It depends on the amount and which state you were charged in but usually adds six years mandatory to the charge . In most cases to be served after the sentence for the original charge is served.
You need to see a lawyer for exact details on your particular situation in your particular jurisdiction. In general, each charge carries it own sentence. Consider this - a person gets convicted of robbery and gets 5 years. He/she serves 3 years with probation for 2 years. While out on probation, the same person commits another robbery which carries another 5 year sentence. The court probably will NOT give the person "credit" the robber on his/her second conviction for time served for the first conviction.
He served in Parliament.
I served dinner to everyone in my family yesterday
If a person dies while serving a life sentence, the sentence is typically considered to have been served, as the individual is no longer alive to continue serving it.
Federal law requires a minimum sentence of 5 years for possession of any amount over 5 grams & a maximum sentence of 40 years. If convicted of possession of 50 grams or over, the mandatory minimum sentence is 10 years & the maximum is life
A palatable French dish was served to the guest.
A (adjective) selection (subject) of (preposition) cheeses (object of preposition) served (verb) with (preposition) grapes (object of preposition). For starters, 'A selection of cheeses served with grapes' is not a sentence, it is a phrase. A sentence requires a subject and a verb. While the word 'SERVED' is usually a verb, in this case it is being used to describe the cheeses, it does not indicate any action taking place. What happened with the selection of cheeses and grapes? If the phrase were rewritten: 'A selection of cheeses WAS served with grapes', then you would have an action. A selection of cheeses- is the subject of the sentence. was served- is the verb in the sentence, WAS is an auxiliary verb. with grapes - A prepositional phrase modifying the subject. - wjs1632 -
Cake and program are the nouns in that sentence.
The conditional release of prisoners before they have served their full sentence is called parole. This allows a prisoner to serve the remainder of their sentence in the community under supervision.
The Curate's Egg. "How is your egg?" "Parts of it are excellent," replied the polite curate, eating a bad egg served by his bishop.
That all depends on the charge and the sentencing Judge. One may have to serve the entire length or others may only serve a portion depending on the circumstances.