It is entirely up to the decision of judge who gave you the sentence of probation in the first place. You could be remanded to jail to serve out the remaainder of your sentence behind bars.
If you violate probation you could be sentenced to serve the remainder of your original sentence behind bars.
You COULD be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of the sentence you were originally given behind bars.
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.
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.
Probation IS a sentence for being found guilty of an offense.It is at the judge's discretion that they issued a probation sentence rather than sending the convicted defendant to jail.If you violate the judge's trust they may choose to send you to jail to serve the reaminder of your sentence behind bars.
Depending on the violation you commit, as few as once.
No way to know. It depends entirely on the judge's decision. Since you can't seem to abide by the terms of your probation sentence, you could be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of your original sentence.
Yes, you can serve probation while still in jail if you talk with your judge and they like you lol. Just kidding , but my boy friend served 30 days because he didnt do his probation so he prettyy much just did jail time instead of probation
There is no way to know what is going to be in the mind of a judge when the violator appears before him for violating the judge's probation rules. You could be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of your sentence behind bars.
Probation is used to give a person a chance to not go to jail. A violation of the probation means that the judge can impose a new sentence that is likely to include jail or prison.
Worst case scenario: You will be remanded to jail to serve out the remainder of your sentence.
Yes, it is up to the sentencing judge as to how seriously he views your VOP. He could send you to jail to serve the remainder of your time.