Only if Maryland accepts the transfer of your probation supervision from Pennsylvania. (1) You must petition the Court for permission to transfer your probation from one state to the other. (2) The court must approve it. (3) Maryland must agree to accept the responsibility (and the cost) of your supervision. You cannot move out of state unless and until all this takes place.
She lived in Springdale, PA and Silver Spring, MD.
PA=Personal Assistant while MD=managing Director
You go to jail, so pay it now!
well darling, an md is an mc donalds and a pa is a poached apricot.
PA means personal assistant
Sussex Cnty DE Dorchester Cnty MD Talbot Cnty MD Anne Arundel Cnty MD Howard Cnty MD Carroll Cnty MD Adams Cnty PA York Cnty PA Dauphin Cnty PA Northumberland Cnty PA Columbia Cnty PA Luzerne Cnty PA Lackawanna Cnty PA Wayne Cnty PA Pike Cnty PA Orange Cnty NY Rockland Cnty NY Westchester Cnty NY Nassau Cnty NY
Maryland and Pennsylvania
Unless there was some other aspect to the charge that you did not disclose in the question, that alone, should not be enough to get you suspended. If MD does suspend you however, your privilege to drive in MD would definitely be suspended, but it would be up to PA as to whether to honor that suspension in PA or not.
Parkton, MD
The Pennsylvania Board of Probation & Parole does not fall under or answer to the Dept. of Corrections. The Parole Board answers to the state senate for funding purposes and is under the direct control of the Governor. Local probation offices answer to the President Judge of the county except for two counties in PA which do not have their own county Probation Departments. In those two counties the PA Board of Probation & Parole supervises the county probation or county parole cases.
You would need a MD attorney that works in the area you received the ticket in.
Question is unclear but I will try to answer by giving several scenarios: (1) If you are on probation from a PA court, BUT you are being supervised by FL - you can contact your Florida PO and advise him you wish to return to PA. I'm sure FL will be happy to allow it and free themselves of the cost and effort of supervising you, so you should not encounter much problem. Because you are a probationer from PA, PA will HAVE TO accept you back. (2) If you are on probation from a FL court but wish to move to PA, you MUST have permission from the court that granted you the probation. Not only that, the "receiving state" (in this case, PA) must agree to accept the cost and effort of your supervision. Not until this happens can the FL court grant you permission to move. In either case - contact your PO and he will instruct you how to go about the procedure. [CAUTION] Without the approval of the court, you cannot move out of the jurisdiction of the state that is supervising you, or you run the risk of committing a VOP.