Most likely the convicted individual will be required to serve the entire sentence that was originally imposed before he or she was placed on probation plus any resulting penalties due to the probation violation and/or other criminal acts.
For the SECOND time! It is entirely up to the judge who sentenced you but I think your string of luck may have run out. Probation is not a "get out of jail free" card and you will quite likely be looking at time behind bars - perhaps the entire remainder of your sentence.
If you violated/failed 'diversion' twice it sounds like you would be considered a bad risk for any further lenient handling and you stand a good chance of either being committed for treatment or to jail for incarceration. Probably the latter.
Probation revoked and probably jail time. Don't sleep on your stomach!
It depends entirely as to whether you are on misdemeanor probation or felony probation.
If the offense you were found guilty of when you received your probation sentence was a felony, then your violation will be a felony warrant.
no the will go to jail in the state that they are in
In all probability, yes. All felony VOP's are extraditable.
ll Indiana come to az to exterdite fugitive for a class d felony probation violation
If you drink and drive and pick up a DWI or worse DUI, then you are in violation of your probation. However, if it was not specified otherwise in your original court papers, then drinking should not be a violation of your felony probation.
yes, it is a separate charge
Yes
Yes
It's up to the original sentencing judge, but it is very likely you could be facing spending the remainder of your sentence behind bars.
Your felony probation will be immediately revoked and you will be remanded back to prison. In the meantime you will be tried for the felony you committed while on probation and then face sentencing and prison time for that offense also.
Yes