i received a 2nd MIP charge and they sentenced me with 6 months of probation and 62 hours of community service. both of my offenses were in Michigan and both were alcohol related. It varies by state and it also varies if they are alcohol or tobacco related.
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.
probation
If you are lucky you will get probation/
Under certain circumstances probation can be transferred interstate. You would have to petition the sentencing court to transfer your probation.
No way of telling. The amount of probation, and even the question of IF you get offered probation or not, is entirely at the discretion of the sentencing judge.
You do not have to pay any probation officer directly. You do most likely have to pay probation supervision fees, however. These payments are NOT made to your probation officer but usually to the clerk's office of your sentencing court.
Penal Code 859a sentencing is when a judge can accept a plea from the defendant in court. The judge will usually sentence the defendant to probation.
VERY-VERY unlikely. If you are awaiting felony sentencing and you go out and commit yet another criminal act.... what do YOU think your chances of probation are?
This question makes no sense. Parole begins once released from prison and there is time remaining on the sentence. Probation starts when the Court sentences you to probation.
This is an unanswerable question. There is absolutely no way to know in advance how a sentencing judge will choose to handle the disposition and sentencing of a case.
In the court system(s) I am familiar with there are no established guidelines for sentencing probation violators. The judge presiding over your case, (the same one who sentenced you to probation in the first place) will make a judgment based on your individual case, and sentence accordingly.
For those types of violations it is more than likely that the sentencing judge will revoke your probation and you will spend the remainder of your sentence behind bars.