You'll be given a chance to prove your innocence or non-invoilvment.
There are generally two cases in that instance. One is the new drug case. The second is a violation of probation. One condition of probation is always not to commit a new crime. If there is a new crime, then that violates the condition. If it turns out there was in fact a new crime, the judge who oversees the probation may resentence the probationer to anything the probationer could have been sentenced to originally for the first case.
You go to jail
He will get arrested as soon as he is identifed as the perpetrator of the offense. Once he is locked up his probation will be automatically revoked.
Yes you can, and yes it is. It is called absconding and the penalty can be greater than that of the original crime. It can be prosecuted as escape.
A person can always be always be arrested and charged with a crime if there is sufficient evidence to warrant the arrest.
He will be tried for his new crime and sent to jail/prison to serve out his original sentence plus the new one. **They can put him in jail AND charge him for the first reason he was arrested for. Depending on why he is arrested for this time. They put him on probation, this means that they trust him not to get into trouble again. If he does, they can revoke his probation and keep him in jail. They also can just charge him with violation of probation and keep him for a few days or weeks in jail for that then release him again on probation depending on what he did to get arrested for this last time.
If you are arrested for a crime in a different county, the county you're arrested in will run your record and discover that you are on probation. There's a very high possibility they will contact your probation officer, who will then recommend you be charged with probation violation. It is, also, most likely that a condition of your probation is to contact your PO when you're contacted by law enforcement. Not doing so is a violation of probation. The most likely result is that you'll be charged for the new crime in the new county, and charged for the probation violation in the county in which your probation office is located. Keep in mind that the probation office holds jurisdiction over the entire state; not just the one county.
You are charged with a new crime and go on trial for that crime. Then, that is added to your sentence.
Probation is a sentence, not a crime. A felony is a level of crime.
Yes they can i was just arrested and im on probation i smoked weed on friday but now i got probation tomorrow so im most likely going to juvvy :(
If you are arrested but not charged with a crime, it means that the authorities do not have enough evidence to formally accuse you of committing a crime. In this case, you may be released from custody without facing any criminal charges.
Probation is not a crime but does stay on your record, just as the crime that was committed.