Did you mean to say that you were released on PAROLE? Regardless. . . if you violate the provisions of your release you can be returned to confinement to serve the remainder of your sentence.
Then you're in violation of your probation. If you'd been released before you sentence was complete, you'll be required to serve out the remainder of your sentence, on top of whatever time you're sentenced on the burglary charges.
Most probation have a condition that you not be charged with additional crimes for the duration of your probation. It is possible, if your crimes are unrelated in nature, that it may not be a violation, but it seems likely that DUI is a violation of common probation terms. Even though you are unsupervised, it's not as if they won't check on your record periodically.
Are you kidding? Breaking probation means that you end up serving your original sentence. Probation is not a warning...it is a requirement.
If you have restrictions on your probation that restrict your residence area (which you probably do), you will be in violation of your court ordered sentence and may well be remanded to jail or prison for the remainder of your sentence.
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.
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It depends on what the violation is.
That's a violation of your probation. Most likely 6 months in jail.
You can be declared in violation of your probation and thrown back in jail.
It depends completely on the judge's discretion. The worst case scenario is that you can be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of your sentence.
Simple. Just follow ALL the rules set forth in your probation documents and you will do just fine. JUST REMEMBER: Because you got probation does NOT mean you 'got away with it.' Probation is a sentence for being found GUILTY.
You go to jail on a probation violation.