Don't make me violate my probation!
We all get nervous in a probation moment.
He was incarcerated for five years for his involvement in the crime.
A conviction is a conviction. Probation IS a sentence - - a lenient sentence but a sentence nonetheless.
A suspended imposition of sentence (SIS) is a closed record after probation is successfully completed.
Probation is a sentence, not a crime. A felony is a level of crime.
The question is a little unclear - but if the probation was terminated it should mean that you had completed your sentence to the satisfaction of the judge. However, the charge for which you received the sentence of probation will remain on your criminal history record.
It is a sentence on which the convicted person is serving on probation.
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.
I have committed a burglary on probation and got revoked and payed with my original sentence and the new sentence charges.
When your probation sentence ends.
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.
depends on jurisdiction and judge. Commonly revocation of probation, and imposition of remaining sentence of the original crime.