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If you drink and drive and pick up a DWI or worse DUI, then you are in violation of your probation. However, if it was not specified otherwise in your original court papers, then drinking should not be a violation of your felony probation.
Violation of the terms of probation means that the original sentence is reinstated. In other words, reincarceration.
If you are on probation you have already been found guilty. Probation is a sentence for being found guilty. If you commit a violation of your probation you don't get a separate trial for that violation. It means that you have put yourself in jeapordy of the original sentencing judge remanding you to jail to serve the remainder of your sentence. You don't get two bites at the apple.
Are you kidding? Breaking probation means that you end up serving your original sentence. Probation is not a warning...it is a requirement.
USUALLY a misdemeanor BUT, it can be either. It depends on what the original crime and sentence was. Also: What was the violation that caused the VOP? If it was the committing of a crime, THAT would be a separate offense altogether.
This depends on what crime you were originally sentenced to probation for and what level of the trial court it is in. The violation is not what you get sentenced for, you are either found in violation or not found in violation. If you are found in violation you then have a final surrender hearing where your probation can be terminated and you receive the original sentence for the crime were found guilty of or CWOF'd. However, not all probation violations result in time served, depending on the severity of the violation. In a district court you can be sentenced to up to two and a half years for a felony and one year for a misdemeanor.
The maximum penalty would be governed by the underlying original charge and any sentence that was suspended in lieu of probation.
Question is unclear - but - are you asking what will happen if you are on probation and commit another offense for which an arrest warrant is issued (???) - It most likely will result in your violating your probation for the original sentence and very probably mean that you could be remanded to jail for violation of parole (VOP).
Yes, they could... if they wanted to. It might depend on the seriousness of the original offense and what the VOP consisted of.
If forfeiture of your driving privilege was a part of your original sentence, then yes. If you VOP'd, the provisions of the original sentence would take effect.
If a warrant is issued for a violation of probation then the clock stops until probation is either reinstated or revoked in open court. If it is reinstated the amount of time between the violation and reinstatement will be added to the original probation period. Say you are on probation for 3 years and you are 16 months into your term and you violate the terms and ran for 4 months you would still have the 16 months remaining the 4 months would be what they call "dead time".
A fine for the ticket, and violation for the new criminal charge. You could be required to serve the remainder of the original sentence.