My PO is saying that he is going to put an out for me cause I gave him my new . Ive called him over and over and he never answers. So if he puts the new out is there a way i can just pay it off????

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7 Responses to “Can I Pay Off An Arrest Warrant For Violating Probation?”

  1. Rosebudd says:

    I would mail a certified return receipt requested letter to the probation office. I would address it to the head or chief officer or the supervisor of your probation officer. The officer definitely can have you arrested. A warrant issued by P & P is not like a warrant for a traffic ticket. There is no paying a P & P warrant. You go to jail and are placed on a P & P hold and are taken before the P & P board, not a judge. They can revoke your probation and demand that you serve out the original sentence. In the letter you need to indicate your address, telephone number, employer, and send a copy of the permission to move that was given by your officer. Request that your case be transferred to wherever it is you are living (if it is a different city) so that you are able to do your monthly reporting in person as is required by law. Don’t play around with this. These people can be nothing nice and some even enjoy making peoples lives miserable.
    P.S. next time- rent a room as it would have cost you less in the long run.

  2. tallerfe says:

    The warrant will be issued and you will be violated. Meaning you are going to jail. The wise thing would be to go for a face to face with the PO and get this taken care of before you get thrown in jail……….

  3. ARTY says:

    Nope, sorry, but you can fight it in court since the *** face wont answer your calls.

  4. james m says:

    No.You violated your probation,this is not a traffic violation.Your best bet would be to turn your self in to the court,and hope you get a soft hearted judge.

  5. busted says:

    I would just like to add to James m. go to the local police,probation office , where you are now . they could probably help get your probation moved to where you are currently residing. by the way everybody has a boss.

  6. pitbull1 says:

    It depends on the offense. You need to document and have proof of trying to get hold of your PO. Calling him by cell phone is great because the number and time are right there. That way there is no dispute. You can try to request a new PO if there are other issues with the one you have, be prepared though to prove everything. You might also want to get in touch with the judge the sentenced you or the City/County attornies office to see if there is some way to take care of this. Good luck

  7. mklouda says:

    No you cannot, and your PO can actually throw you in jail without a bail so there would be no getting out. Once you are convicted you give up certain rights until you have at least served out your sentence and then you don’t always get those rights back.

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