Your parole officer can get it to where you only have to do 90 days or 2 for 1 which means every day counts as 2 so then you will serve half the time (45 days) or if you have a tough parole officer you could possibly sit in jail for the rest of your parole period. ADDED: The above assumes that the PO can convince the judge. It is the JUDGE you are brought before who will have the last say on what happens to you. The PO can only offer his opinion as an advisor, he has no legal power to control the sentence. A PAROLE violation is usually treated more seriously than a PROBATION violaion. You could be facing going back to prison to serve the remainder of your sentnece.
40 years to life with no parole.
Your probation will probably be terminated and you will be remanded to jail to finish the remainder of your original sentence. Meantime - you will begin the the judicial process for the second offense for which (if found guilty) you will serve an additional sentence.
If you are "well-behaved" in prison, then most people are eligible for parole in 75% of the jail time, so it would be 13 and a half months.
Most of the time.
If you missed a court date or didnt pay a fine while in jail and a warrant was issued, all you would need to do is appear before the issuing judge and give him proof that you were in jail during the time the warrant was issued.
A sheriff's return on a bench warrant means that a return notice has been filed stating that a warrant was served. It also means that if the person is in jail at the time the warrant is served when they are released, they are to be transferred to the jail in the jurisdiction where the warrant was issued.
If anyone on parole (orprobation) break the rules of their parole/probation and/or commits another criminal offense, they run the grave risk of being returned to jail/prison for the remainder of their sentences.
The question is unclear. If you are on parole and violate the law and have to appear in court on another charge, it is quite likely that your parole may be affected or even revoked, depending on the severity of the new charge. If you are simply on parole and subpoenaed to attend a hearing relating to your parole case, you had BEST attend or risk having a bench warrant issued for you. Parole is NOT a -get-out-of-jail-free" card! You are still serving your sentence.
Usually this means that you are being ordered to go to jail and serve some time, usually a specific amount of time. This type of warrant is issued to those who fail to appear in court for fulfillment of sentence or who fail to appear at jail to begin their sentence.
25 Years
It is totally at their discretion.
To figure out how much time is left on parole.