That depends on
what "this offense" is
where you are
You don't say what the offense is, and you don't say where you are living... different countries have different laws and different penalties.
Give us a clue next time, as to what you are asking about.
Don't assume we have read any previous questions you have asked.
It depends entirely on your Probation Officer's decision and the decision of the judge as to whether you're VOP'd, and incarcerated or not.
no he was in court to see if he was going but he was found not gulity i live next door to him
ANY offense that is not classified as a criminal offense, is a civil offense. Civil offenses carry no jail or prison terms, only performance requirements (enforced by the court) or monetary sanctions.
This depends on the state where the driving offense occured and what offense was commited. After your second driving offense of driving after revocation, you would most likely serve jail time.
Not the UK . Class A is the class reserved for the strongest drugs that carry the longest jail terms. Obviously, (just) drinking alcohol is not a jail-able offence in the UK. It's what can be done under the influence of alcohol that is usually the jail-able offense.
People have to be found guilty of an offence, not merely charged, before any sentence can be passed.
if you commit a federal offense, you may have to pay a fine or go to jail
Yes dog fighting is a huge federal offense! The person will go to jail the first time even though they haven't done it before.
A possability. In MA first offense: receive a fine, lose your liceance for 60 days, 2nd offense, some jail time
The police do not keep you in jail, the court does. The court will keep you in jail - or temporarily free on bail - until your "not guilty" status is confirmed by a court. Either the prosecution fails to prove you guilty or prosecutors drop the charges. When the court confirms you are not guilty, you are immediately freed.
For a misdemeanor offense.
it depends