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3 answers

I am not sure if you mean what I mean since the term blue warrant is a nickname in Texas for a parole violation warrant. If this is what you mean, they go to the county jail until there is a hearing for revokation of parole. If they lose the hearing, they go back until the sentence is finished (original sentence) or they are given parole again on a second chance. If they win the hearing, they go back out on parole.

Of course, there is a separate trial for whatever crime they are accused of that made the p.o. ask for the revocation warrant (if it was a crime and not a technical violation). For this, they can get whatever the law allows on the new charges, from probation to jail time.

2006-09-12 12:25:30 · answer #1 · answered by Steve R 3 · 0 0

You know to be more specific about the charges and where you are. "Blue warrant" doesn't mean anything.

But the answer anywhere is 0 time -- if you are found to be not guilty or charges are dropped.

2006-09-12 11:41:23 · answer #2 · answered by C_Bar 7 · 0 0

0 if the charges were dropped

2006-09-12 11:47:47 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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