Yes, she did
This depends on state to state. While many states allow you to serve a third of your prison term prior to release, others have a mandatory minimum of 85%, including Florida and the federal system.
Your use of the word "prison" implies that they were convicted of a felony offense. Convicted felons are prohibited from holding elective office.
Yes. Though divorced from his first wife in 1976 (they were both young when they married, but had a daughter named Meaghan), Walter Thomas Hampson remarried to Frau Gräfing Andrea Herberstein (born 1953?) after their living together for a couple of decades. Frau Gräfing Herberstein has three children from an earlier marriage. In November of 2008, Frau Gräfing Herberstein was convicted of fraud, tax evasion, and misuse of government subsidies; she was sentenced to a prison term of five months, and fined €272,657. The case was appealed to a higher Austrian court in February of 2011, and the penalty was increased to two years' imprisonment, of which eight months was to be served.
Jimmy Hoffa
Illinois is one of 16 US States without term limits.
Prison term
The term "LE" in prison is an abbreviation for "Law Enforcement." Inmates may use this term to refer to prison guards or other personnel associated with the enforcement of rules and regulations within the prison.
A slang term for a prison sentence is "doing time."
Not much you can do. If you were originally sentenced to a term in prison, then a VOP of that sentence would only mean that you would be remanded to serve your your original sentence. This is true especially if the remaining term of incarceration is for more than one year.
If you conduct a criminal act.. such as a felony, there will be deportation orders for you once you serve your prison term. Note: District judges and Fed judges have differences, where the Dist Judges would rather deport the person to a prison in their own homeland, while the Fed. Judges prefer the person to serve their time first. Unfortunately, some countries will not accept prisoners to serve time for acts not committed in their homeland.
The offender received a consecutive sentence. This means that after completing the five-year term for the first crime, he must serve an additional three years for the second crime, resulting in a total of eight years in prison. Consecutive sentences are imposed for multiple offenses, requiring the offender to serve each sentence one after the other.
Incarceration covers the prison term and community corrections or probation covers the other term. The usual wording is something like: " The defendant is remanded to the custody of the state department of corrections for a period of incarceration not to exceed 5 years and upon release is to serve 2 years of probation."