It would be very unusual, but I'm sure it has been done. You would have had to jump bond however.
In absentia.
It means you are in serious trouble.
Your felony probation will be immediately revoked and you will be remanded back to prison. In the meantime you will be tried for the felony you committed while on probation and then face sentencing and prison time for that offense also.
In absentia is Latin for "in the absence". In legal use it usually pertains to a defendant's right to be present in court proceedings in a criminal trial.
I believe that charge might be a felony case due, especially, to the length of time it went on.
Of the 106 felony cases he tried while at the Los Angeles DA's office, he lost only 1.
In absentia means, while absent, so if a person is not present (for whatever reason) at that person's own trial, he or she can be found guilty in absentia. We prefer to allow people to defend themselves (or to have their lawyers do so) at a trial, but if they refuse to show up we do not necessarily give up our right as a society to arrive at a decision about their guilt or innocence.
FIrst of all, your probation will, in all probability, be revoked for violating your probation, and, you will be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of that sentence behind bars. Additionally, you will be charged with the felony forgery and since the forgery charge is a felony you could be facing, upon conviction, an additional term of MORE than one year in prison.
no i dont believe you can.Added: It is EXTREMELY UNLIKELY. One of the conditions of being released on bond is that you won't commit any more criminal offenses while released. You do the math!!
It's almost 100% probable that your first probation will be revoked and you will be returned to incarceration for the remainder of your original sentence - AND - in addition, you will be charged and tried for the felony you committed while out on probation and if found guilty, you will have THAT sentence to serve in addition to your original one.
The way the question reads is that you were charged with felony offenses that you allegedly committed while you were carrying a concealed weapon at the time. Because the fact that the felony offenses were dropped does not negate the fact that you were carrying an unlawful firearm. That charge is still valid. It is quite possible that the felony effenses were dropped because the case for the concealed weapon was stronger and easier to prove.
Felony