Very doubtful. Probation is a lenient sentence usually given to those people who have little or no past criminal record, in an effort to rehaibilitate and educate them. If you are a repeat offender, obviously you have not learned your lesson.
Yes. Unless it was felony probation. Only felony convictions limit your ability to possess firearms.
You have 4 felony convictions in another state, and you think you're going to get probation? You'll be lucky not to get hit under the"3 strikes"law.
A felon on probation can not work in a school in Louisiana. Most felony convictions are unable to work within a school environment in Louisiana.
It depends entirely as to whether you are on misdemeanor probation or felony probation.
Probation is a sentence, not a crime. A felony is a level of crime.
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.
If the offense you were found guilty of when you received your probation sentence was a felony, then your violation will be a felony warrant.
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.
This depends on what you are on probation for. If you have been convicted of a felony for which you are on probation, the Housing Authority may remove you from the program, depending on what the felony is.
Past criminal history can be an element of recidivism, but it is not the only one. Economic situation is a huge element. Consider that in the US a perspective employer can face prison time if he discriminates against an applicant on the basis of race, religion, gender, gender specificity, gender preference, age, weight, and a variety of other minutia, but there is no prohibition against discriminating against someone due to a previous conviction. In fact the federal and state governments practice it themselves, despite lack of evidence proving or even implying that the previously convicted are any less qualified or any greater danger.In preparation for the coming debate (which by the way is a violation of WikiAnswers rules), recidivism is a trackable phenomenon. So are initial convictions. There are currently 2.5 million people incarcerated in the US, there are more than 25 million with previous felony convictions, this is almost ten percent of the US population. Fewer than half of the convictions in the US are the result of repeat offenses--the majority of convictions in the US are first time convictions. How then are people protected from all of those dangerous felons by discriminating against them? One cannot discriminate against a felon who is not yet a felon. Likewise, one cannot protect against a felon who is not yet a felon.Back to the original question: those who have no previous history of criminal behavior have no reason to be on probation, so those who fail on probation invariably have a prior history of felony conviction.
Are you kidding? Breaking probation means that you end up serving your original sentence. Probation is not a warning...it is a requirement.
No.