The difference between felony and misdemeanor probation is the felony is when a person is sentence to a jail term, but it can be served out of jail. The misdemeanor probation is not given jail time. They serve a probation period.
Felony probation is a sentence the judge imposes when someone pleads guilty to a felony. It allows a person to serve his sentence without going to jail or to prison. The person will be under court supervision and he can be incarcerated if he violates the terms of his probation.
Are you kidding? Breaking probation means that you end up serving your original sentence. Probation is not a warning...it is a requirement.
No. It might be in the best interest of the survivor spouse to request a protective order. If it is granted then the person in question would be subject to arrest and would be in violation of probation terms and most likely would have to serve the sentence that was imposed suspended to allow probation.Revocation of probation is when the judges takes away the probation and the person must serve their sentence out in jail.
The maximum penalty would be governed by the underlying original charge and any sentence that was suspended in lieu of probation.
Yes
If someone gets a sentence of 7 years plus 5 years supervised probation it usually means that when they get out of prison they will have to also be on probation for 5 years, supervised. This depends on the actual order by the court.
No
If you are on felony probation it indicates that you have not yet completed the sentence for your offense, meaning that you are not yet eligible to have your record expunged, which means you cannot vote.
From the info given in the question it sounds like the incarcerated person is wanted for violation of probation on another entirely different felony charge, and when he is released at the end of his sentence he will be held for the authorities and face prosecution for the VOP.
A suspended imposition of sentence or s.i.s. is basically suspends a sentence. There is usually a duration put on the s.i.s. that is known as the probation. Usually a person has a s.i.s. when they plead guilty or plea bargain for a crime. Basically, the courts are seeing if a person can act better. If a person gets in trouble again during their probation period, then the court can punish the person for the crime that they committed previously. If the person does not get in trouble during their probation period, then the crime is forgiven and the person is not convicted.
yes