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That means you are going to do the time you got probated by the court. If you had 3 years on the shelf probated, then you will be doing the 3 years. (less time for good behavior, and what ever the serve out is for a year in your state, ie: the state I live in (KY) for every year given you must serve out 7 months and 21 days. Good luck. I hope that this is a rhetorical question, otherwise, I would advise you to get an attorney and try to see if you can't get some relief.

2006-12-28 11:05:48 · answer #1 · answered by piratephyl 3 · 1 0

I live in Oregon and i just went in front of a judge and they revoked my probation.I asked them to explain and he saidi am off probation now. So i am confused with these answers

2014-04-25 16:57:16 · answer #2 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

Just to add on to the discussion... (Believe the attorney's and the PO's... the rest don't have it quite right...:)

When probation is revoked, the Court typically issues a bench warrant. From the moment probation is revoked, you don't earn credit for being supervised on probation. So, you're granted 3 years probation. Lets say you you take off after 1 year, when you still had two years to serve on probation. The court revokes probation and issues a warrant. Whenever you return on that warrant, even years down the road, you will STILL have to serve 2 additional years on probation, if probation is reinstated.

2006-12-29 02:57:25 · answer #3 · answered by Amy S 6 · 0 0

In my state (Arkansas) when a person who is on probation, commits a serious violation of the terms of probation, a Petition to Revoke Probation is filed with the court. This is not usually done for minor violations, unless they are recurrent. The person is then set for a hearing before a judge to determine if there are grounds to revoke the probation. Probation cannot be revoked without a hearing or a plea before a judge. The judge has a wide range of options in sentencing for a probation violation. He/She can sentence the person to prison for up to the maximum for the crime for which probation was given, but that is unusual in today's world of prison over-crowding. Probation may be extended, or a period of jail time may be ordered in an attempt to "convince" the violator, or the judge may order other special conditions

2006-12-28 22:13:42 · answer #4 · answered by huduuluv 5 · 0 0

When a court places you on probation, it does so upon various conditions. If the court gets information that you have violated probation, it will usually immediately revoke probation. The court may issue a warrant for your arrest, or the court or probation officer may give you a date to appear.

This does not necessarily mean you are going to jail, since first you are entitled to a hearing on whether you really did violate the condition. Even if you did violate the condition, the court does not have to permanently revoke probation and impose a sentence, but can instead put you back on probation, perhaps requiring an additional period in custody as a condition.

2006-12-28 19:34:36 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

When your probation is revoked for a violation, it means you must serve the full term of your remaining sentence in jail or prison (depending on the length). You can talk to the court, an attorney, or probation officer.

2006-12-28 19:03:01 · answer #6 · answered by Angry Daisy 4 · 1 0

It means you are on probation, but did something wrong and your probation officer has revoked it, thus you are to go back to the judge ( and held in jail for the hearing) to determine if instead of staying on probation, you go and spend the time in jail instead.

2006-12-28 19:24:05 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

it means you were on probation and you violated your agreement, example, suzie & jimmy have an EPO against you, you decide well hey I'm gonna talk to suzie & jimmy anyway, they call the police when you show up and a report is made, you just broke probation

2006-12-28 19:08:03 · answer #8 · answered by christinedaae 3 · 1 0

means there taking your probation privaledges away and invoking the sentence mike

2006-12-28 19:07:56 · answer #9 · answered by mmikemmabry69 1 · 1 0

You are probably going to jail

2006-12-28 19:02:44 · answer #10 · answered by me2 5 · 1 0

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