If you were incarcerated on the date of your court appearance the court will learn of it and it won't count as an FTA (Failure to Appear).
Maybe. depends on many many factors.
you will go to jail
No because he got out on bail but his court date on Thursday we need chris go to jail for beat up his girfriend.
jail is where they sticks you once you have been arrested then u ethier get out on jail bonds or sit in jail until your court date .. once u go to court if the judge convicts you to a sentence that's when u go to a prison
No he did not, his court date was pushed back to January 27, 2010.
Yes, but for the bond to be canceled the person must go back to jail before their court date.
No, his court date has been delayed, as he needs dental work before being sentenced.
No, but a person can go to jail for not appearing to answer a summons.
Jail time is not always mandatory for contempt of court. If a person has to go to jail will depend upon what the judge says about their contempt of court.
you get jail time
He has been in jail. watch his show
assuming you skipped out on your final court date you probably have a warrant out. you will go to jail overnight, see the judge, and prove you can pay the money back and they will let you go with probation
Answer 1: Missing a court date is generally considered, by the Court, to be contempt of its orders. A court date is an order. Missing it is "contempt of court." There are no set lengths of time to which one may be sentenced for "contempt of court." It's entirely up to the judge. Well... let me refine that: There are at least some guidelines which the judge must follow; he can't just throw you in jail and leave you there. However, the judge's discretion is so broad that, trust me, being tossed in jail for contempt is NOT something that you ever want a judge to do.