no
If restitution was part of your probation sentence and you are not complying with it - you could find your probation revoked and be remanded to jail.
It mean revoked IMMEDIATELY, without a hearing. In other words "go directly to jail."
Very likely. The answer lies within the question. The probation was REVOKED. If the judge revoked your sentence of probation that leaves only one possibility, he meant for you to be removed from your supervised freedom and remanded to jail.
It depends on the crime and the motivation. Pleading guilty does not mean a custodial sentence. There may be a fine, community service, mental evaluation, or just a plain old warning not to do it again.
The judge reviews the probationer's supervison history and violations and determines if the offender's probation should be revoked or modified. Revoked usually means a period of incarceration.
You have violated your probation, which means you can go directly back to jail without any waiting period.
Probation is a constant monitoring of the wear a bouts and activities of an individual rather than having them in prison. Revoked probation means that they violated the trust and have been returned to prison.
If your probation is revoked, it means that you will be sent to jail/prison to serve the remainder of your sentence behind bars.
3 to 6 months depending on the crime. For instance failure to go to a probation meeting, can be 3 weeks or up to 3 to 6 months in the state of texas.. The bond is revoked and the person in jail stays in jail until their court date.
A Probation Violation Warrant will be issued. Your probation could get revoked and you could be sentenced to a term of incareration in jail or prison.
It meqans that the release that was granted to the defendant (probation - bail - etc) is revoked by the judge and the person is to be taken into custody and remanded to jail.
If you are in jail now because your probation has been revoked, it is likely that you will remain in jail until the final decision on the motion is made by the court.