house arrest. In the area I'm in, you have a set route from home to work and back. You schedule when you go to the store or Dr. Apps or anything else like treatment, religious services, etc. You're being monitored, not really confined. Heck, Life 360 does almost the same thing and it's a whole lot cheaper.
@@micwclar true for me no specific route to go to work just have one hour before and after work and have to have my schedule on me at all times in case I'm stopped
Yeah here in the UK when you're on house arrest you're allowed to go and do whatever during the day. They only care that you're home between 7pm-7am.
There is some flexibilty in that curfew on a case by case basis but it's always a 12 hour stretch they're required to be home and it's always overnight.
Also in the UK tags don't monitor alcohol or drug use, instead they take some hair and urine samples. Weirdly if you test positive for drugs they don't care, but alcohol is a 1 way ticket back to prison.
@@micwclar in my state a job or schooling is required and you have to set up a schedule with your PO or monitoring agency. For low level offenses you can contact whoever is monitoring you in order to make arrangements to go shopping see a doctor etc. I’ve never spoken to a higher risk individual dealing with this, mostly alcohol and drug violations so I don’t know if it gets more restrictive as the crime gets more severe but I assume so.
Question... How do they get groceries? (If they don't have internet access) And how would they get clearance to leave ie. Hospital, dental or a funeral?
You are allowed to do those things. You just have to speak to your parole officer beforehand.
Phone call to the parole officer.
I used to work with two criminals that had ankle bracelets they got permission to go to work they just had to show the parole officer their schedules for the week before they were allowed to go back into work.
@@MrScraftineer I'm sure they can also adjust the house arrest boundary to add in the workplace too.
In my state, it's common for house arrest orders to include one scheduled trip to the grocery store, usually on a specified day.
"you are under arrest for leaving ur house"
"my house got destroyed by an earthquake"
"ur supposed to tell us"
Edit: HOW DID I GET 5.3K LIKES IN 2 DAYS-
Well yeah you need permission to leave, otherwise it's your own fault that you're getting arrested, it doesn't even penalize you at all if you're too lazy to report it despite having a phone on your foot, you just have to deal with police for 6-12 hours before being sent home
“U’re”, technically…
This is a joke.
"But I never left my property. I was there the whole time, right there. In my living room. I think it was my living room..."
"You think?"
"It was dark under all that rubble."
"I attended your address at twelve noon. The sun was shining, it was not dark and you were nowhere to be seen."
"I was there, I swear! Under something really heavy. Come on, man. I didn't leave my house, my house left me. The earth threw it up in the air and it fell back down on top of me. That's what earthquakes do!"
"Mr Criminal, neither adverse weather events nor seismic inconveniences are sufficient grounds for failing to abide by your bail conditions."
"Why do you talk like that?"
"I certainly did not allow it to prevent me from meeting my obligation to attend our appointment. And it wasn't easy. The roads were a mess."
"Earthquake."
"The citizenry were much more idiotic than usual - and that's certainly saying something for this city."
"Again, earthquake. And this close to Christmas everyone's crazy."
"I was forced to trek the last five blocks on foot. When I finally arrived at your property I was able to locate what was left of your front door and I knocked on it. Loudly. Several times. You failed to answer. Didn't you hear that? I even yelled your name, loudly. Three times."
"Yeah, I heard you and I yelled back as best I could. I yelled to you where I was. I yelled I needed help and get me out of here and a whole lotta other stuff."
"I heard nothing from you, Mr Criminal. Not a word."
"Yeah, well, maybe better you didn't hear some of it actually."
"Even so, you surely saw me standing there, at your front door? If I remember correctly from previous visits, your front door opens into your living room. Your windows had no curtains. Indeed, on this occasion they had not a single intact pane of glass. If you were in the living room like you say, not six feet from where I stood, you must have seen me."
"Why do you talk like that? It's wierd."
"Why did you not come to the door?"
"I couldn't get to the door! I couldn't even stand up until the firefighters dragged me out and by that time you'd left already."
"You were unable to stand without assistance? Have you been violating the conditions of your bail by using intoxicants?"
"No! My damn leg was broken?"
"Ah yes, your leg was 'broken'. And it just happened to be the leg our ankle monitor was attached to - which is now damaged beyond repair. I have a replacement unit here. Perhaps we'll have more luck if we attach it to your other leg. There. And now I'll need you to sign this equipment damage slash replacement form. Thank you. And this invoice."
"Invoice? What the-? I can't pay this!"
"We have a range of payment plans available if-"
"I'm not paying this! I didn't break the damn monitor, the earthquake did!"
"Then by all means sue the earthquake or its legal representatives to recover these costs but in the first instance, you owe us this amount for replacement of our equipment damaged while in your possession, as agreed by you when you signed the original monitoring agreement with us under the agreed guidelines of our contract with the county court."
"What is all this? Equipment hardware cost - monitor - strap. Equipment delivery fee. Monitor calibration fee. Representative attendance fee. That's you?"
"Indeed."
"Off-site attendance travel levy?"
"This hospital is 14 miles outside the standard service radius covered in our county court contract."
"Customer orientation and education service fee - i.e. you again."
"Correct."
"Fine, gimme the pen. But this is harassment! Extortion! You should be the one wearing this thing, you thief!"
"I'm merely fulfilling the terms of the contract you signed, Mr Criminal, and I'm certainly no thief. In fact, I expect to study for the bar next year!"
"You're a lawyer?"
"Almost."
"A lawyer. So that's why you talk like a really old dictionary?
"Thank you for the compliment, Mr Criminal."
"Welcome."
"And thank you for your signatures. Here is your copy. Payment options are outlined on the reverse and I suggest you give particular attention to the fine print in section G under the heading "How To Pay".
"Thanks a lot. Will do."
"That concludes my business with you today. Can I be of any further of assistance?"
"No! Absolutely not! I can't afford another... off-site attendance travel levy."
"Excellent. Very wise."
damn you wrote an entire essay
@@shhhhhhh9328Bro you should be an author damn
Can you sue the water if you drown
As someone currently on house arrest, this was very informative. Thank you mike!
How do you get food?
@@tobyw.1688 he lets the battery run out and when the police show up he traps them in a web of silk and eats them.
@@tobyw.1688 he eats his own turds.
No, really, how do you think someone could get food without leaving their house, in the era of the Internet?
Probably you can order food and groceries, or you can get family or friends to bring groceries for you
@@tobyw.1688buy some
What happens if your evicted from your house when your on house arrest?
very good question
Just go to jail. Atleast you'll get free meals and housing there lol
@@halimacamara4744 Its not a good question. There is a system in place. The courts are aware that people get evicted. Its not a situation that would be a surprise to law enforcement.
@@christopherlane5238 your expecting a level of competence and communication that has been shown time and time again not to exist in America. Good luck with that
#christopherlane5238 dang chill out i just wanted to know the question
This dude makes so many skits I forget he's an actual lawyer
Yuh
@@Juramations ... He probably makes more money off RUclips than being a lawyer.. 🤔
He is an actor
@@luiza3707 no hes a lawyer making skits on youtube bro hes Law by mike
@AlohaCharlie124I'm seriously telling you he is an actor
The way he said “if you let the battery die out” he made me laugh so harf
A round of applause for the guy who had to commit something to get the ankle bracelet on
I see
@@laboriousjourneyfanreal its a fake one, its for the skit
No, fr shoutout to that guy for always playing the clueless guy. He has the face for it, no roast. Hope he gettin paid good.
*Yes let’s glorify crime* 👁️🫦👁️
@@devilzhauzno shi sherlock
Mike was a little to not worried 😂😂
Yeah
Man…
My uncle was framed for a crime and got one of these, he was confined to my parents house for a little over a month before he got it off
Makes me miss him… (He died recently, well after this)
I’m sorry for your loss
Loving this content
"Mike you worry too much!"
*eats the ground*
When i was 17 i used to have that bracelet for a whole year and it was a nightmare after that i didnt do bad stuff again.
Edit: for those who are asking (nobody is) i need to ask permition everyday to work and thats it. I was all day working. And i couldnt have free time at home cause my parents didnt let me chill. So yeah
oohhh badman
Tf did u do
@@mirkopoznanovic1147 lied on RUclips.
Glad to see you learned and improved as a person 😄🫂
@n3h4_sh31kh hush now bud he isn't trying to act hard he just has a personal story that's relevant to this short. Have some respect, this man turned his life around.
“You’re gonna be on house arrest! Oh, and by the way, we know you won’t be able to work the entire time but we’ll still charge you.”
Edit: y’all need to chill. How can you see my name and profile picture, fucking Berserk shit, and think I am being serious? I am not.
They will sometimes put provisions in place to let you go to work depending on where you are
@@Recckklessssometimes they don't coming from experience i was on full house arrest for 8 months no work nothing only after 8 months could I go to job interview and after the job interview the judge would have to approve it if I did get the job
I used to work at company that had a lot of ex convicts some with moniters on still. They were allowed to be at work allowed outside those zones a specific amount of time before an alarm went off. Thats for going work/home and to the store quickly if necessary. Thats more or less what i remember
then don’t do stuff that will get you on house arrest. simple.
Lol, you know you can't work when you in jail as well? Don't do the crime i guess.
Same for ignition interlocks.
You have to pay for the device. Pay to have it installed. Pay to have it removed. Etc.
Oh and the installation of the interlock almost always fucks up you vehicles eletrical system after they remove it.
"Mike, you worry too much" is tackled by cops.
"Do I now?"
“Mike, you worry too much”
*gets tackled by the police*
“Do I now?”
I've got question's about the house arrest thing, 1. How do you buy food? 2. How do you get money to buy food or for the maintenance fee? 3. If you let the battery die out of accident would be there still an arrest warrent even when you doesn't leave the house and 4. How do you change the batteries?
You think an ankle monitor takes batteries
Dude, I don't know about any of this. I've seen this in movies and cartoons but that's it, I don't even think the country where I've from have this either🤷♂️
I love Lawbymikes videos because he makes them entertaining while at the same time they are really helpful
The bracelet seems like a problem if it can't be removed for any reason, as if it causes skin problems, that can be irritating. Not to mention showering. Even if its water proof, ideally you want to clean your leg when showering.
Well ideally you'd want to not do whatever it takes to get it on you lmfao.
@@skunknoodles6426 These are usually alternative to bail before your trial, which means lots of innocent people who have done nothing wrong have worn these. Their use as sentencing is much rarer.
Ideally it is more healthy to not commit crime to get yourself in this position in the first place. Ideally other people around you want to feel safe and you’re clearly putting them in danger.
"Mike, you worry too much"
Famous last words
@DontReadMyyypictureebro shut up
I knew a 12 year old on house arrest (a former friend of my daughter). The judge did not want to send him to juvenile hall because he was too young and he would likely get roped into a bad crowd. The kid violated house arrest three times: once because he “forgot” to charge his ankle monitor, another time because he didn’t think the ankle monitor could actually track him, and the third time was to meet his friends at the gas station down the road. He ended up going to juvenile hall and his mom was charged for failing to support him in the process.
The zone is not actually just "inside the house" it's more of a radius of the address. At least where I'm at, people are given a little distance outside of the address every now and then for a smoke break. So long as you're like "right there" and don't abuse it or you'll have problems. Idk the law on this. This is just how my pretrial department treats it. It's a "abuse it, lose it and then some"
Thank you, that is the comment I was looking for. I asked myself, if the system was so strict that you could breathe fresh air by walking a few meters away from the house, or not.
Here in the UK you are allowed to go anywhere during the day but have to be home between 7pm-7am.
From 7pm-7am you're not allowed outside at all. They calibrate the machine to all the doors and windows of the property.
@@Jack-kx5rf, isn't that quite chill? I mean, you cannot go out or on long trips, but on work- or university I am usually home by this time
i have just realized that i have been watching you for over a year now, I can't help it tho, hearing you laugh and enjoy yourself playing makes me happy and cheery also!
The young man: Mike, you’re worrying too much!
A random cop: *catches him
but what, if someone needs help, and i have to get out that zone.
"Mike, you worry too much" - famous final words.
Bot
@@miloradpetrovic7244 anyone with even barely working eyes would be able to see that
Thot
BOT!!!!
Rainbolt gonna find his house easily from that map view
The tackle at the end made me jump
😂😂😂😂😂
Mike, what happens if you're on house arrest and there's a fire? Do you still get in trouble? Or would that be excusable because you were in danger?
hi, i have a question, what if you need groceries and dont wanna order online, do they take you to the store?
no
You usually have specific times of the day where you can go outside.
Same thing with work, you can go to work and back directly without any trouble
Interesting law by Mike. Thanks for interesting facts and teaching us more about law
Huh
Bot
@@Snorkylorkyhe ain’t a bot
He got tackled down like it was nothing 😂
Yuhh
If your monitor dies or starts malfunctioning, PLEASE follow this advice:
Get your smartphone and immediately start recording yourself that you're at your home at the time you discovered that it died; show in the video that you're at home. Don't stop recording yourself at your home until you get a hold of the phone number you were given if such an event were to occur. You're gonna need ALL the proof you can get to show that you never left your home while it was dead.
Show other clocks, timestamps, get witnesses, or get whatever evidence you can get to show that you never left the perimeter. Cameras don't lie, and this could save your ass at a termination hearing. Your lawyer will thank you.
"Mike you worry too much"
Last words
I had a friend on house arrest. He could do everything he normally would besides drink alcohol and do drugs. Other than that it was like he had a curfew from 6am to 6 pm
So he could leave in the evening?
@ yes. He would come to my house to hang out. As long as he made it back in time for curfew he was good
Stop them from being miserable. Drugs and alcohol are bad :/
@@elheisenberg9094 what if they heard you doing illegal things? 🤣
@@declanm2017 I don’t know 🤷🏾♂️. The curfew was more so he could go back and forth to work. But he worked for his dad😭
How do you buy food or get essentials? Also if you have a doctors appointment do they let you leave for them?
Delivery and Permition
@@strengthcolossal5538 What if there is no delivery from the supermarket? I guess you starve to death...
@@johnsmith1953x just go to prison for free meals
@@johnsmith1953x Have friends or go to jail. House arrest isn't a right, it's a privilege, if you can't make it work you don't keep it.
@@johnsmith1953x send the neighbors kid
What's the point(legal), of house arrest anyway, it's like being in jail but with comfort and little luxury. Why wouldn't they just put them in jail?
It's normally used for crimes that are deemed very low to no threat at all. They use it because prisons have an overcrowding issue so those who aren't deemed a threat to anyone are put on house arrest and those who are a danger to those around them are put in prison.
@davidharris3028 ah ok
Question: Does probation work the same way?
Probation usually allows you to do stuff under specific court guidelines, and you’re assigned an officer to keep you on track
So probation is a bit different. There's basically two kinds: Supervised and unsupervised, both generally come with some sort of suspended sentence.
Supervised is the one where you have to stick to whatever set of rules (check-ins, drug tests, sobriety programs, whatever else, you know it all depends what the offense was) and if you re-offend or violate the rules of the probation then you can be send to jail to serve off the sentence.
Unsupervised is basically just you're free to go, don't reoffend because you will have to serve off the suspended sentence.
Both have a term. Supervised might release you early if you behave. With unsupervised there's really nobody to release you from it.
"Mike you worry too much"
Top 10 worst final words to say.
Basically, face an infinite itch
That's only 5... 💀
@@JWRB_GamingI think you read that wrong...
@tonikorhonen7687 HEH? WDYM?
Got tackled like a football 😂
bro you cannot be real..you must be a bot fr
my mom had a friend back when she was in highschool who got put on house arrest, so she had the range of the neighborhood around her school which included the grocery store. her parents had to go on a trip and was having my grandma (my mom's mom, obviously) watch her. she took her to the store while my mom was at band practice and got caught trying to steal alcohol, while already on house arrest.
Thank you for publishing entertaining yet educational video😊
That tackle was everything 😂🙌🏾👌🏾
YAY LAWBYMIKE VIDEO
The equipment must be hooked up to a land line. So if you don’t have service for one already, you have to start one. And if you don’t have a jack, you also have to pay to have one installed.
I love your videos it is very interesting
I wonder how many false positives they get from GPS drift...
Too many...
I'm sure it ignores small drifts, which means if you're across the street for like 1 second, it probably won't matter
**Police officer tackles criminal**
"AND HIS NAME IS JOHN CENA"
How do you oay your mortgage if you can't work? Is it just paused until your time is up? If not, what do they do if your house is foreclosed and you're homeless?
Someone I know was on house arrest, and he was taking the trash out, when the trash can fell over and was rolling down the street.
He was looking around for someone to help, but there was nobody around and he ended up going after it, and that got him in more trouble.
Mike indeed wasn't worried too much
how do people on house arrest get groceries?
Delivery?
@@deantodd8103 thanks, I forgot that doordash was a thing for a moment
You notify your governing authority that you would like to do a grocery store trip. A written request that is generally approved. You'll be given a date and time to go, and a return home time. Just always be where you are supposed to be.
You can also request to visit the homes of relatives and friends, even attending funerals. Submit your request as per the rules and you will generally be approved for your request. Provided you adhere to their rules. If you violate the rules you will eventually end up back in jail. Just be where you are supposed to be, when you are supposed to be there.
@@deantodd8103No everyone can have delivery though. DoorDash and other delivery services like that aren’t available in my area so if I were to ever be out with an AB I’d have to ask to do a shopping trip
sometimes the house arrest has a set time where the perimeter extends to include a direct path to the grocery store and the grocery store itself. it may also do the same for your work, provided you get back on time.
Your videos are useful keep up
"Hey, you can't leave your house while you got this bracelet on, and you owe us 15 dollars a day"
"... How do i work to get the 15 dollars a day?"
"That's your problem 👉👉"
"if you break your ankle bracelet-"
instructions unclear, i broke both ankles
He forgot to mention, somebody is listening to you through the ankle monitor, and they can issue you commands through it too...basically gotta watch what you say too.
I’ve always wondered, in an emergency situation like if the house was on fire or the person was having a medical emergency would they then be able to leave the house WITHOUT incurring further penalties?
What about taking showers, just have to be careful and wash around it?
They're waterproof.
@sirfriendzone1228 proof or resistant?
@@ChaseWright-k4ywater resistance I was able to shower with mine on just don’t go inside a pool tho
@@ChaseWright-k4yHe just said “waterproof”.
@rubikscubechannel6588 yeah, but people lie/exaggerate. Even websites say "proof" and it's resistant
I love home but being stuck there sucks 😳💀😭
Drawing
i guess you could say you would be homestuck (nobody will get this joke)
When he showed the California flag i though that was The NCR from Fallout New Vegas 💀
My friend has a NCR flag and the first time I saw it I asked him why because I mistook it for the actual California flag until I got a good look at it.
wait they make you pay to maintain something that they make you wear?
$15 a day sounds like heaven in modern economy
Its in YOUR home
LMAO. $15 x 30. Thats what, $600? To live in your own fucking house😂
"mike you worry too much"
Famous Last words before death penalty
Still sounds like an introvert’s dream
Question from someone outside USA. If the person isn't allowed to leave the perimeter of their house, how are they meant to get money to pay each day? Do they have to call family members to help out?
what most criminals don't know is that IF YOU DON'T DO CRIME YOU WONT BE ARRESTED!
what most people don't know is that INNOCENT PEOPLE ARE ARRESTED AND CONVICTED ALL THE TIME
You don’t understand how to get the boot out of your throat
Bro this guys would make a great teacher
You can use a SDR to spoof the location of the device and still leave the house.
Remember, on top of the cost of wearing an ankle monitor. House arrest makes it impossible to go to work for many people. Even during the pandemic, many of us couldn’t work from home, and even less people can now. Also, good luck if you get sick. Even if you get the option to leave during the day, the curfew often makes it impossible to get to appointments or work non-office hours (ie an hourly job with shifts).
I always wondered, are forbidden to leave your house or your property because I feel like as long as you are on your own property there shouldn’t be an issue
Question with the last part what is when the house in that case beginns to burn is he allowed to leave the area then to get in safty or is he still getting in jail ?
They need work arrest in California. Forced labor and paying off tickets. No imprisonment without work.
Questions for house arrest: is it inside the house or the yard? Can i go on my swingset, trampoline, mow the yard? Shower or bath?
I’m assuming they have a little leniency in case of life and death emergencies- the house is on fire, neighborhood flooded, emergency room, events where staying in your house could mean death?
Thank you for doing the I'm in and I'm out, that really checked things off the bucket list
Currently on house arrest in Indiana, I have to pay $13 a day, go to the home detention department of the court house weekly to make a schedule of times I will be out of my house, where I will go, and when I will return, there is a 200ft radius around my house that I am allowed to be in so I can let my dogs out, mow my yard, and other things like that, I have to charge my device for an hour each day (it’s a magnetic charger that pops off easily so I cannot do it in my sleep). If my device breaks I have to pay $750, if my charger breaks I have to pay $40, if my device dies an officer for the home detention department will come to my house and I will get a violation, I cannot drink or use drugs of any kind and I can be required to submit a drug test at any point in time, I will have 3hrs to submit my drug test after requested to do so
Sorry this comment is long but I hope that fills anyone’s curiosity
Question: what happens for example if your house is inhospitable. Like if you had a fire or a home invader and you had to escape?
My question was, why the police rush potential criminals like this even though they pose nono fight, threat😮 nor run or agitated
What happened if you have to leave the house? Like if there’s a fire or danger or somebody outside needs medical attention?
From my understanding, certain leeway is given, at the court's discretion, for a certain distance from your domicile. As in they wont ding you for going to your next door neighbor to borrow a cup of sugar. It also allows for X number of possible discrepancies or GPS errors in the tracking. Seldom is it an immediate do not pass go thing to have a negligible amount or frequency of discrepancies.
I wish someone like this existed for Canadian law
Had a GPS monitor for years.
75 dollars a week.
Your only a criminal if you can't pay.
" can't pay the fine don't do the crime"
Makes sense now.