It's up to the Judge. If it's failure to comply with any number assignments like classes, then make sure the class is done before you go into court. The judge wants to see that you're active in completing whatever it is you were ordered to complete. If you show up to court with nothing to show for yourself, they're going to throw you in jail. Complete any and everything you can and more than likely you will be fine. First time probation violitions are typically a slap on the wrist.
No difference, just two ways of saying tghe same thing. This means you are on probation for a certain period of time, and if you do not violate the terms of the probation, the sentence is not applied.
Don't make me violate my probation!
If you violate probation you could be sentenced to serve the remainder of your original sentence behind bars.
Whatever your PO told you it would be. It should be on your court papers too under "jail time suspended" Jail time suspended is the amount of time you can receive when you violate.
Infractions that violate your probation are not triable. You've already been found guilty and received your sentence - which was probation. If you violate the probation rules, you've violated your sentence and you can be remanded to jail to serve your "real" sentence.
Probation is used to give a person a chance to not go to jail. A violation of the probation means that the judge can impose a new sentence that is likely to include jail or prison.
No. A sentence of probation means that you have already been tried and found guilty of an offense. If you violate your sentence (probation) you do not get a second bite at the apple with all the constitutional guarantees.
Probation IS a sentence for being found guilty of an offense.It is at the judge's discretion that they issued a probation sentence rather than sending the convicted defendant to jail.If you violate the judge's trust they may choose to send you to jail to serve the reaminder of your sentence behind bars.
2 years probation mean you will have to report to a probation officer weekly for 2 months and if you get clean urines for 2 months you go 2 times a moth and if no problem's occur then you only have to once a month but it you violate probation you will have a warrant issued for your rearrest and when you got to court they will most likely offer you 50% of your suspended sentence and some more probation. the time you receive you will only have to do 50% of so out of 2 years you will only have 6 months after you complete you will be released on ts and placed under paroleuntil your sentence is finished or another six months
Probation itself IS a sentence. If you abide by all the conditions of the probation sentence you will remain free of jail. If you violate the condition(s) of your probation your freedom can be revoked and you can be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of the term of your sentence.
To supervise and oversee those who have been sentenced to probation to ensure that they carry out the terms of their sentence and do nothing to violate their status.
It's POSSIBLE. Because. . ., if the judge knew you you had an outstanding criminal warrant at the time he gave you a lenient sentence of probation. . . he might not have offered you probation in the first place.