Criminal Law What does the probation and incarceration wording mean?

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johndoe

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In immigration law, it says that incarceration of more than 6 months results in removal and deportation. Is that the same as probation for 6 or more months? Also, would a misdemeanor charge of theft with a one year probation be considered a crime of moral torpitude(cant spell) or an aggravated crime in immigration law? Thanks
 
This it not legal Advice!


Look up the word incarceration and then look up the word probation and that will give you the answer your seek.

As for theft, yes it is one of the crimes immigration do not like.


Good Luck

Mark.
 
Q: In immigration law, it says that incarceration of more than 6 months results in removal and deportation. Is that the same as probation for 6 or more months?

A: Probably not, unless there was a 6 month or more stint in jail.



Q: Also, would a misdemeanor charge of theft with a one year probation be considered a crime of moral torpitude(cant spell) or an aggravated crime in immigration law?

A: Yes, it is a crime of moral turpitude.
 
You should take the time to look the words up though, an dedicated mind is an educated mind.
 
You should take the time to look the words up though, an dedicated mind is an educated mind.

Google is your friend:

For example....



Definitions of incarceration on the Web:

* Imprisonment; confinement in a jail or penitentiary.
www.utcourts.gov/resources/glossary.htm

* the act of putting an offender in jail.
www.nationaltcc.org/tcc/

* Confinement in prison/jail. Indictment A formal charging document issued by a Grand Jury to the Court wherein the named person(s) is accused of committing a specific crime. Indigent A defendant unable to afford a private defense attorney. These clients are represented by the public defender or a conflict attorney. Information A formal charging document issued by the State Attorney wherein the named person is accused of committing a specific offense. ...
sa18.state.fl.us/legterm/terms.htm

* When a person has been convicted of a criminal offence, there are a number of possible penalties that can be imposed by the judge. Incarceration, which means the person must spend a period of time in either a provincial jail (if the period of time is less than two years) or a federal prison (if the period of time is two years or more) is the most severe. ...
www.owjn.org/info/glossar3.htm

* (in·car·cer·a·tion) (in-kahr²s[schwa]ra¢sh[schwa]n) [L. in in + carcer prison] unnatural retention or confinement of a part, as may occur in hernia.
www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_h...zcommonzSzdorlandszSzdorlandzSzdmd_i_05zPzhtm

* The bodily confinement of a person to a prison or jail.
www.iejs.com/glossary/Glossary_I.htm

* captivity: the state of being imprisoned; "he was held in captivity until he died"; "the imprisonment of captured soldiers"; "his ignominious incarceration in the local jail"; "he practiced the immurement of his enemies in the castle dungeon"
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

* A prison is a place in which people are confined and deprived of a range of liberties. Prisons conventionally are institutions authorized by governments and forming part of a country's criminal justice system, or as facilities for holding prisoners of war. A prison system is the organizational arrangement of the provision and operation of prisons.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incarceration
 
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