I am not arguing. I was only making my own statement. I appreciate the advice that you are all giving. I will take all of this advice into consideration and hopefully I will get to speak with an attorney on this. I am very questioning when it comes to this. I have been through a lot to get my son and it has not been easy so I apologize if it seems like I am trying to argue. I only came here to get outside advice and opinions.
I understand what is going on here. Part of you simply wants mom out of your child's life, and part of you is afraid that gang retaliation will happen and your son will get caught up in it. Unconsciously you may even have a tiny hope (without even realizing it) that gang retaliation WILL happen and make the whole thing go away.
So you want to stall. I completely understand that. If I were in your shoes I would very likely feel exactly that same way. This is a serious situation with potentially serious consequences.
However, I do think that you are grasping at straws in your hope that she is still considered to be "incarcerated" as far as supervised visitation is concerned. Also, she CANNOT travel to where there is a supervision center available, not while she is on house arrest.
So, you have a decision to make. Comply with the order and select a supervisor and give mom the visits...or, risk the contempt. What are the risks of contempt? The biggest risk is loss of custody, and I doubt very much that there is any chance whatsoever of that happening to you. Not with the set of facts here. The next biggest risk is jail time, and again, I see that as very unlikely if you have never been held in contempt before. The last risk is being fined...maybe just a little, maybe a lot.
So, which risk is the greatest? The risk that you cannot arrange the supervised visits in a way that ensures your son's safety, or the risk of being fined, maybe a lot? Only you know the answer to that question. Only you know how big of a risk there is of retaliation, and only you know how much damage being fined can do to you.