If you are ON PROBATION you HAVE been convicted. CONVICTED = GUILTY. If you had not been convicted you would have been found NOT guilty and you wouldn't be serving a sentence of PROBATION. Before travelling anywhere (including out-of-state) check with your probation officer or the court - OR - how about this? Read your probation papers to see if you have any travel restrictions imposed on you.
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You actually CAN be on probation with no conviction with certain deals they make with first time offenders. You can be sentenced to probation to have your record cleared after the probated term is up and you don't accumulate any new charges in that time.
Added: The scenario immediately above, while correct (known as Probation Before Judgement - a more rarely used form of probation), does not address the situation posed in the question.
Even under the above scenario the offender receives certain guidellines and rules from the court which they MUST follow or run the risk of being in violation. If one of those conditions is a travel restriction - to violate it would cause you to violate your probation.
Passports do not carry that type of information. However, if it ever became a matter of interest, your home country could always request your criminal record from the country you visited.
This will depend on several things. First, did you get permission from your probation officer? If so, provided you adhered to the terms of the permission to travel outside the country, you are fine. If not, keep reading. Second, were you caught traveling outside the country while on probation? If not, you got lucky and will probably not have anything happen to you, unless someone finds out about it and notifies your probation officer. If you didn't have permission to travel outside the country while on probation and you get caught, you could be punished by anything from an extension of your probation to having your probation revoked and being put in jail for the original conviction.
How has probation in this country to where it is today?
Sure with the permission of your probation officer. If your officer is okay with you taking a trip or visiting someone out of State your officer can issue you a travel permit.
It depends on where you are coming from. If you are travelling from elsewhere within the US, a misdemeanor will not prohibit travel (unless you are on active probation or parole with travel restrictions.) If you are travelling from another country, you will need to check with your embassy in the US to find out if your conviction will prohibit entry into the US.
Extradition
Huh? If you are already an illegal alien how do you expect to apply for, much less receive, an official government document allowing you to emigrate? ? ?
If you are a non-U.S. citizen and you have a felony arrest in the U.S., it could impact your ability to return to your home country, depending on that country's entry requirements. You may face challenges with immigration or re-entry issues, and it's advisable to consult with legal experts or your country's embassy for guidance.
You can travel to some foreign countries after a DUI conviction, but it varies according to the country. You cannot enter Canada from the US with a DUI conviction.
Yes, you can travel from Australia to Germany with a felony conviction. Whether Germany will let you actually enter the country is another issue. Call the German embassy or its local legation.
Yes, but make sure to check with your PO or the court first. You can only travel and/or leave the country if the court permits it.
If you are not listed in the UAE or Interpol or you passport shows a deny stamp of the country which you had the conviction there is no problem. But you better do not get caught in the UAE with drugs. Jail or execution can happen.