This will depend on several things. First, did you get permission from your probation officer? If so, provided you adhered to the terms of the permission to travel outside the country, you are fine. If not, keep reading. Second, were you caught traveling outside the country while on probation? If not, you got lucky and will probably not have anything happen to you, unless someone finds out about it and notifies your probation officer. If you didn't have permission to travel outside the country while on probation and you get caught, you could be punished by anything from an extension of your probation to having your probation revoked and being put in jail for the original conviction.
According to my DUI lawyer, travel outside the country requires the judge's approval.
It depends on the terms of your probation. Typically, probation prohibits international travel.
It depends on the terms of their probation. They would typically need permission from their probation officer to travel outside the US, and failure to obtain permission could be a violation of their probation.
Generally, Misdemeanor warrants are not extraditable outside the state, the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), states that only Felony warrants, or severe misdemeanor warrants, are entered into this system. i was extradited from wv to VA viginia for misdemeanor bad check. the warrent was in ncic. would a state farther away ignore this?
no. Actually yes.If currently on parole or probation you must have permission from your supervisory authority. Not all countries will allow you entry though.
You will need a court order.
Leaving the state without permission from a Probation Officer is considered violating the probation. Permission will have to be granted for any out of state travel, and sometimes travel outside of one's county. It is best to check with the probation officer before leaving the state.
Whether a truck driver on probation can leave the state depends on the specific terms of their probation. Typically, probation conditions may restrict travel outside the state without prior approval from a probation officer. It's essential for the individual to check with their probation officer and understand any limitations or requirements before making travel plans. Violating probation terms can lead to serious consequences.
Yes, but can depend on the jurisdiction and/or age of the defendent. For example, a curfew violation of a juvenile is considered a status offense, not a misdemeanor.
yes they do because it tells them how you been on probation and how people think you are doing usually the probation report is what they look at because the judge does not see your actions outside the court~EXTRA INFORMATION~♥ so yes they do consider your probation report and therefore if you do not have one they go by evidence or just how the jury comes to it but usually most people have a probation report and sometimes you don't even have to be on probation ♥
Business environment within an outside the country is different?
abroad is the word for to be outside one's own country