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Hi! No this does not mean you have to go to jail. You might depending on the charges, but for most misdemeanor charges probation will suffice. When it happened to me, I was on probation for 2 weeks, until I fulfilled my requirements given by the judge (a class for the crime I committed).
Unless you have received an 'Adjudication Withheld' sentence - or "probation before judgement" - it DOES usually mean that you have been convicted. If you weren't the court would not have the authority to order you into treatment and rehab.
Each state is different. In the state of Florida the adjudication of guilt MUST be withheld. After you have completed your sentence, whether it be probation or jail time, you will be eligible to apply to have your record sealed. If you would like it expunged the state attorney's office must sign off on it.
It goes away. You violated it and you will serve the remainder of the sentence for your conviction (or at least a portion of it), while incarcerated. If you violated it by committing another crime, you could, in addition, also face separate charges and court action for THAT offense as well.
jail, he wrote a book in jail about h genocide
They'll serve you in jail
It can serve jail time.
It WILL be on your record. No one in the US serves time in jail or prison without a record of conviction to justify it.
If you are in jail for a VOP, you will likely serve the remainder of your sentence behind bars.
For firearms charges, you can typically expect to serve jail time.
It means that the court has come top some conclusion (perhaps a finding of guilt and imposed a sentence). However THEN the court has stayed (stopped) the portion of the adjudication that you must serve the sentence. In plain English: the conviction and the sentence go on your record, but you won't have to spend any time in jail over it.
Yes, you will have to serve in a civilian jail and also the French Foreign Legion jail for desertion.