Well, first you must deal with the parole violation. Chances are you will be returned to prison. Then there will be a hearing to determine whether you will be required to finish out the original sentence. During this time, you may be charged with the misdemeanor, if charges are filed, you may be tried, and if found guilty sentenced. The judge may determine to let you serve the time for the new charge concurrent with the original sentence, OR you may be required to be remanded to the county jail of jurisdiction once you have been discharged from prison.
You get the rest of your time, or the amount of time the judge determines is sufficient to teach you to lay down and quit being foolish. Do the crime, do the time. All you have to do is be aware of your stipulations, and just follow them.
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.
Not unless you first let your probation officer know ahead of time. If you are just on court probation you need to let them know. If you leave without telling them, when you get back you will be in violation and spend 60 to 90 in jail for violation of probation.
Worst case scenario for a VOP: You could be sentenced to serve the remainder of your sentence behind bars.
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 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.
That depends on: Age of violator Nature of probation Nature of violation Nature of crime Was the victim involved in the probation violation Age of violator State statutes Judicial discretion of the trier of fact
no Probably not but any violation of the terms of probation is grounds for revocation. It depends mostly on the mood of the probation officer, current policy, and the nature of the violation. Other factors include the nature of the conviction, the class of offense (minor misdemeanor vs. major felony), how crowded the jail is, or if TDCJ is accepting prisoners, etc.
no no
Probation violations are not subject to a statute of limitations. You can be charged with the violation at any time.
Unfortunately there is NO statue of limitations on a Warrant. I think you have this mixed up with a Statute of Limitation on the actual Crime you were placed on probation for.
A technical violation refers to a probation violation. The jail time could vary anywhere from the full term of the probated sentence to no jail time. It depends on a number of factors.
Legally they probably can. As a practical matter (time/expense/trouble) they may choose not to do so on a minor offense.