It is strictly up to the probation officer. I think that it also depends on the violation, i.e., is it a technical violation (not reporting, not paying supervision fees, fines) or was there another crime "allegedly" committed. But usually, yes. And as far as the "10 day rule"....that is not true. I have known of people being incarcerated waiting for another state to come pick them up for up to 30 days, not counting weekends. Your question is rather vague. I don't know if said person is currently incarcerated. I think it also depends on when the violation occurred. I am certainly no expert, but am speaking from what I know and what *I* have seen with my own eyes. The best thing to do is to contact the probation officer or the probation office (if the specific officers name is not known). Hope this helps!
It depends on what the violation is and what you are on probation for.
here in the state of Florida the is no statue of limitation on a probation violation (SORRY)
in florida
no the will go to jail in the state that they are in
Yes.
THERE SAFE AS LONG AS THERE NOT IN THE STATE THEY RECIEVED THE DUI
It depends on the probation, felony or misdemeanor. Either way, if you get picked up in Florida they will run a nationwide warrant check on you. If they find the po violation, they will let the that county know and they will have a set amount of days to come get you or your automatically released. Here in Texas its 10 buisness days
It depends on the severity of the crime as well as the state the offense was committed. Say the fugitive is wanted in Florida for violating the terms of his/her probation and is picked up in South Carolina.The State of Florida has the option to expedite the person.However, it also has the option not to.Again depending on the severity of the crime. That happens to be my case by the way.Fla. didnt expedite me and terminated my probation. I got sentenced to the county for 30 days for being a fugitive.
Yes, they could... if they wanted to. It might depend on the seriousness of the original offense and what the VOP consisted of.
In all probability, yes. All felony VOP's are extraditable.
any arrest or negative contact with police can be a violation of probation and sometimes it takes the state months to catch it........ for instance my b/f got arrested in June while on probation and was released.... all charges were dropped but now when he reported in September he was told he had a warrant for his arrest for a violation from that arrest in June.... however for a violation they usually let you see a judge with in ten days and they usually solve it at the first appearance... good luck
You will probably have your probation revoked and have to serve the remainder of that sentence behind bars PLUS whatever jail time will be added if you are found guilty of the DUI offense.