Nothing, unless they get caught, in which case there is an good chance they will go to jail.
they have a good chance of having to go back to prison and serve the rest of their sentence
Only the judge who originally sentenced you can answer this question. The possibility exists that you could be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of your sentence.
Being convicted of something while on probation for something else violates the terms of the probation, so now you have the double whammy of the first conviction plus the DUI. Sorry. Live and learn. Its your fault.
Probation violation you will go to jail. An still owe on fines an still will be own probation
There are generally two cases in that instance. One is the new drug case. The second is a violation of probation. One condition of probation is always not to commit a new crime. If there is a new crime, then that violates the condition. If it turns out there was in fact a new crime, the judge who oversees the probation may resentence the probationer to anything the probationer could have been sentenced to originally for the first case.
A probation warrant is issued when a person violates the terms of their probation. The warrant is issued by the court and the person must appear to explain their actions to the judge.
No. It violates the state regulation for security people.
Felony probation is a sentence the judge imposes when someone pleads guilty to a felony. It allows a person to serve his sentence without going to jail or to prison. The person will be under court supervision and he can be incarcerated if he violates the terms of his probation.
They will keep looking and schedule a later Court date. Someone from the probation office will cover the case. The Court will not just forget.
If someone has their probation is suspended that means the Court has stopped the defendant's probation time and they are no longer in good standing with the Court. This happens because of a probation violation. It does NOT automatically mean the defendant will go to prison.
If a person violates probation for child support they may be jailed. The punishment will vary depending on the laws in the state.
Depending on the seriousness of the violation, it is possible that that they may be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of their sentence. If the violation involved the same reason they are in rehab - the possibility is even more likely - so that they can be more closely controlled during their rehab period.
Yes, the odds are very high that they will go to prison, if not for the VOP on the first offense, then probably for committing the 2nd offense.