It depends on the original sentence. If the original sentence was greater than one year and one day, your will serve your time in a state penitentiary. If the sentence was less than one year, you may serve it in a county jail, but the judge could mandate prison.
what is a sentence for violated
Probation is a sentence, not a crime. A felony is a level of crime.
Yes, likely as not.
If charged with a new crime while already on felony probation the likliehood is 100% that you will be 'violated' and returned to jail/prison, not only to serve the remainder of your sentence while incarcerated, but also to await prosecution for the new offense.
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.
It means a person has violated probation for the third time.
If a felon violated probation he'd probably go back "inside" and wouldn't be eligible for SSI under those circumstances.
The difference between felony and misdemeanor probation is the felony is when a person is sentence to a jail term, but it can be served out of jail. The misdemeanor probation is not given jail time. They serve a probation period.
A sentence of probation for ANY kind of gun felony is practically unheard of.
A conviction is a conviction. Probation IS a sentence - - a lenient sentence but a sentence nonetheless.
Are you kidding? Breaking probation means that you end up serving your original sentence. Probation is not a warning...it is a requirement.
Not in Arkansas. The sentence is mandatory.