You are entitled to justice and the protection of the law. The assault against you should not go un-reported. It may be likely that he could be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of his sentence but, so what. If he gets away with violating his sentence what has he learned.
If you do not complete the terms of your probation, your probation could be revoked and you could be required to serve any or all time remaining on your probation. It doesn't matter why you didn't do it.
It was Assaulted.
You could have your probation revoked and go back to prison.
when you violate your probation one of 3 things can happen 1. reeive a jail sentence 2 . receive prison sentence equal to your term of probation 3. or revoke your current probation and and start your probation over again. again it depends on what your circum stances are.
Depending on the conditions of your probation, it could be as grave as revocation of probation....safest to stay clean and free
your in deep trouble.
That person could be arrested for violation of probation and have their probation revoked which ends up with the person going to jail. You may also have a new set of probation terms given to you.
They should be treated no different than any other citizen.
You'll still be arrested when they find you because you broke your probation before you were 18. Period.
A person cannot be set for a probation revocation hearing unless they have already been sentenced to probation. If you are asking if a person can request to do their prison time instead of being released again to probation then yes they can. It may sound odd, but it does happen.
If you got into criminal trouble before you were on probation. You would be in jail and not on probation. Probation is for if you are not in jail. They can't happen at the same time.Unless, you are picked up while on probation, but that would be a violation of your probation which we would be very quickly revoked.Added: The question is worded very unclearly. Probation is a sentence for being found guilty of a criminal offense for which you were charged and brought to court.It is a very lenient sentence, but it IS a sentence nonetheless.If you violate the provisions of your probation you can be taken into custody for VOP and the judge will make a decision as to whether or not you will be punished for the VOP and, if so, in what fashion.If you re-offend (commit another offense while released on probation) you will have your probation revoked AND you will be charged with the new crime.
It depends on how serious the probation violation is considered to be. Your violation wasn't a repeat of the offense you were on probation for, so it's really up to your probation officer. He can give you a warning and another chance, or he can have you arrested and sent to a hearing where your probation could be revoked, and you would serve out your jail sentence.