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Violation Of Probation

Violation of Probation Lawyer in Florida | VOP Defense Attorney | Smith-Johnson Law PLLC

Smith-Johnson Law PLLC Florida Violation of Probation Defense

Available 24/7 Call (407) 717-8557

Florida violation of probation: what happens next

Violations of probation can arise in misdemeanor and felony cases. If a probation officer believes the probationer failed to comply with supervision conditions, the matter may be addressed informally, through an alternative sanctioning process in some technical cases, or through a formal affidavit of violation filed with the court.

Depending on the alleged conduct and the probationer’s history, the court process may involve a warrant, a notice to appear, a first appearance, detention or release, plea discussions, and a final violation hearing. If the court finds a violation, it may continue, modify, or revoke probation.

1
Alleged probation violation is reported
The issue may begin with a positive drug test, failure to report, missed treatment, a curfew issue, absconding allegation, house arrest allegation, or a new law offense.
2
Probation officer reviews how to handle it
Some technical violations may be handled through warning, documentation, a notification letter, or an alternative sanctioning process instead of immediately filing a formal affidavit with the court.
3
Affidavit of violation, warrant, or notice to appear
If the matter proceeds formally, the probation officer may file an affidavit alleging which conditions were violated. The court may issue a warrant or, in some cases, a notice to appear.
4
First appearance and custody decision
After arrest on a violation, the court may advise the probationer of the allegation and decide whether the person will remain in custody or be released pending the next hearing.
5
Admission, denial, or negotiated resolution
The probationer may admit the violation, seek a negotiated reinstatement or sanction, or deny the allegation and require the State to prove the violation at a hearing.
6
Violation of probation hearing
At a contested hearing, the State must prove the violation by a preponderance of the evidence, and the court decides whether the alleged noncompliance was willful and substantial.
7
Court decision on the violation
If the violation is not proven, the court may dismiss the allegation. If it is proven or admitted, the court may continue probation, modify probation, or revoke it.
8
Reinstatement, added terms, jail, or prison exposure
Depending on the case, the outcome may involve reinstatement, added conditions, a short jail sanction in some probation cases, or revocation with a sentence the court could have originally imposed.

Common probation violations in Florida

Florida law now identifies several low-risk technical violations and also recognizes more serious conduct that may move the case out of an alternative-sanctions track and into formal court proceedings.

Positive Drug or Alcohol Test

A positive test result is specifically listed in the statute as a low-risk violation for a probationer in the proper setting.

Failure to Report

Failure to report to the probation office as instructed is one of the common technical violations that can trigger a VOP review.

Failure to Report Change of Address

Not updating probation with a new address or other required information can become a violation issue quickly.

Failure to Attend Class or Treatment

Missing a required class, counseling session, treatment session, or meeting may be treated as a violation depending on the facts.

Curfew Violations

Curfew violations are specifically recognized in the statute and may be handled differently depending on the probationer’s history and supervision level.

Absconding

Absconding is treated much more seriously and is not eligible for the alternative sanctioning program under the statute.

House Arrest or Community Control Violations

Failing to remain at an approved residence or violating stricter supervision rules can expose the probationer to more serious consequences.

New Law Offenses

A new felony, misdemeanor, or criminal traffic offense is not considered a technical violation and can create immediate and substantial exposure.

Why a VOP allegation is serious

A violation of probation can expose a person to arrest, detention, added supervision terms, county jail, or revocation and sentencing on the underlying case. In some cases, what looks like a small supervision problem can become much more serious once an affidavit is filed and a warrant is issued.

How VOP cases are often resolved

Some cases resolve through reinstatement of probation, sometimes with added conditions, treatment, community service, curfew restrictions, house arrest, or short county jail sanctions where the statute allows. Other cases are resolved by negotiated plea. In more serious matters, the court may revoke probation and impose a jail or prison sentence based on the original charge and sentencing exposure.

What to do after being accused of violating probation

Keep every probation document, save every reporting instruction, and do not miss court. If a warrant may have been issued, delaying action can make the situation worse. VOP cases move fast, and the best defense position is usually built early.

Disclaimer

For more information on defending a violation of probation in Florida, call us at 407-717-8557. This page is intended only as a basic general overview of the VOP process in Florida for educational purposes. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship.

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