Court supervision is expunged for the personÕs record with the person follows all terms and conditions. With probation, the charges stay on the personÕs record.
intensive supervision probation. parental supervision of the officers and the high risk offenders. then where juveniles continually fail to be helped by local court system and end up in juvenile jail.
Yes, paying all fees and fines related to the court including restitution, court costs, attorney fees and probation supervision fees can be a term of your probation and you can be found in violation of probation for not paying them in a timely manner.
You do not have to pay any probation officer directly. You do most likely have to pay probation supervision fees, however. These payments are NOT made to your probation officer but usually to the clerk's office of your sentencing court.
All states have both. Probation is a term of supervision in the community that is sentenced by a Court. Parole is a term of supervision in the community following release from prison, usually for the remainder of a person's original sentence.
Only if Maryland accepts the transfer of your probation supervision from Pennsylvania. (1) You must petition the Court for permission to transfer your probation from one state to the other. (2) The court must approve it. (3) Maryland must agree to accept the responsibility (and the cost) of your supervision. You cannot move out of state unless and until all this takes place.
Don't forget - while on probation you are under the control and supervision of the court. You must ask the court for permission to travel, sometimes even to travel out of state. If the judge approves the travel there should be no problem.
What do you mean by over? If the Court has discharged you from probation then no. The Court cannot give you jail time on your probation charge after you have been discharged from probation. If, for example, you were granted a two year term of probation that was due to expire on 02/01/10 but failed to report and a warrant was issued in 2009 then you are not off the hook. The Court can suspend your probation if you violate the terms. Once it is ordered suspended then the Court retains jurisdiction until you are either relieved from probation supervision, continued on probation with a time extension, or revoked and sentenced to jail or prison.
The answer is no. The federal judge needs to formally terminate supervision. This is accomplished by either defense counsel or the USPO petitioning the court.
Don't get yourself in trouble! You need to contact the court and have the court's permission to leave OR, or perhaps to transfer the supervision of your probation to AK. Remember - probation is a SENTENCE for a criminal offensemjust like going to jail is, except that you are free with certain restrictions placed upon you. One of these is your freedom of movement.
Don't forget that you are serving a sentence, albeit a lenient one, because you were found guilty, and are free under the supervision and authority of the court. If the court wants you to sign some type of papers affecting your probation status you would be well advised to do so.
Do NOT -repeat- do NOT move to another state without first getting permission to move from the court which sentenced you to probation. If the court even grants you the permission the probation agency of the state to which you want to move has to agree to accept you for supervision. Don't forget you have been found guilty and you have been sentenced - sentenced to probation - a lenient sentence - but a sentence nonetheless. You are not free to move about, and come and go, as you wish without first getting the permission of the sentencing court.
After. A person is not on probation until they are sentenced to probation by the Court. Why would they get a probation officer until they are sentenced?