Well, from seeing other people, they are all book and release type cases. After court sentencing, usually the first one is no jail or 4 days (give or take) and subsequent ones usually are 10 days. I know a guy on his 4th and he's doing 10 days. Either way, it's with Huber so it's not so bad. Being on probation affects this, because you're getting a new criminal charge so your P.O. can hold you or reprimand you accordingly.
It mean revoked IMMEDIATELY, without a hearing. In other words "go directly to jail."
You have violated your probation, which means you can go directly back to jail without any waiting period.
If restitution was part of your probation sentence and you are not complying with it - you could find your probation revoked and be remanded to jail.
A Probation Violation Warrant will be issued. Your probation could get revoked and you could be sentenced to a term of incareration in jail or prison.
One qualifies for unemployment ONLY while available to work AND actively seeking work. Folks in jail cannot work, so they are disqualified from unemployment benefits.
It meqans that the release that was granted to the defendant (probation - bail - etc) is revoked by the judge and the person is to be taken into custody and remanded to jail.
it depends on why they were revoked i think second offence carries 11-29 days in jail if the first charge was a DUI and you need to check if that would make you a HMO that in its self can carry manditory jail time good luck
It depends on the crime and the motivation. Pleading guilty does not mean a custodial sentence. There may be a fine, community service, mental evaluation, or just a plain old warning not to do it again.
One.
Then the person that lend the car can go to jail
A conditional release from jail means the offender is released from custody but if they fail to adhere to the conditions, the release can be revoked and they will return to jail for a violation of the terms on their release.
Very likely. The answer lies within the question. The probation was REVOKED. If the judge revoked your sentence of probation that leaves only one possibility, he meant for you to be removed from your supervised freedom and remanded to jail.