It depends;sentences of between 5 and 10 years are possible, especially where fraud is involved.Merely not paying taxes rarely attracts criminal prosecution by itself. Filing a frivolous return (such as protesting the war) will cost you administrative penalties. If the IRS orders you to file a proper return and you subsequently fail to do so Then you leave yourself open to prosecution. Once the IRS has assessed your taxes -- sent you a bill -- if you fail to pay they will start seizing your wages, accounts receivable, or etc .
Depends on the sentence.
you do still have to pay your taxes when you get out of incarseration.
Depends on the judge's sentence
30 days
The sentence will depend on the crime.
You COULD be remanded to jail for the balance of your sentence.
depends how long the jail term is and if you have any comments..probation is a walk in the park if you play by their rules...
If they can call your crime terrorism, forever.
It has a long vowel sound.
Um.. for life. Hence life sentence. Till you stop breathing.
For ur life
About 30 days from the end of sentence.