A good lawyer should be able to answer that question for FREE. This public-access site could garner any number of false leads.
Well,i am not from Missouri but they probably get arrested or go to jail if it wasn't their first offense.
It makes no difference where you are arrested. You will be charged and arraigned for the new crime. Because of your status you will not be offered bail for the new offense, and the court will, in all probability, revoke your bond for the first offense and send you to jail.
If you VOP'd AND was arrested for another offense, the likliehood is quite high that you would be remanded to jail to serve the unexpired portion of your original sentence, or at least until the prosecution of the new offense is completed.
In many states you can be arrested for even the smallest traffic offense. However it is extremely rare. As to the penalty in court, there is no jail time and just a small fine.
You cannot go to jail unless arrested.
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.
I hope someone answers. I'd like to know myself. My stepson was just charged with manufactoring meth....he was already on probation.
Probably meth.
She was arrested at 15 but never in jail.
You being arrested has no bearing on your loan. As long as you make the payments on time there will be no repossession. The loan company does not care if you are in jail as long as they get their money.
It can possibly mean different things in different jurisdictions, but in my experience the 'commitment charge' refers to the offense for which the prisoner was originally arrested and booked into detention under.
No, but in many states it's a criminal offense and you can be subject to license suspension, fines and jail.