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5.10 Revocation or Punitive Action by the Sending State - Conditions

Chapter 5.10
Effective April 1, 2026

     For purposes of revocation or other punitive action, the sending state must give the same force and effect to a violation of a condition imposed by the receiving state as if the condition had been imposed by the sending state. A violation of a properly imposed receiving-state condition may therefore serve as a basis for revocation or other sanctions, even if that condition was not included in the original supervision plan established by the sending state. See Rules 4.103 and 4.103-1

     The receiving state may impose conditions at the time of acceptance or during the term of supervision, provided those conditions are consistent with Compact requirements. If a supervised individual violates such a condition, the sending state must recognize and act upon that violation in accordance with its own revocation procedures. 

PRACTICE NOTE

Courts in the sending state should treat violations of lawfully imposed receiving-state conditions as equivalent to violations of locally imposed conditions when determining whether revocation or other sanctions are warranted.

New Rule Amendments in Effect

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