TECHNICALLY you are on probation until the end (midnight) of the day your probation expires. I guess that if you committed a VOP prior to midnight you could be violated.
It depends on what the violation is and what you are on probation for.
Probation Violation
Violation of probation is not subject to a statute of limitations. Once a violation has taken place, they can be taken back to jail to finish their sentence.
No time imposed means that even though he or she had a violation they didn't receive any jail time. That doesn't mean that the judge didn't give them community service or some other form of punishment. It simply means they didn't receive any jail time.
That's a violation of your probation. Most likely 6 months in jail.
You can be declared in violation of your probation and thrown back in jail.
The maximum time you can get jail time for VOP is the maximum sentence you would have received without probation.
If you are in jail for a VOP, you will likely serve the remainder of your sentence behind bars.
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.
You go to jail on a probation violation.
Probation violation you will go to jail. An still owe on fines an still will be own probation
Depends on the "JUDGE"......