It depends on the judicial system of your country. In the UK, if sentenced to 5 years or less, you're automatically given a 50% reduction on your time. In this example - that would mean you would serve approximately 45 days.
HOWEVER - if you misbehave while in prison, you can have days added back onto your sentence - so you could (theoretically) end up serving the 3 months - and more if the bad behaviour was severe enough !
It is not likely you would receive a six month prison sentence on the state level. There are several states, such as Wisconsin, where if the judge does not specify a place of incarceration, the conviction is automatically a felony, and you would be required to serve this time in a prison environment. Chances are you would not leave quarantine, and you would serve six months.
It depends where you are. In Massachusetts they would just let you go.
The answer would probably be one year!
No. His 30-month prison sentence was commuted. He served the rest of his sentence, which was two years of supervised release and 400 hours of community service. Even if his prison sentence had not been commuted, he would have been released at the end of 2009, at the latest.
This depends on state to state. While many states allow you to serve a third of your prison term prior to release, others have a mandatory minimum of 85%, including Florida and the federal system.
It is impossible to say what the judge in a case will decide. The maximum penalty would be to be returned to prison to serve the remainder of your sentence.
Not much you can do. If you were originally sentenced to a term in prison, then a VOP of that sentence would only mean that you would be remanded to serve your your original sentence. This is true especially if the remaining term of incarceration is for more than one year.
You are breaking the law so will be charged with a crime and a prison sentence is a possibility.
Not living at the address given to your probation officer would be considered violating probation. Doing this can get you sent back to prison for the remainder of your sentence.
I doubt any state tracks this percentage over all. There are some states that track the percentage of minority inmates that serve greater sentences. In Michigan, it is generally accepted that the inmate will serve minimum of twice his minimum sentence. Ohio is probably pretty similar.
The amount of time served would depend first upon whether the sentence is for a federal or state crime. In the federal prison system, the prisoner will serve approximately 80-85% of their original sentence without any reductions. The amount to be served for a state crime would vary to state to state by statute.
about 9 month with good behavior, sometimes even less now with the overcrowding the government are letting prisoners home earlier on tag.