Usually its the remaining time of your probation. My friend violated his probation after 1 year. His probation was for 5 years and he has to serve the remaining 4. Jail time is different than "real" time. The equivalent of 7 months 21 days jail time is 1 real year. You could still be out earlier than that on good behavior.
It is determined by your State and how their Justice System works. In most cases if you fail to appear on a criminal summons, or a promise to appear by signing a traffic citation, the judge will order an arrest warrant with a bond amount. If you are arrested, you must post the bond amount in full or pay a bondsman a percentage of the bond to be released. The judge also has the option to mandate a "cash only" bond in which case you have to pay the full amount in cash, no bondsman option. In more severe cases, as in domestic, restraining orders, or in felony cases, you will not have the "no bond" arrest warrant and you have to wait in jail until you are able to appear before the judge at his leisure and scheduling.
For violating your probation you could be sentenced to serve the remainder of the time on your sentence behind bars.
4 months
Based on the information the question contributor provided in the discussion area, it is not a guarantee that you will be violated at all. It is possible that your PO may request the extension of your probation to permit you to complete the requirement of Community Service.
There's no way of answering this question. It is totally up to the discretion of the judge who originally sentenced him. If the judge believes he intentionally failed to report his change of addres in an effort to avoid probation requirements, he COULD be sent to jail to serve the remainder of his sentence behind bars.
you may have to serve the remainder of your sentence
If your probation is revoked then you could be required to serve the two years that were withheld initially.
Yes, you can serve probation while still in jail if you talk with your judge and they like you lol. Just kidding , but my boy friend served 30 days because he didnt do his probation so he prettyy much just did jail time instead of probation
SOL's apply only to non-adjudicated offenses. There are no SOL's for probation violation. You have already been pronounced guilty and probation is your SENTENCE. If you violate your sentence it is pretty much the same as violating your jail time.
get a lawyer.depending on your city and state they can fine you and you could do some long jail or prison time for violating your probation
In theory, you could serve probation to the very last day and still be in violation of such probation and end up in jail/prison. And the courts generally don't give credit for the probation time you've served.
Generally, you are liable for the remainder of your sentence.
That really depends on the probation officer , and you could pull the whole 5 years for violating probation , doesn't need to be first time , second time and so on .