The question is not worded correctly or is missing vital information. You can't be 'violated' after-the-fact after having successfully completed and being dischargedfrom probation. The key words are SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION -and- AFTER DISCHARGE. If you never successfully completed, or were discharged from, your probation, then you didn't meet the requirements of your sentence and were still under the jurisdiction of the court, whether a total of 120 days had passed, or not.
It depends on the judge. He could make him serve six years in prison. Or he could sentence him to an additional year (or more) in jail.
This usually means that the person received a sentence to prison for a specific amount of time, generally exceeding the two years mentioned. But that sentence, provided the person completes two years of probation successfully, is withheld. When the person completes the two years' probation, his sentence is completed and he is no longer in the system. However if he violates the terms of his probation he could be sent to prison to complete the prison term, and there's no credit given for the time he was on probation.
Don't make me violate my probation!
A conviction is a conviction. Probation IS a sentence - - a lenient sentence but a sentence nonetheless.
Probation is a sentence, not a crime. A felony is a level of crime.
We all get nervous in a probation moment.
The question is a little unclear - but if the probation was terminated it should mean that you had completed your sentence to the satisfaction of the judge. However, the charge for which you received the sentence of probation will remain on your criminal history record.
It is a sentence on which the convicted person is serving on probation.
Probation itself IS a sentence. If you abide by all the conditions of the probation sentence you will remain free of jail. If you violate the condition(s) of your probation your freedom can be revoked and you can be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of the term of your sentence.
I have committed a burglary on probation and got revoked and payed with my original sentence and the new sentence charges.
When your probation sentence ends.
Infractions that violate your probation are not triable. You've already been found guilty and received your sentence - which was probation. If you violate the probation rules, you've violated your sentence and you can be remanded to jail to serve your "real" sentence.