Depends on the "JUDGE"......
It depends on how his sentence of probation is structured. Child Support is a civil offense, not a criminal offense, but if he flees to avoid the bench warrant THAT definitely would be a violation.
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.
It depends on what the violation is and what you are on probation for.
no the will go to jail in the state that they are in
Violating condition of a felony probation in Georgia can carry serious consequences. It can be punishable by jail. For serious probation violations a judge has the power to revoke a probation sentence and send the violator to prison.
SOL's apply only to non-adjudicated offenses. There are no SOL's for probation violation. You have already been pronounced guilty and probation is your SENTENCE. If you violate your sentence it is pretty much the same as violating your jail time.
The maximum time you can get jail time for VOP is the maximum sentence you would have received without probation.
You will probably have your probation revoked and have to serve the remainder of that sentence behind bars PLUS whatever jail time will be added if you are found guilty of the DUI offense.
Probation Violation
Felony probation is a sentence the judge imposes when someone pleads guilty to a felony. It allows a person to serve his sentence without going to jail or to prison. The person will be under court supervision and he can be incarcerated if he violates the terms of his probation.
That depends on many things. Most important is what is the person on probation for? A felony or misdemeanor? What is the violation? The time served can be from nothing up to the maximum amount of time for the probation offense allowed by law. It is up to the discretion of the sentencing judge.
If you have restrictions on your probation that restrict your residence area (which you probably do), you will be in violation of your court ordered sentence and may well be remanded to jail or prison for the remainder of your sentence.