you may have to serve the remainder of your sentence
Try asking your probation officer.
Revocation
This question cannot be answered on this venue due to lack of sufficient information. It would best be answered by contacting your Probation Officer and asking.
You should be asking what happens if you violate your probation, because the same sanctions will occur for whatever reason you violate your probation. You will be arrested and returned to court to address this violation of probation. The punishment can range from a warning to complete revocation of your probation and incarceration.
Depends on what one is 'on probation' for. If it was a DUI offense, a drivers license might be suspended for a specified period (depending on the state) and possibly up to 3 years . If the person is not on a DUI probation, and has met all the requirements of the probation order, one would think they can progress in life and get the license. Would possibly advise that you be asking your probation officer this question, too.
Probation typically refers to a legal status rather than a specific day of the week. If you are asking whether probation supervision or check-ins can occur on a Sunday, this would depend on the policies of the probation department and local laws. Some probation officers may schedule meetings or check-ins on weekends, while others may not. It's best to consult with your probation officer or the relevant department for specific guidelines.
If the probation officer is conducting the search then he must be there for it. Every state has its own procedures for conducting searches on their probation clients. Police generally cannot assist probation officers with their search, but probation officers can assist police with theirs. But police must still have a search warrant, while probation officers don't-- IF such search is allowed as part of the subject's condition of the probation. In practice, however, probation officers don't help police with their search because they can easily and unknowingly contaminate the evidence or crime scene. Probation officers' searches generally have a different purpose than police searches. If you're asking if the subject's probation officer must be there to conduct a search, then generally yes, they cannot substitute another probation officer for the subject's assigned PO.
A "praecipe" is a legal document filed to request a court action or to initiate a specific procedure. When the state files a praecipe for a contested final probation revocation hearing, it means that the state is formally asking the court to schedule a hearing to determine whether a probationer's probation should be revoked due to alleged violations. This hearing allows both the state and the probationer to present evidence and arguments regarding the probation violations in question.
It would depend on the offense of the crime. When your proabation officer finds out, then your probation could be revoked & any suspended sentence you received as a term of your probation could be imposed. Not to mention the "trouble" that you just got into the police with.
YES Having worked as a parole/probation officer for many years I can say that there is really nothing that you should not tell your probation officer, especially when it could affect the outcome of your probation. No detail is too small to mention, especially if you are asking yourself if you should mention it or not. The individuals I had on my caseload that were willing to tell me the truth, I would work to the end of the world for. If they were actively trying to deceive me, they were not worth my effort, and I would explain this philosophy to them at our first meeting. (note this is the first time im going there i just signed up for an interview and will i be tested then)
That would depend on the conditions you must follow according to the terms of your parole/probation you entered into for whatever reason. If your parole/probation agreement said that you were not to leave the country, then it would be a violation of the agreement if you were to do so. They could violate/terminate the parole/probation and file charge(s) against you for violating the parole/probation agreement. Your best bet is to contact your assigned parole/probation officer and get a written statement (signed) from them with the determination of whether you can leave the country without violating your parole/probation agreement. Written proof is the best way to cover your neck, just in case they say you left without first asking them, if it was all right to leave the country without violating your parole/probation agreement.
You do not go to jail for a motion. If Probation has filed a Motion to Revoke, it means you are on probation, and your probation officer is asking the court to revoke your probation. If this is the case, the judge will decide how to handle your case. Revocation of probation can mean anything from no additional sentence to serving the remainder of your probation time in custody. It depends on the underlying charge, the reason for the revocation, and a number of other factors.