Sentences with phrase «more jail time»

He served 26 days in jail this year for his wire - cutting actions, with more jail time expected in subsequent charges.
If a defendant doesn't show up, it could mean more jail time.
Judges take this very seriously and often impose more jail time than the original sentence for such violations.
The client may often also end up with more jail time than he would have gotten otherwise via a violation for the remainder of his probation; which could include any suspended time.
And, as Ronnie Dean Harris, one of the Indigenous leaders supporting the Burnaby blockade line, posted to social media, this is about the fact that «people may get more jail time for crossing an invisible line of an injunction than you can get for killing an Indigenous youth in this country.»
He betrayed Mangano to try to save himself from more jail time after the government caught up to «massive amounts of financial fraud,» Keating said.
Defense lawyer Stuart Grossman argued that Boyland was hammered with much more jail time than other pols convicted recently of similar corruption charges.
«Were it to exceed a million dollars, then it would change from a class C felony to a class B felony and potentially involve more jail time
Refusing to pay, Mr. Williams said he expected more jail time.
(AP, Facebook may mean more jail time for S.C. inmates)
And he knows the likely result: More charges, more jail time.
A man who was ordered to pay $ 10 million in spousal support and other payments to his wife of 40 years, spent six months in jail for deliberately ignoring the order and, to date, has not yet complied - potentially setting himself up for another finding of contempt and more jail time.
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