Turner's sentencing has been postponed until Dec. 21. I answered my own question.
It's the date that the action is final, usually by sentencing, acquittal, dismissal. With a conviction and sentence imposed, the disposition date is the date of final sentencing even though there is a sentence to be completed (with all the actions attendant to that, like parole hearings, appeals, etc.).
It means that the sentence is deferred for one year. In one year (from whatever date was read in the courtroom) the sentencing of the criminal will take place.
It can be done as soon as guilty verdict is announced, or set off for a later date at a sentencing hearing.
File a motion to that effect with the court. Usually it will probably be granted... unless the prosecutor or the court believe you are simply trying to ward off the imposition of the sentence by frivolously postponing the inevitable.
A determinate sentence means an exact release date. No early release, no parole. Indeterminate sentence provides a hearing by a sentencing review board after a minimum amount of years has been served.
IF you meant Lacey Turner from the program Eastenders - she was born on the 28th of March 1988.
He had a court date yesterday.He rode his bike around the court.
Yes They Did Date
Your right as a Defendant says you have the right to examine PSI report Before Sentencing ,for any Mistakes or untrue Statements Made by Probation Officer.
At sentencing, the verdict (decision of the judge or jury) is announced and you can either immediately be taken away to begin your sentence (or pay your fine), or given a certain amount of time to get your affairs in order before you report to jail/prison.
(in the US) That's the way our legal system operates. If the person is not a flight-risk, and they are eligible for bailbond, the judge may be allowing them to be out on bond prior to the actual sentencing date to wind up family or business affairs prior to reporting for prison.
At the time of sentencing, the judge will pronounce two periods of time: a minimum and a maximum. for instance, an offender may be given a sentence of 10 to 40 years. The ten years is the minimum, and in Truth in Sentencing states, that offender will do ten years before ever being considered for parole. In states where administrative "good time" is still given, the offender with a ten year sentence could do as little as five years before being considered for parole. It all depends upon the sentencing statutes of the state in which the offender was convicted. Also, when the offender is delivered to the DOC in your state, the paperwork that accompanies him will display a "Conditional Release Date." This is the soonest he can be considered for parole. It is possible also that in some states the judge may pronounce a "flat" sentence, that is only one period of time will be mentioned in the sentence, say ten years. Depending on the sentencing laws of that state, the offender may have to do the full sentence and discharge from prison at the end with no parole, or he could be held on parole for a determined or indeterminate amount of time. The law is capricious about sentencing.