Up to 6 months imprisonment and (not or) up to $1000 fine
First conviction is a first degree misdemeanor and second conviction is a fifth degree felony.
Not enough information is known. . . it COULD signify a First Degree Misdemeanor. (???)
IANAL The parent will be charged with contributing to the Delinquency of a Child, Ohio Revised Code section 2919.24(A)(2), a first degree misdemeanor, and Failure to send child to school Ohio Revised Code 3321 (which is also a misdemeanor).
It is an M4 misdemeanor (The lowest possible misdemeanor) aka a 4th Degree Misdemeanor in Ohio, just as long as guns or firearms are not involved. Then the charge becomes much more serious. But usually they will charge you with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon if you are using firearms, knives, or other deadly weapons.
The sentence can vary considerably based on the actual charge. While "menacing in the second degree" is typically a Class A misdemeanor, first degree menacing is a class E felony. In Ohio, for example, menacing and stalking as a 4th degree misdemeanor is punishable by a fine or up to 30 days in jail, and aggravated menacing is a 1st degree misdemeanor with up to 6 months in jail. For repeat offenses or those involving a minor, it can be a 4th degree felony with a maximum prison term of 18 months.
Probation and a fine. After being convicted of the first offense, each subsequent offense is a fifth degree felony
You can take legal action once 1 payment is missed in Ohio. The person required to pay the child support can be charged with a first degree misdemeanor offense for their first charge of non-payment.
In Ohio, assault is a first-degree misdemeanor. Conviction on these charges result in not more than 180-days. A court that sentences an offender to a jail term under this section may permit the offender to serve the sentence in intermittent confinement or may authorize a limited release of the offender.
in Ohio a misdemeanor 1 is the worst and a 4 is the lightest
The general for this offense is a First Degree Misdemeanor. It carries with it 6 months in Jail or a $1000 fine or both. It is very rare to be charged at the felony level. If you need more information check out the O.R.C (Ohio Revised Code) 2921.13.
Under the Ohio Revised Code, Chapter 2921 - Section 45: (A) No public servant, under color of his office, employment, or authority, shall knowingly deprive, or conspire or attempt to deprive any person of a constitutional or statutory right. (B) Whoever violates this section is guilty of interfering with civil rights, a misdemeanor of the first degree. So yes, in Ohio it's a first degree misdemeanor, punishable by 180 days in jail and/or a $1000 fine. Not to mention the civil liabilities that are warranted by civil rights violations.
In Ohio, perjury is a felony of the third degree punishable by up to five years in prison and a maximum fine of $10,000. Perjury in a federal proceeding is subject to a similar penalty.