90 days in jail
Vehicular Manslaughter in Missouri is a Class B felony. A Class B felony is punishable with a minimum sentence of 5 years & a maximum of 15 years.
If it is a Class A felony there is no limitation. For the other felonies, it is three years.
It depends entirely on what you were charged with - NOT - what sentence the judge imposed. If the statute written by the legislature calls for a sentence of MORE THAN one year it is, by definition, a felony. The judge, at his discretion, can sentence persons convicted of felony-class crimes to serve less than the minimum sentence, however, the offender remains a convicted felon nonetheless.
Yes it is a class C felony
The penalty for second degree murder in Missouri is imprisonment for not less than 10 years or more than 30 years or for life.
The amount of imprisonment time a person can get for a Class C felony in the state of Missouri is one year or more. The exact length of time depends on the crime and the court system.
Mine is $10,000.
A class 4 felony in Ohio is usually related to a violent or sexual assault. A class 4 felony usually gives the perpetrator the maximum fines and imprisonment sentence.
In Arizona a class 3 dangerous felony can have a maximum sentence of up to 15 years with no prior record. A dangerous class 3 felony is not eligible for probation.
Not in Arkansas. The sentence is mandatory.
25 to 40 years with parole being offered after 16.
"RSMo 195.211" means "Missouri Revised Statutes, chapter 195, section 211".It has to do with production or distribution of controlled substances (drugs, or possibly ingredients that can be used to make drugs)."Felony B" refers to what Missouri calls a "class B felony", which is a felony (a severe crime, worse than a misdemeanor). Class B is the second "worst" kind of felony; class A felonies are murder, some kinds of kidnapping, forcible rape of a child, and so on.The various classes are used to determine what the maximum sentence for the crime is. Class B felonies have a sentencing range of not less than 5 nor more than 15 years in prison. Under certain conditions, repeat offenders can be sentenced for a class B felony as if it were a class A felony instead: 10-30 years, or life imprisonment.