To find your discharge date, you can check with your healthcare provider or the hospital's admissions department, as they typically have access to your medical records and discharge plans. Additionally, you may find this information on your patient portal if the hospital offers one. It's also helpful to ask your nurse or care team for updates during your stay.
To find out your correct discharge date, you can check with your healthcare provider or hospital staff, as they typically have the most accurate information. Additionally, reviewing your discharge paperwork or medical records can provide details on your expected discharge date. Many hospitals also have online patient portals where you can access your health information, including discharge dates. If in doubt, don't hesitate to ask your nurse or care coordinator for clarification.
If you abscond past your maximum discharge date on probation, you may not be able to discharge from probation as you have violated the terms of your probation by absconding. It is advisable to contact your probation officer or legal counsel to discuss your situation and options.
If you failed to report and a warrant was issued before your discharge date for not reporting then yes. If you were arrested on a new charge that is prosecuted before your discharge date then I am pretty sure the parole hold would need cancelled on your discharge date. If you were discharged then "caught a new case" it would not be a parole violation because you would no longer be on parole.
no
Your time in service will be listed on your DD214. It might require some math, as I believe your enlistment date and discharge date are all that appear there. Look at the top of the record.
It is 10 years from the date of discharge.
Student loans do not go through the discharge procedure, only bankruptcy's. A discharge takes place six months from the date you filed for bankruptcy. Then you have to wait two years from the date of discharge to apply for a home loan.
6-7 years after the date of discharge
A bankrupt is automically discharge from bankrupcy after three years from the date on which the bankrupt filed her or his settlement of affairs.
Creditors list the charge off date as the date the bankrupcty was filed
Ten years from the date of the discharge, not the date of the filing.
7 years from discharge (not filing, but actual date of discharge) of a Chapter 7. Don't know about a 13.