2 years probation mean you will have to report to a probation officer weekly for 2 months and if you get clean urines for 2 months you go 2 times a moth and if no problem's occur then you only have to once a month but it you violate probation you will have a warrant issued for your rearrest and when you got to court they will most likely offer you 50% of your suspended sentence and some more probation. the time you receive you will only have to do 50% of so out of 2 years you will only have 6 months after you complete you will be released on ts and placed under paroleuntil your sentence is finished or another six months
Differences are.. If years is used as noun preceding an adjective it would be used in plural form because the year is a countable noun. For example... A) my daughter is thirteen years old....in this sentence the old is adjective and years is noun. (B) The above situation is distinguished with, there are two 63-year-old men in the meeting room. in this sentence the year is an adjective as
This could mean deferred sentence. For example a person put before the the Judge has been sentenced to a year in prison BUT the sentence has been deferred (or set aside) while the probation service prepares a report on the defendants mental state, previous character etc.
The word 'years' is plural, so it must be followed by 'are', not 'is'. 'The years are passing quickly now that I am old.' not 'The years is passing quickly now that I am old.' An example of the correct way to use the word years in a sentence is like this: Has the year passed? There are 365 days in a year. WOW! The years went fast!
Biannual can be used in a sentence as an adjective to denote an event that occurs twice a year, or every two years. So, "It's a biannual event" is a rather ambiguous statement.
The dumpsite will be closed later this year for safety reasons. The neighbors had been using the empty lot as a dumpsite for years.
This means that the individual will serve one year in prison, and the remaining three years of their sentence will be suspended, pending completion of probation. If they successfully complete probation, they may not have to serve the remaining three years in prison.
Marvin Gaye's father, Marvin Gay Sr., was sentenced to a six-year suspended sentence and five years probation for fatally shooting his son.
On a 'suspended" sentence you don't "serve" ANY time incarcerated. There may (and probably will) be a period of probation, both supervised and un-supervised, which could run for the entire 11 years. All depends on the sentencing judge and his decision.
This usually means that the person received a sentence to prison for a specific amount of time, generally exceeding the two years mentioned. But that sentence, provided the person completes two years of probation successfully, is withheld. When the person completes the two years' probation, his sentence is completed and he is no longer in the system. However if he violates the terms of his probation he could be sent to prison to complete the prison term, and there's no credit given for the time he was on probation.
It depends on the judge. He could make him serve six years in prison. Or he could sentence him to an additional year (or more) in jail.
A 10 year sentence with 7 years suspended means that the individual would serve 3 years in prison immediately, and the remaining 7 years would not be served unless the individual violates the terms of their probation during the suspended period. If no violations occur during the suspended period, the individual may avoid serving the full 10 years in prison.
He will have a set period of probation which is called a suspended sentence. If he completes his probation without getting in more trouble or getting a violation of probation then the charges will be dropped at the end of the probation period.
It means you were convicted of a felony offense and received a 5 year sentence. One year of which will have to be served behind bars, and the other 4 years suspended.
How was the sentence imposed? (i.e.- a 2 year sentence - serve 60 days with the remainder suspended? -OR- the ENTIRE 2 years sentence suspended?) It all depends upon the wording of the judge's decision.
Most forgery crimes are felonies. If you were charged with a felony offense - regardless of whatever the length of the sentence you received - you are a convicted felon and CANNOT possess a firearm.
Not enough info. Are you on probation? Was the sentence suspended simply on the promise that you not re-offend within a given amount of time? Do you have any residence requirement or travel restriction connected with the suspended sentence? Need to know this info before a knowledgeable answer can be given. Best suggestion: contact the court that sentenced you and ask them.
most likely a couple years and for sure one year probation