No way of telling. The amount of probation, and even the question of IF you get offered probation or not, is entirely at the discretion of the sentencing judge.
If, as a result of your VOP, you are charged with a new offense, you will serve the un-expired remainder of your original sentence.
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.
The sentencing judge who gave you probation in the first place will have the final word. They may send you inside to serve the entire remainder of your original sentence, or only part of it. It is totally the judge's call.
That depends upon the laws of the state in which the incident occurred, prior criminal convictions and so forth. The sentence that was imposed an then suspended relating to the terms of probation will have to be served now that the probation has been violated.
A probation officers average income is 45,000$ a year
If you violate probation you could be sentenced to serve the remainder of your original sentence behind bars.
You will be charged with the new marijuana PWI offense and face court action for that charge. As far as the probation goes - the sentencing judge who gave you probation in the first place will have the final word on what they will do with you. They may send you inside to serve the entire remainder of your original sentence, or only part of it. It is totally the judge's call.
you may have to serve the remainder of your sentence
SOL's apply only to non-adjudicated offenses. There are no SOL's for probation violation. You have already been pronounced guilty and probation is your SENTENCE. If you violate your sentence it is pretty much the same as violating your jail time.
If your probation is revoked then you could be required to serve the two years that were withheld initially.
The judge can revoke your sentence of probation and send you to jail for the remainder of your unserved sentence. If your VOP involved committing another offense, if convicted of THAT offense, it will be added to to the length of your original sentence.
Probation means that the court decided the imposition of your sentence was suspended and granted probation. The grant is most commonly 3 or 5 years, but can be any time period the court sees fit. In lieu of serving jail/prison time, the probationer gives up 4th amendment rights and agrees to a warrantless search as well as the other terms and conditions of probation. If the terms and conditions are violated, the PO can file a motion to revoke probation. If probation is terminated, the defendant may have to serve all of the original sentence. If the probation is reinstated, the terms and conditions can be modified, or the probation expiration date be extended, and credit for time served be waived.